I i off the record Eighty-three years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan ITT and Chile: Paranoia deja 1 vu 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 News Phone: 764-0552 SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1973 Anybody steering the boat? THE NIXON Administration's announce- ment Thursday that it is consider- 'Ing a tax increase, veiled as changes in the tax law itself, is a frank admission of its failure to stem galloping price in- creases. The President himself said Monday that the Administration "continues its strong opposition to a tax increase." And since last year government spokesper- sons have maintained that a tax increase is out of the question. A tax rise is never popular, and that the President could even tentatively re- verse his position and call for such an in- crease when his Administration's popular- ity has fallen to an all-time low is an in- dication of the crisis situation which ex- ists. REP. AL ULLMAN (D-Ore.), acting chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, remarked that it would be "impossible to get a tax sur- charge through Congress at the present time, when people's real incomes are go- ing down because of inflation, even if you disguise the increase with the promise of a later refund." President Nixon his thus placed his popularity on an even more treacherous limb with the announcement of a pos- sible tax increase. Only the gravity of the economic situ- ation could force him to act in such a manner, assuming that the proposed in- crease is being seriously considered at all. Melvin Laird, counselor to the Presi- dent, said there are two changes in the tax laws under consideration. ONE IS AN across-the-board increase that would be collected when the economy was in an inflationary stage and refunded when a recession occurred. The other proposal would initiate a variable investment credit for businesses, giving firms a tax credit ranging from four to 15-per cent on its machinery and equipment expenditures depending on the state of the economy. The across-the-board increase, by siphoning money out of consumers' poc- ketbooks, would presumably dampen price increases by lowering total consum- er demand. TODAY'S STAFF: News: David Burhenn, Jack Krost, Cheryl 'Pilate, Ann Rauma, Charlie Stein Editorial Page: Mornie Heyn, Zachary Schiller, Eric Schoch Arts Page: Diane Levick, Mara Shapiro Photo Technician:,Steve Kagan Photograph), Staff DAVID MARGOLICK Chief Photographer KEN FINK.,......................Staff Photographer THOMAS GOTTLIEB..............Staff Photographer STEVE KAGAN...................Staff Photographer KAREN KASMAUSKI ..............Staff Photographer TERRY MCCARTHY............Staff Photographer JOHN UPTON ...... .............. Staff Photographer However, with several sources as au- thoritative as the economist of the Manu- facturers Hanover Trust Co. already pre- dicting a recession by next year, a tax increase could wind up precipitating such a slowdown. THE FLUCTUATING investment tax credit which constitutes the second part of possible tax law changes would, at certain periods of time, more than double the amount businesses currently receive for plant and equipment expendi- ture. The present system gives firms a seven per cent credit on such expendi- tures. The overall tax proposals outlined by Laird Thursday would be clearly unfair to the public at a time when incomes, contrary to the President's first State of the Union message, are falling in real terms. But coming as they do after the Ad- ministration has vigorously denied that a tax increase would be necessary, they lead to a question aptly put by Louis Schnei- der, president of Jet Party Favors of Stamford, Conn.: "Is there anybody steer- ing the boat?" Inadequate THE UNUSUAL recent suggestion by a federal appeals court urging special Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox and President Nixon to sit down with their lawyers and listen to the tapes of Presi- dential conversations together has some merit on the surface, but is basically a poor idea. It is not surprising that the judicial system wishes to avoid a major consti- tutional showdown with the executive branch, but we believe that there are serious drawbacks to such a compromise. The President and Cox would meet in secret and somehow determine which of the tapes should be released to the grand jury. No doubt Nixon and Cox would themselves have to compromise as to what would be released. Cox would likely have to let the President keep some tapes secret that the prosecutor might want for his case. Thus some important infor- mation might very well be kept from the grand jury. MORE IMPORTANTLY, such a compro- mise would not settle the basic ques- tion of Presidential confidentiality in- volved. We cannot believe that the Presi- dent can withhold information bearing on a criminal case based on any argu- ment of Presidential confidentiality. A compromise such as the one sug- gested would not clear the issue up to any degree, leaving any President the freedom to continue to pursue the same policy in the future. A compromise such as the one sug- gested would not provide a satisfactory resolution to the issues in the case. 