f Seventy-Third ' ear EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICIrGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS re Opinions ArePr STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 rrutb Will Prevail" orials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. FISCAL REFORM: Romney Package Has Varied Contents DAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1963 NIGHT EDITOR: PHILIP SUTIN 'Blue Bloods' Botch Education Report [ER NEARLY five-and-a-half months of abor, the "blue ribbon" committee may its interim report on the problems of igan higher education to Gov. Romney in oming week. eting in executive session today, the com- e will receive a draft report from its in- subcommittee. If the full committee ae- it, the report will then be sent to the, mor. er being sent to the governor, the report most likely be bound in fine leather, ,raphed by Chairman Dan Karn and prob- receive a niche in the' Capital library. *TE EDUCATIONAL PROBLEMS are ute as the Michigan Coordinating Council ublic Higher Education's recent report em- ized. It noted that in just two years time 0 additional students will be entering igan colleges and universities. rely a problem as crucial to Michigan and esidents as higher education should be the closest and most complete examina- as possible. V. ROMNEY'S COMMITTEE has not done his. wile the 50 odd "blue ribbon" citizens first last April, very little if anything, was ac- )Iished until late July and early August. his time a 12-man interim subcommittee formed to do. a report on the short term ems of higher education. Almost simul- usly the Kellogg Foundation made a 00 grant to the committee enabling it to some staff personnel. e Upjohn Foundation contributed the without whom work would have remain- a standstill. From about Aug. 6 to Sept. ey worked "pulling together preliminary rch." After another meeting of the sub- nittee, last week, the Upjohn staff was Show Biz HOUSE Un-American Activities Com- nittee hasn't been doing too well these days. any fine, upstanding legislative committee, eeds plenty of exciting headlines to keep public from worrying about the fact that oesn't do much legislating. But through e oversight (i.e., conspiracy) the press just n't seem too concerned about HUAC. it Thursday, while investigating a group of ents who were subverting our nation by paring it to Cuba, HUAC's persistent pa- s were smiled upon by Fate. 'The students kind enough to stage a noisy demonstra- --not a very, impressive one, but enough to a banner headline on the front of the ago Tribune. Luckily, the students got even ilier as police dragged them out of the ing room. MIGHT even make a good movie. -K. WINTER Democratic 0 TTINESS was rife Thursday as the House lebated Gov. George Romney's request for ey for the Legislative Apportionment Com- ion, established under the new Constitu- Rep. Joseph Gillis (D-Detroit) tried to k a $38,000 appropriation for the commis- s work before January 1, but, after some ,te, the House, including Gillis, voted .the ey. ais incident is the latest in a series of par- i squabbles over implementing the new Atitution's apportionment provisions. The ocrats, undoubtedly the losers under the provisions as under the old, have attempt- o delay and to becloud the issue rather 1 attempting to make the most of an im- ible situation. ider the new Constitution, the Senate h currently has frozen districts will be dis- ed on the basis of 80 per cent population- er cent area. However, aside from giving chunks of nearly-empty land a dis- ortionate weight, the rules on multiple dis- Editorial Staff RONALD WILTON, Editor VID MARCUS GERALD STORCH i orial Director City Editor ARA LAZARUS............Personnel Director Ip SUTIN.............National Concerns Editor EVANS................Associate City Editor ORIE BRAHMS .....Associate Editorial Director tIA BOWLES ...................Magazine Editor NDA BERRY ............... Contributing Editor GOOD........................ Sports Editor BLOCK.................. Associate Sports Editor IERGER...............Associate Sports Editor zwINCS ........... Contributing Sports Editor asked to "pull together conclusions of the meeting." They received "less than a week" for this task. SO THE TOTAL TIME spent on one of the crucial problems facing this state today was less than four weeks. Much of this time was taken up with preparing, printing and mailing out the findings to the subcommittee members. From appearances and from the words of one of the leading members of the subcommit- tee, the "blue ribbon" committee was not called into existence to make any substantive con- tribution. Romney established it to use the names of the 50 odd distinguished citizens on the committee's letterhead. The leading member said he believed that Romney's purpose in forming the committee was to make passage of educational legislation through the Legislature more facile In ad- dition, he believed that a report from leading citizens would bear more weight with the public than one prepared by a government staff. rJHIS WAS possibly the reason why all "blue ribbon" meetings with the exception of the first one were held in secret. It is hard to believe that much could have been done before the staff was obtained for two reasons. First, since the staff did all the research work in conjunction with a number of other agencies, nothing was accomplished until a staff existed. Second, without funds, no work or even meet- ings could occur. Either you keep meetings secret because things of great importance are going on or you close the doors in order to keep up a public image because nothing of importance is going on. In the case of the "blue ribbon" committee" the latter case seems to be