'By TED STEIN "Administration officials spe of the day denying charges t United States was involved in t throw of Chile's President, Dr dor Allende Gossens . . ." -The N.Y ZAP! THIS BOMBSHELL is bu in the grayness that is the T it is even more explosive for us chaotic surge that swept Allende' regime from o f f i c e. An Adm spokesperson vehemently denies involvement in the military c nobody buys it. Perhaps we don't bristle at th fact lodged conveniently out of si inside page of the newspaper. But to be a good yardstick of how f come with Watergate. To fight the suspicion and para the Watergate White House en we have to take on such a deme selves. We must assume, there the CIA was involved in the Ch heaval and that Administration are covering it up. THIS IS A WORKING premise tedly, it is based on circumsta dence. But with ITT payoffs, dir The m By BETH NISSEN WELCOME BACK. Ann Arbor is again absorbing the annual iSeptember pilgrimage of students from 10 to 10,000 miles away. The masses arrived last week, disem- barking from airport limousines, cross-country buses and family sta- tion wagons, unloading stereos, heavily-chained bicycles and orange crates of favorite albums. Sleeping until noon and long sun- hot hours to build a bronze body, or 8-to-5 hours with regular pay- checks are forgotten in the almost- late 8 a.m. walk across the Diag, the 6 p.m. wait for the North Campus biis, and the first 40-page reserved assignment at the UGLI. For those who are now returning to Ann Arbor for the first time since their relieved post-final exam exodus last May, Ann Arbor is re- assuringly - or, depending on your attitude, unfortunately - t h e same. The Diag still reigns as the Uni- versity campus center of pamphlet- ing, dealing, and religious prophet- eering. Frisbee addicts perform nightly aerial shows, and Ann Ar- bor's prolific population of prom- iscuous canines play in Diag sha- dows. THE UNDERGRADUATE Lib- illegal campaign contributions and a secret nt most war (or two) behind us, it is a posture we hat the have been forced into accepting. be over- The specific background for the charge Salva- of U.S. complicity is rooted in the "Chile papers" published by syndicated columnist . Times Jack Anderson in March, 1972. They con- Sept. 13 vincingly show how the Nixon Administra- ried deep tion and the International Telephone and imes. But Telegraph Corporation-which has $200dmil- than the lion in Chile holdings-had conspired to s Marxist topple the newly-elected Allende regime. consider the following; Ministration American Item: William Merriam, vice president oup. And in charge of ITT's Washington office, writes a company director describing a meeting is simple he has with a Central Intelligence Agency ght on an source. He says he is "still very very pes- t it seems simistic about defeating Allende" but that far we've "approaches continue to be made to select members of the armed forces in an attempt anoia that to have them lead some sort of uprising- gendered, no success to date." Meanwhile, "prac- oanor our- tically no progress has been made in try- fore, that ing to get American business to co-operate ilean up- in some way so as to bring on economic officials chaos," Merriam says. ITEM: THE VICE president of ITT in e. Admit- New York, E.J. Gerrity, writes Harold ntial evi- Geneen, ITT president, that the White 'ty tricks, House has been told ITT is prepared to assist financially in sums up to a million dollars to block Allende's inauguration on Nov. 3, 1970; and, Item: Two ITT flacks in Santiago write Gerrity that on Sept. 15, 1970, U.S. Ambas- sador to Chile Edward Korry had "finally received a message from the State Depart- ment giving him the green light to move in the name of President Nixon." "The message gave him maximum authority to do all possible-short. of a Dominican Re- public-type action-to keep Allende from taking power," they continued. The sense of deja vu is overpowering. If only one slogan remains from the Water- gate mess for posterity, it might very well be ". . . in the name of President Nixon." SMALL WONDER THE press was in- credulous when word got out that Nixon knew about the coup in advance. At first, official spokespersons only admitted that U.S. warships headed for Chile to engage in maneuvers with the Chilean navy had been warned of the coup. That pronounce- ment came from the Defense Department's Jerry Friedheim, the manswho repeatedly lied about our secret war in Cambodia. Yesterday, rumors that the Nixon Ad- ministration had known about the coup were confirmed. But official sources said that the President had taken no position .on the outcome. How can we believe this without proof? The authenticitybofthe Anderson-Chile pa- pers has not been disputed. And the situa- tion ITT agitated for has occurred-the military did take over, and economic chaos, perhaps, proved to be the prime reason for the downfall, MOREOVER, THE CLOUT ITT has with the Nixon Administration, as well as Ge- neen' s penchant for doing a little foreign policy of his own on the side, is well docu- mented, And to assume that the CIA calmly stood by while knowing all along of an impending coup does stretch the imagination. Perhaps Jack Anderson will come along now with another memorandum, this time pinning the, coup on the CIA-ITT coalition. This would certainly produce the kind of thorough Congressional investigation into the matter that Rep. John Moakley (D- Mass.) proposed Wednesday. k But more than likely, we'll only end up with more suspicions that our government lies through its teeth. And we seem to have enough of those already. Ted Stein is executive editor of The Daily. More.:. 4 I 'J ire thitngs change, the rary still employs the suspicious old man who frisks students and paws knapsacks and U-Cellar book- bags for smuggled resources. The registration lines are longer, tui- tion higher, and the procedures still as frustrating for those hapless students who must run the drop- add gauntlet. For those who are here for the first time, the University is an un- known; their sole contact with the Big U has been Orientation, where hours were spent trooping along in a style reminiscent of a third- grade class field trip as a strain- ed-voice leader explained' the in- tricacies ofthe Angell-Mason-Hav- en Halls maze. And as much time was spent on the lawn of the Health Service discussing alterna- tive methods of birth control as in preparing a first semester schedule of lectures and discussion sections with a minimum of 8 o'clocks. To those who are approaching a first University experience with in- ner anxiety despite a confident ex- terior, remember that you are not the first to feel frustrated or for- gotten in the crowd. There is some comfort in knowing that the person in front of you in the dorm meal line has felt it, too. AND WHILE the University is still more massive machine than guiding friend, there are more hu- man aspects this year than last. Dialing 76-GUIDE can link you with advice, information or a friendly ear, and the new LSA Check-Point system is a well-organized untang- ler of LSA academic confusion. For many, this year will be de- cisive in preparing for a life's work. And many will decide there are better ways to life's goals than through University graduation re- quirements. Many will start ano- ther semester with no long-range purpose: this will be a cause for inner re-evaluation in some, a source of frustration for others, and of little concern to the rest. Some aretstarting with optimistic energy, others calling on reserve strength after an exhaustive sum- mer. It all starts again this week- reunion with last year's friends, buying used books, standing in line for a better stadium seat than you had last year, searching for a mis- placed meal ticket, and dusting off the yellow plastic card that carries your University identity in 10 digits. Welcome back to Michigan's most illustrious mental institution. Beth Nissen is a student at the Universi/y. t Daily Photo by DAVID MARGOLICK Letters: Open hearings on Chile asked . #PAT I. JUS1T' VEAMED -1NE ELLS IlZ LtARS ~oiE IN AND SToLE IMY 1tAPE ... ! ' i i To The Daily: , THE UNDERSIGNED represent a broad constituency of citizens of Washtenaw County who are con- cerned that there may have been active United States -government involvement in the overthrow of the duly elected government of Chile. Our suspicions are specifically based on the past activities of ITT and the CIA in Chile, the recent exposures of the massive secret U.S. intervention in Cambodia as well as the hostility of the execu- tive branch of the U.S. government towards the Allende administra- tion in Chile. In light of this we feel that the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee should im- mediately hold a public investiga- tion to examine any possible overt and/or covert encouragement or assistance or actual participation in the overthrow of the government of Chile by any U.S. government agency or operative. (Titles f o r identification only.) -Richard Levy, University teach- ing Assistant; Bruce Cameron, Executive Committee, Washte- naw County Democratic Party; Allen Whiting, University pro- fessor; Gary Owen, state repre- sentative, 22nd District; BIllI Brodhard, state representative; Jerry DeGrieck, Ann Arbor City Council; Carol Jones, Ann Arbor City Council; Norris Thomas, Ann Arbor City Council; Susan Lind- say, Ypsilanti City C o u n c ii; Elizabeth Taylor, county com- missioner; Ray Shoultz, coun- ty commissioner; L. Allen Toth, county commissioner; Robert Guengel, Washtenaw county cor- poration counsel; James Watt, County Commissioner Div. 8; Vi- vian Shaner, Mich. Women's Pol- itical Caucus, vice chair; Ethel Howard, vice chair, VAW C.A.P.; Meri Lou Murray, county com- missioner; Suzanne Freund, Wasltenaw County Commission, vice chair; John Reuther, Legis- lative Review Co-ordinator, Ford Motor Co.: Kenneth Langton. revolution, such as that in Chile, when in the past, The Daily has of- ten been sympathetic to the idea of overthrowing an unpopular gov- ernment, namely the American government. The editorial in point notes that the popularity of President Al- lende's government had risen from 36 to 43 per cent. Yet, this still left 57 per cent opposed to his ad- ministration. Furthermore, h i s presidential victory came about only because the two major parties split the vote, allowing him to slide to power with 36 per cent. (In Ann Arbor, we saw the Re- publicans take over city hall in a similar way. And I'm sure there are many people in this city who wouldn't mind a takeover of the city administration by the liberals.) That the poor benefitted f r o m Allende's "social revolution" can- not be denied. However, their gains came at the loss of the majority of the population, which didn't j u s t include the capitalist corporations, but the entire middle class. While the middle class probably wasn't opposed to the bringing together of the lower and upper classes, they were scared by what they felt to be a lowering of the middle, rath- er than the lifting of the lower. Dissension in Chile was found in both the extreme right and left, as well as the middle. Meanwhile, the economy worsened, according to the Detroit Free Press, with "the world's Worst inflation, production declines, crop failures, political dis- tribution Hof foodstuffs, acute short- ages." The Daily easily exuses this, blaming it on "the reactions of businessmen and landowners . .." The truckowners'strike wa not one by the rich capitalists; 50,000 truck owners, mostly middle class, participated in a strike supported by the middle class. How can The Daily condemn le- gal methods of protests (strikes)? Doesn't The Daily feel that a frus- trated majority of a country should have znm, C ra t i t+ ; c nca eration via the revolution m a y actually strengthen democracy in Chile over the long run. I suppose whether this is desir- able or not depends on whether one prefers socialism or democracy. Regardless, it is grossly unfair to impose the will of the minority on the majority. Frustrations grow, and the tendency to rebel is strengthened. If not the coup, then a civil war may have broken out. Was either desirable? -Martin Stern, '73 Sept. 13 bail To The Daily: I AM A FORMER student at the University, the third president of the Black Action Movement, and also one of the Black Action Move- ment (BAM) strike leaders. Many sacrifices were made to win our demands; these were try- ing times. Students were arrested and threatened; one Black w a s thrown to -the sidewalk, and would have been beaten by a policeman had not his partner stopped him. Many Whites were supportive of our efforts to gain and maintain rights of Blacks at the University, rights for future students. We learned and used legal, practical techniques. I am pleased to have worked with all the people involv- ed in the strike. Later, I left Ann Arbor and moved to Mississippi where much freedom-fighting work is needed. The black community asked me to work with them. After some neces- sary legal work was done, white law officials of the state felt I was a threat to their passive black community. For this reason, they conspired to bring false charges against me. I was quickly and quietly tried, convicted in 15 minutes of jury deliberation, and sentenced to five years in Milan Federal Prison, Milan, Michigan. Since there was no preliminary hearing, my attorney has asked for an appeal. In the meantime, I have responsibility- To The Daily: THE WRITER of your editorial on "Women and Grad School" was quick to transfer to the University responsibility for encouraging wo- men to enter graduatereducation. The task is one we cheerfully ac- cept, although it is large and im- portant enough that no one need feel it belongs only to someone else. A year ago the Graduate School, with strong support from the fa- culty and administration, estab- lished a special committee on wo- men in graduate education. This group was asked to see why wo- men still may not enjoy equal ac- cess to graduate education and to say what the University, the Grad- uate School, and the graduate de- partments and programs might do to assure equal access. The committee saw very quickly the importance of the sort of mo- tivational factors which your edi- torial cited from the Educational Testing Service study. It found, closer to home, that women apply- ing for admission are accepted at a higher rate than men in all four of our graduate divisions - the biological and health sciences, the physical sciences and engineering, the social sciences and education, and the humanities and arts. But this advantage is immediately can- celled by the lower rate at which women accept admission and ac- tually enroll in our graduate pro- grams. What is more, there is a marked further attrition of women at each of two later thresholds to an academic career - the entry into doctoral-level studies and the entry into a first teaching posi- tion. The committee felt we are unlike- ly to make much headway until we understand more of what is behind the drop-out of women at each of these entry ways. For this reason they have mounted special studies of recruitment and admission, of the movement from master's to doctoral-level work, and of the dent Fleming, following his re- marks in The Daily, Sept. 6, 1973, in which he stated, "We like to think we stress honesty, virtue and integrity, but we see over and over again people doing things that are very distressing." We agree. Seeing over and over again (sic.) discrimination against minorities and women is indeed distressing. For instance, Fleming says that salary equity has n o t proved to be a problem for minor- ity employees. On what grounds does he base his peace of mind on this matter? Fleming further states that complaints about discrimina- tory wages for women can be pro- cessed only "as we become aware of them". Unfortunately, when made aware the U. typically re- sponds with agonizingly slow pro- cessing as well as vindictive treat- ment of the individuals who made them. Significantly, when discrim- ination cases are won by the com- plainent, the U. never admits to sex discrimination but only claims that an error has been made. Fleming claims that you. won't find women or minorities qualified in some areas, which presumably limits their full employment by the U. This may be true for some areas, however, the University has a responsibility to- offer release time and training programs for up- grading academic employees (see Higher Education Guidelines, Exe- cutive Order 11246 - H.E.W.). When is this going to be done? What about the many women who were considered unqualified to work or be promoted at the University of Michigan and who are now teach- ing at major institutions here and abroad? Fleming further states that a "reduced job market" is hampering efforts towards e q u a 1 employment. A reduced job market is a poor, excuse for lack of ef- fective search procedures to find qualified women and for blatently discriminatory employment and promotion practices. Finally, Fleming states that if "we maintain the prestige of the -1