the correct reason. IN THE LAST ANALYSIS, the crucial topic of higher education in Michigan has been handled in a slipshod manner. Supposedly Gov. Romney established a special citizens committee to study Michigan's educational problems, but he failed to supply them with funds. BECAUSE OF DELAYS necessitated by this lank of funds, no work was done for four months. The work when it started was under- taken by personnel of the Upjohn Foundation, the Michigan Coordinating Council for Public Instruction, and the governor's office. The short range problem was investigated in less than a month. And a fraud was perpetrated on the people of Michigan by a supposed com- mittee that received the credit without doing any work. The problem has been glossed over by Rom- ney. The long term report which is to be com- pleted by next year will undoubtedly be no better than the present one. One thing that the committee will certainly accomplish will be having its report, which is secret, ready for the governor by Oct. 1. For this one (1) achievement, the committee deserves one (1) round of applause. -ANDREW ORLIN bstructionists tricts also work to the Republican's favor. The Democrats gain slightly in the House as the moiety clause requires that a district have .7 the population of the average district instead of one-half as permitted under the 1908 Constitution. BOTH THE apportionment provisions in the old and new constitutions are being tested in the courts. But the Democrats are not co- tent to allow a final decision to settle their case. They have, through delay and controversy, attempted to prevent the redistricting of the Legislature. If the Democrats succeed in stalling the Ap- portionment Commission's work, they will snarl the 1964 election. The varied apportionment procedures take at least six months and if some decision on districts is not made by next July, it will be impossible to hold primaries in August or September. This breakdown in the elective machinery will cause chaos. DEMOCRATS, led by state chairman Zolton Ferency seem intent on causing chaos rather than waiting for court action-their best hope. Ferency loudly refused to appoint the Democratic members of the commission and only did so after Romney went to great lengths to compromise with him. The request for the supplemental appropriation and legal status for the group until Jan. 1 followed. The Republicans were not helpful either. Romney in his special message to the Legis- lature went out of his way to berate Demo- cratic intransigence. This made the Democrats mad, for they felt this violated the spirit of the compromise. Fortunately, cooler heads prevailed and the To The Editor By MICHAEL HARRAH NOW COMES Gov. George Rom- ney with his long-awaited tax reform program to save the State of Michigan from fiscal oblivion. In many ways it was not surpris- ing; in many ways it was encour- aging; in many ways it was disap- pointing. True to his word, the governor's program does not involve any in- crease in state spending or actual taxation revenues. Romney seems to be making a genuine effort to economize wherever possible. The fiscal reform package itself consists of eleven points in dollar consequences, eight of them tax reductions and three of them tax levies. The total amount of money at issue is $306 million. THERE ARE good measures: The repeal of the business ac- tivities tax will cost the state some $78 million annually, but it will alleciate the financial hardship now laid upon businesses not op- erating at a clear profit. Repeal of the BAT would result in encourag- ing new businesses to establish and continue in Michigan without a crippling tax in their costly, for- mative years, and it would allow* established but floundering con- cerns to recover without the alba- tross of -a heavy taxation. Hand-in-hand with repeal of the BAT would be a two-year exemp- tion of new corporations from the corporate franchise tax, an annual loss of $500,000 in revenues. This, too, would encourage new busi- nesses to locate and continue in Michigan. * * * EXEMPTION OF prescription drugs from the, current four per cent sale tax would result in a substantial saving for the aged and infirm, who expend large amounts annually for medicines. The loss to the state would be on- ly $1 million per year, but the'sav- ing to those living on fixed in- comes, where every penny means a lot, would be quite meaningful. Also desirable is the repeal of the state intangibles tax, which currently nets $35' million a year in revenues. This tax effectively amounts to double-taxation, col- lected largely on dividends and annuity payments, this tax hit the citizen with a fixed income par- ticularly hard. In addition, the tax is collected twice on the same money: Once when the corpora- tion has it, and then again when the stockholder receives it as a dividend. This is considered double taxation, since in effect the stock- holder IS the corporation. * *, * EXEMPTION of foodstuffs from the. sales tax would cost 'the state some $91 million in revenues, and here the whole business begins to get sticky. For instance, many items are sold in food stores; what constitutes foodstuffs and what doesn't? And even among food- stuffs, should caviar be exempted along with milk, or candied bum- ble-bees along with bread? This would defeat the whole purpose of the exemption, true, but where does one draw the line? Besides, a sales tax, whether it be on foodstuffs or alppliances is relatively painless to pay, regard- less of what it amounts to in the end. The shopper' would much pre- fer paying out 40 cents on a $10 purchase several times a week than to see some three or four dollars withheld from his salary during the same week. * * * ANOTHER PROPOSAL, the Homestead tax deferral for senior citizens will cost $6 million an- nually in revenues. (In essence, this amounts to a mortgage, pay- able only after death.) Granted, it is a noble sentiment and undoubt- edly it will ease the burden on senior property owners, but it will also bring a rash of lawsuits that won't quit. Suppose that old Mrs. X owns a piece of property and she de- fers $200 a year in property taxes. This begins when she is 65 years of age and she lives to be 85. Some $4000 has piled up in back taxes by this time, and suddenly Mrs. X dies. The state immediately steps in and demands the back taxes. Mrs. X has been living on a small, fixed income, so her estate con- tains little cash. She has willed the old family homestead to her daughter, a spinster, who has lived with Mama all her life, but the back taxes, the funeral ex- penses and the state and federal inheritance taxes are so high that the property must be sold to meet the. payments. Spinster daughter is left out in the cold, hardly a desirable or just circumstance. GENERAL PROPERTY tax re- lief will cost $93 million, and this too is commendable, but perhaps a bit optimistic. Once again, this reduction serves to alleviate the burden on those with fixed in- comes, but the question becomes how long will the tax stayed re- duced? We must recall that property taxes started out low and worked their way up due to rising govern- m e n t a 1 expenditures. Current spending policies on the part of local governments do not seem to indicate that governmental ex- penditures will cease rising, so it would seem safe to assume that the temporarily reduced property taxes will soon find an occasion to rise again. Quite obviously this will defeat the whole purpose of the tax reform. * * * BRINGING UP the rear in the area of tax "reforms" is a one and one-half million cut in the tax on beer, which looks extreme- ly out of place among the rest of the "humanitarian" tax measures. Whether or not this item goes or stays is of little relevance to any- one but the brewers, and I daresay it is of little consequence either, when the figure under discussion is $306 million. * * ON THE REVENUE side of the ledger, somewhat more simple but somewhat more controversial, are the three revenue producing meas- ures. The smallest item is a total five and a half per cent on' finan- cial institutions. Probably no one argues with this. Since state law prohibits more than one tax being levied on financial institutions five and a half per cent is ad- mittedly reasonable. Next is a three and a half per cent tax on corporate income, which will yield 81 million yearly. This replaces the business activi- ties tax, and the only difference is that this tax is on net income and not gross income. Here again we have a very reasonable tax rate. In fact, since this tax is on a company's clear profit, one might perhaps not be amiss in suggest- ing that three and a half per cent is too reasonable. Another one and a half per cent (for a five per cent total) would reap another $35 million.' THE PROBLEM, however, arises with the final measure: The im- position of a $216 million, two per cent levy on personal income. This levy would be added onto the pro- gressive federal income tax, the four per cent state sales tax, the federal capital gains, federal and state inheritance and gift taxes, federal and state luxury taxes, federal and state nuisance taxes on liquor, beer, cigarettes, gasoline and gambling, federal excise taxes, to say nothing of reduced but still ominous local property taxes' and the impending threat of a lo- cal income tax, such as the one now levied in Detroit. Faced with this prospect, one must seriously doubt that the mass of individual -citizens will welcome an income tax, with only the pros- pect of food and drugs being exempted from the sales tax. Two per cent of a man's yearly income looks bigger to him than four per cent of a ten dollar bill now and then each week. Perhaps in fact it isn't, but it's appearances that count. * ** * *4 GOV. ROMNEY stresses "More Jobs and More Justice" in his tax reform program. True, it will An- doubtedly create "more Jobs," for it is a structure specifically set up with business in mind. As far as "more justice" goes, the pattern begins to get vague. To the Editor: PHILIP SUTIN'S pretentious at- tack on United States policy in South Viet Nam succeeds only in reflecting the poverty of thought which has so long characterized that policy. Six paragraphs of lashing but unoriginal criticism backed up with the traditional "backtrack slightly and attempt to maintain the current military situaton" is hardly useful com- mentary. And waiting for revolution-for others to do the work-is a waste- ful and dangerous delegation of power. Indeed, an anti-Diem revo- lution might well bring more headaches than it is worth, par- ticularly in the event of an in- crease in popular support for the Viet Cong. In short, we have been watching and waiting for ten years; and taking a diplomatic thrashing in the process. THE ONLY real hope for a happy exit was glibly passed up by Sutin-a reunified and neutral Viet Nam. The argument was that Diem and Ho Chi Minh would not be willing to negotiate; yet the Diem family's corrupt and brutal management of South Viet Nam does not suggest that they would be hindered by anything like prin- ciple. Too, Diem has well-publicized connections in Hanoi which would prove useful if he were forced to make serious use of them-and the recent French suggestions, if Kennedy would listen, seem to pro- vide a starting point for such force. Senior citizens, persons with fixed incomes, and the infirm definitely benefit; but these persons make up a small part of Michigan's popula- tion. The large bulk of the citi- zenry is faced only with an income tax that will offset the exemption of foodstuffs from the sales tax, a reduced property tax that will un- doubtedly go up again and the prospect of local income tax on top of it all. One tends to doubt whether this will seem like fiscal reform to Mr. Average Citizen. Gov. Romney pointed out that there is a need for tax reform in Michigan. This is undoubtedly true, but the gov- ernor seems to be confusing tax reform with tax rearrangement, and the two aren't necessarily the same. * * * HE HAS STAKED his prestige on the line to see this program succeed, saying "if not now, when? and if not me, who?" His tax mes- sage was inspired, and he delivered it well. The initial impression is a good one, but when the glow of his spoken word wears off, when the legislators try to explain 'this to the folks at home, and when the average citizen sees another two per cent of his income bitten off, perhaps tax reform will not sound so pi'essing. The next several weeks will tell. A REALLY constructive policy might take the following steps: 1) Move out the CIA and de- clare openly the extent of our aid to Diem; thent 2) Initiate talks with the French, indicating a willingness to make use of their experience in the area and an interest in a united, neutral Viet Nam; at the same time, x 3) Making it clear to Saigon that continued internal tyranny will be met with decisive reduc- tions in nonmilitary aid. * * * IT STRIKES ME that winning this war is impossible: neither we nor the Chinese are willing to give up Southeast Asia. The only pos- sible solution" is a detente, yet Washington and Mr. Sutin persist in advocating the line of policy which has not, and will not, pro- duce anything but a long and costly war of attrition. -Edwin G. Burrows, '64 Bells , , , I AM a medical student living near Burton Tower. Almost every night of the week the caril- lion blasts in my window, and I'm sure that I'm not the only one who finds this an annoying hindrance to studying. If it must be played, can't it be played at an earlier hour (5:00-6:00 p.m.) when most people are having dinner-and not when students try to study? I like music but not when, like an air raid siren, it is too loud to be muffled by a closed window. -Dale Jacobs, '66M "As For Civil Rights, I Agree With Sen. Goldwater That This Is A Matter Of State Rights-Uh.- Let's Finish This Speech Somewhere Else" 4r S ' a CITYSCOPE: Demonstrators Meet Dead End on Ordinan ce rV I ¢r JL . 'a I ". By WILLIAM BENOIT MAYOR CECIL O. CREAL and the Ann Arbor City Council pay they are embarrassed over picketing and sit-ins at City Hall. The only action that could delay further civil-rights demonstrations is passage of a strong fair-housing ordinance, an ordinance radically different and significantly more complete in its coverage of bias in housing than the ordinance now up for council consideration. Even if such an ordinance were passed, contrary to the wildest expectations of any fair housing advocate, it is possible that similar demonstrations would continue} with varying only in the ends they would hope to achieve. For instance, the local Congress of Ra- cial Equality is considering dem- onstrating for fair employment practices when and if the fair housing battle is won for them. * * * SIT-IN demonstrators make bad publicity for Mayor Creal. Lately, they forced him into a defensive position at a Michigin mayor's meeting. Mayor Creal asks what is the rationale behind sit-in demon strations. This is an incredibly naive question. Sit-ins are used by civil rights groups because these, groups believe the ordinance ,now in council scheduled for its second reading is inadequate and there- fore wrong. Demonstrators have met dead ends in trying to negotiate with council and Mayor Creal. The de- vice of public hearings or closed council sessions is tired, worn out, and has proved ineffective in num- erous attempts. THIS WEEK, Eastern Michigan University Prof. Quin McLoughlin was convicted under a section of a city ordinance prohibiting loiter- ing. His sentence was $50 or five days. This is significant in that Prof. ably continue as long as there are people to bring into court. But even if CORE, the Direct Action Co tmittee and other civil rights groups run out of demonstrators, civil disobedience is frequently symptomatic of a deficiency in government. It is very likely that the defi- ciencies lie in Mayor Creal and his "Neolithic council member flunkl ies." It is wrong, basically and fundamentally wrong, to ignore intelligent Ann Arborcitizens who wanted to reason with council and perhaps arrive at an adequate or- dinance. Folly is added to political wrong when an attorney for the city makes a "dramatic" and "im- passioned" plea for men to refrain from "placing, themselves above the law and therefore above G" as did the prosecuting attorney in the McLoughlin case. * * * IS IT NOT possible that the men who make the laws are them- selves somewhat short of perfec- tion? And while on the subject of God, it might be well to note that, many Ann Arbor clergymen align with demonstrations and civil rightists' demands. r Fresh Air, I G NERAL de Gaulle certainly has not offered a surefire rem- edy for the woes of Viet Nam, but he has let some fresh air into the miasma which American policy has generated and in which we ourselves are stifling. It may be, in view of the situa- tion in Laos that a better solution would be a federation of North and South, the North to remain Communist the South capitalist with free intercourse between the two and no foreign interference, either from Red China or the United States. This is no easy solution, but it is far more realistic than anything k; S, .: