r POWR CSG1-U. Cat%)6fS9 S 56VI&Th OF 6V1PYThI&)8. RlAS SUELk) PROVE;) Y( J§PEC(A L~ c7Jdcs; HA5 B6U '°""° PI vE&) £1lts Senate lacks understanding of tax reform problem *, EAK ,S NAs Bff CL.A - PROV6& IS TkPR &OW) Ed CH TO TAE M62/ By DICK WEST SNU;BER of senators in recent idays have spoken out on the need for tax reform. The one thing that stan4s clear from their state- ments is that they don't really un- derstand the problem.. Senators tend to approach re- form from the angle that while their backs were turned s o m e nefarious person or persons un- known infiltrated the Internal Re- venue code and riddled it with loop- holes. In their view, tax reform is needed to undo the work of highbinders acting at the behest of vested interests. I certainly agree there are ele- ments of inequity in the tax laws. And that something should be done before the phantom loopholer strik- es again. But this is not the great- est defect. THE MAIN PROBLEM rests on the premise that: --People who mean well c au s e more trouble in this world than those with evil intentions. -True reform must begin by dra mping the great dismal swamp through which one must slosh in order to pay one's taxes. Believe it or not, our tax forms, which are the verbal equivalent of freshly discarded bubblegum, were not deliberately contrived to vex and nettle you to the point where you break out in hives. It just seems that way; At least 90 per cent of the quag- mire was created by efforts to ad- vance through tax breaks, meritor- ions causes that fail to qualify for direct subsidies. Tax laws are used to abet' moth- erhood, philanthrophy, home own- ership, scholarship, dental work, entertaining business associates, joining the Elks Club and I don't know how many other laudable and uplifting, activities. ADDITIONALLY, new candidates for exemption are nominrted al- most daily. One recent proposal would per- mit contractors to write off the cost of installing ramps for the handi- capped in new buildings. Another would allow individuals to deduct sums put into retirement funds. These are desirable goals to be sure. But also potential new thorns in the tax form thicket. I can see myself agonizing for hours over whether anything I built dur- ing the tax year might conceivable be used as a ramp by the handi- capped. NO, SENATORS. Merely closing loopholes that compensate fat cats won't get the job done. Any ac- tion worthy to be catlei tax re- form also must eradicate the good- ness and mercy, virtue, probity, nobility and social well-being that are cluttering up the tax forms. Let this their motto ye: Any- thing worth doing at all is non- deductible. Dick West is a writer for United Press International. a *I --- r ---° s C ' . 9 y rr i+# l e %Jw 1 . f t M e Id a ~1 Eighty-two years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1973 Fightig executive privilege IS REASSURING to know that Con- gress has resurrected a legal weapon in its dispute with President Nixon over his usage of Executive Privilege. A piece of Congressional legislation passed in 1928, yet never used by Con- gress, was recently unearthed by Sen. Sam Ervin Jr. (D-N.C.) which appears to empower Ervin's Government Opera- tions Committee to obtain from the President in writing almost any infor- mation it requests. The law, Section 2954 of Title 5 of the Federal Code, states that "an executive agency, on request of the Committee on Government Operations (of the House* or Senate )shall submit any informa- tion requested of it relating to any mat- ter within the jurisdiction of the com- mittee." IVAT MAKES this law look so promis- ing is that it states that the executive branch "shall" provide the information. Legally, the word "shall" implies manda- tory agreement with the ruling, and thus the President must obey, unless the law is overturned in court. Editorial Staff CHRISTOPHER PARKS and EtUOENE ROBINSON Co-Editors in Chief ROBERT BARKIN ...........Feature Editor DIANE LEVICK .... ......Associate Arts Editor DAVID MARGOLICK............Chief Photographer MARTIN PORTER............... Magazine Editor KATHY UC 1KE ................ Editorial Director ERIC SCHOCH ....................Editorial Director GLORIA SMITH ..........................Arts Editor CHARLES STEIN .......................City Editor TED STEIN........................Executive Editor MARTIN STERN.....................Editorial Director ED SUROVELL..... ............Books Editor ROUTB TESSEM.....................Picture Editor The law, unfortunately, doesn't affect President Nixon's claim to withhold an unlimited number of witnesses from Congressional hearings. But it does re- quire the White House to provide docu- mentary information that it has up till now refused to make available. As such, the law will at least restrict the Admin- istration's use of executive privilege. For instance, Congress has not been allowed to examine records of military flights undertaken by the President, members of his family, and Administra- tion officials during last year's Presiden- tial campaign. The Administration has revealed that the President's re-election committee paid $149,291 for 55 flights on the Presidential aircraft during the cam- paign, yet has refused to list passengers or flight details. This information was sought so that the Government could check that it had been reimbursed for any political trips by the President's campaign organiza- tion, 'as required by law. The 1928 law should now lead to the release of this information. THE TOTAL scope of this law still re- mains to be seen, but it is not too improbable that it may be useful in un- covering some- truths about the Water- gate incident. We sincerely hope so. t Today°'s staff: News: Don Blugerman, Gene Robinson, Terri Terrell, Becky Warner Arts Page: Jeff Sorensen Editorial Page: Bill Heenan, Martin Stern Photo Technicians: Steve Kagan, David Margolick PO W torti By PETE HAMILL THE TROOPS ARE well home now, at least the ones who wear the uniforms of combat. (Some 9000 plainclothes soldiers remain in South Vietnam, in the employ of the great Gen. Thieu.) All the PWs are back. Perhaps now it will be possible for Americans to examine some of the more treacherous current pieties without being accused of playing easy with the lives of those beloved American "boys" whom the politicians have always been so fond of sending off to fight strangers. Specifically, it would be in the interest of America to begin de-mythifying the PWS. Every night now for weeks, we have seen these men on TV. The torture stories have come with an increasing well-orchestrated crescendo, at least three a day, at precisely the ,time that Richard Nixon is in large trouble over skyrocketing prices, ITT-Chile. Watergate, and the unconstitutional bomb- ing of Cambodia. THIS IS NOT to say that torture did not take place. It is to suggest that the torture stories are now being used, the way the PWs have been used all along: to cover up other matters. We have to start with one premise: the PWs would not have been tortured if they A looka By DAVID MENDENHALL ing that THE ARAB-ZIONIST conflict in we migh the Middle East is now over both pec 50 years old. Though many out- before a side political aspects have chang- It ise ed, the central problem remains systema the same: that the elemental hu- reds of man rights of the. Palestinians can- army fr not be reconciled with the objec- reasons tives of Zionism, . curity, c There .is a strong similarily be- nebulous tween defending the Arab position rights p and speaking on behalf of the ers now North American Indian in the 19th gee cam century. One faces the image of viving oi pioneers arriving with the bene- grant la fits of civilization represented by their con superior technology, while the na- comes t tives are dismissed as primitive, villages backward, and warlike people. Driven to desperate acts by the Israel outright seizure of their lands oi Arael I expropriation with token compensa- - tion (as in Jerusalem today), there ination L results even greater concern for many in the colonists' security and even and so less for the natives' situation. The born Isr images are thus reinforced, just tion, ye as they once were in Tasmania or fe just( the American West. A Boston jour- surprisin nalist once went so far as to com- erals dei pare the Arab g-uerilla leaders to ples are Sitting Bull or Chief Pontiac, add- No cou _ _ e leg. David Mendenhall, a University ts or n graduate, is a guest -writer for Tie ities antc Daily. ence th uire hadn't been in North Vietnam in the first place. The great majority of these men were pilots. They were not drafted. Nobody tore them out of their homes and told them they must go and bomb North Vietnam. From 1966 on, the nioral issues of the war were clear, and those men still chose to get into airplanes and bomb North Vietnam. They justified their acts by saying they were acting "under orders." But at any point, they could have resigned from the armed services They could have refused to bomb the North. Instead, they choke to go off and bomb people firom 50."0 fet. In the process of doing this, they were shot down. They were captured. They were interrogated. Some were tortured. Some died. When the survivors were finaly 're- leased, most of them looked a lot healthier than most of the people in the South Bronx. They are, in fact, the healthiest looking crowd of prisoners of war in histor At one of these Pentagon-sponsored press confer- ences someone should ask them what they think would have happened to a North Viet- namese pilot if he had been shot down over Bay Ridge while bombing the U.S. I would guess that the guys would have been beaten to death on the spot. This is not to question the individual cour- age of the prisoners themselves. Courage is tales: lliti propaganda not the question, I know courageous vices. Their remarks about peace demon bo ended up in New York prisons, I strators, Jane Fonda, Cora Weiss, and a lot of courageous young men who others who were working to get them out o federal prisons because they re- of prison are not to be taken too seriously. to kill strangers for their country. They are men, after all, who believe in the are courageous Americans in exile in essential nobility of killing for your country. J Jane Fonda, for all the easy shots >f the PWs have taken at her, has THE NIXON Administration has not mov- great courage, too, risking her ca- ed these men into politics, exploiting them d her life to speak out against bar- in precisely -the way the President promis- ed he would not exploit them. But that makes it the duty of all of us to scrutinize QUES'TION ISN'T courage; it isn't them as toughly as we would anyone else rture, although the torture stories involved in politics. Nixon is promoting king it easier to justify the bombing some of them to generals and admirals, :bodia and the current American tour which means they will be helping to operate . 'lhieu, x hose "tiger cages" were the military machine for a long time to ictly models of penology. The issue is come. If we continue to play "Hail the r the American people will ever ac- Conquering Hero," it will not be long'before e.truth. The Pw show, sponsored by the same men are operating again in ano- d Nixon's Pentagon, is blurring one ther war which we could stumble into as truth: that those men would never dumbly and arrogantly as we stumbled into offered so much if they had not been Vietnam. g North Vietnam in the first place. Vietnam is over for us, but we are still PVs are almost all professional mili- bombing Cambodia, and it will be tough to en, which is precisely why we should raise a cry again for the pilots who are e their current judgments too seri- shot down near Pnomh Penh. lost of them have been out of the orld for the past five or six years; fete Hatill is a columimst for the New that they inhabited the equally un- York Post. Copyright 1973, New York 01,d of the professional armed ser- Posi Corporation. the Palestinitans rt Israel and .4 perhaps in 100 years' time ht admire them. As though ,ples had to be anihilated nyone grasped their point! exasperating to follow the tic destruction of hund- Arab villages by the Israeli oom 1948 to the present. The vary, though national se- ollective retaliation and the s concept of historical redominate. These vilag- face life either in a re u- ap or as slum-dwellers sur- n minimal wages given mn- bour in Israel. Attacks on nfiscated property then be- he basis for clearing out in surrotuding areas. G 16,000 college students in n 1970 there were 200 There is universal discrim- by landlords against Arabs, Austries are closed to them, on. A "sabra", or native- aeli, is a mark of distinc- t if a sabra is an Arab doesn't count. It is always g how many so-called lib- fend a state whose princi- so alien to ours. entry deliberately set up to al privileges to one relig- racial group can preserve ept of equality that minor- omatically demand h e r e, e Israelis worry over t h e hgh Arab birth rate, engage in endless court cases to decide who is Jewish (and thereby receive le- gal advantages), even newspaper ads are taken out by right-wing groups encouraging the country to rid itself of foreign elements. Could Palestinians convert to Judaism and gain their rights? Security laws forbid this, nor can they mar- rv into the faith without prior con- version The violent reaction that always results when this subject is brought Up is as much a matter of econo- mics as one of misplaced religious identificaion Over $50 million is spent on this cause by Zionists an- nually in the U.S. alone. This in- cludes sponsoring of demonstra- tions and cash payments to Senat- ors who vote on financial aid bills. This investment pays off. In the decade 1960-70 direct government assistance (excluding compensa- tion), the sale of Israeli bonds, and tax-exempt private contributions amounted to over $4 billion. The sales of the Israel Bond organiza- tion along in the U.S. in 1972 was $270,000,000 -- going to a popula- tion of only three million. Any pub- lie criticistn damages the coun- try's inage and threatens this flow of cash. In the past, dona- tions have risen and fallen drama- tically depending on the level of crisis in the Middle East, reaching . peaks when Israel is at war. To even out these irregularities, an, institution was recently established in Jerusalem to train personnel in the art of fund-raising, which is referred to there as "taxing the diaspora". THIS ELABORATE HOAX has resulted in a continuous drain on western economies for decades, at a time when Arab countries are be- coming increasingly profitable be- cause of oil interests there and Arab investment in western coun- tries. Defending Israeli's "right" to exist is not only irrational but expensive. In spite of billions in foreign aid, Israelis have the highest per capita national debt in the world. T h e i r tourist industry is greatly depend- ent on areas seized from Jordan and Egypt in 1967. The much-pub- licized kibbutz (commune) system, built largely on Arab land, exists on state subsidies and the inex- pensive labour of idealistic fore- igners. The familiar problems of treet crime, a military industrial complex, air pollution, social in- equities, and an unstable econ- omy belie the reverence and mys- tique surrounding Israel in t h e popular image. ZIONISM and antisemitism share the point of view that Jewish . dividuals aren't compatible with those who are not. This is why in Europe those very governments where antisemitism was prevalent were once approached for support of a colonial enterprise in Pales- tine, in order to solve their ethnic problems. This is why "go to Is- rael" is an epithet in Russia. To be consistent, Archie Bunker would favor Israel as a place (he would say) to send all the so and so's. Peace depends ultimately on jus- tice and not military strength. No lasting settlement will obtain un- less Palestinians are given much more than token rights in t h e country of their birth. The situa- ,tion is deadlocked: for economic and political reasons Israel must identify its government with a re- ligious group, and this identity is the source of the problem in the first place. AN IMPORTANT part of t h e solution lies not in the UN or the big powers, but with people who will think about just how their charity is spent. It isn't unreason- able to place hope in this., After all, the concept of justice is one of our most cherished Old Testa- ment heritages, and the prophets were outspoken critics of govern- ment policies that are unfortunate- ly familiar today. - , Letters: 'Lone Ranger', To The Daily: BOOKBURNING AND censorship are two phenomena that have his- torically been used as tools of pw- erful governments and political personalities to suppress informa- tion and keep the large body of people uninformed and unexposed to certain ideas. These devices are eemployed on the assumption t h a t the general public must be k e p t ignorant or that the public is too stupid to evaluate the information and judge for itself the releace or truth of this information. Recently in our liberal student community, it has become appar- ent that there is a really irrational fear of being branded "sexist" anti-racial, etc. on the part of some people who are responsible forso me of our local media The more sensational tactic employed to further the cause of radical fem- - nism. Pe-sonally, I am sympathetic to the liberation crusades of t h e American Indian Movement, Gay Liberation, the Advocates of Medi- cal Information and the feminist movement in general, but not at the expense of media censorship. 'The Boys in the Band" does indeed present a tragically stereotyped view of homosexual men, but it must be acknowledged that this, film is not entirely unlacking in cinematic and dramatic value. The problems faced by the individuals -in this film are essentially human dilemtmas, people forced to play a role that society demands of them. Beyond the pathetic fagginess and bitnhiness. ano mlipunti *1 m critical judgment. This basic argument holds true for the airing of "The Lone Rang- er". Any damage that the portrayal of Tonto has caused is a part of history. I rather doubt that at- one these days rea ly takes any- thing the. Lone Ranger atid Tonto do very seriously. Tonto is a fic- tion part of Aterican nostalgia and if we still retain -a sense o humor- we can accept his role in a myth that is no longer ptevalent. It is just as silly to think that Tontos "lackey' image is somehow dele- terious to the contemporary Native American as Spiro Agnew's hnage is deleterious to the contemporary Greek. I STRONiL fA\OR and Ldoi- -uite the riht of m mntr~ ien to 'Boys'd material presentable or unpresent- able on the basis of minority sen- sitivity to the subject, we will soon arrive at a- point where nothing can be viewed, aired, or published because someone, somewhere will be offended. Imaginative dialogue is the key to constructive change and critical awareness of certain problems, -not censorship and suppression -Phil Nash Grad Student April 10 Obiscei e' ad To 'The Daily: rI 'I) IT extremely offensive that The Daily publishes obscene advertisements in its "Personal" cIohnnhes as onmiblnh ufor e fended don't even discuss with my b o y- friend. When I ent to see Kristin and told him what I thought of his questionnaire and people like ,him he just smiled and told me that I'm too young to understand. what was going on (I'm 20). People like him should be treated the same or worse than those "masage parlor" women you exposed earlier, and a newspaper like yours should ;got encourage wife-swapping or accept ads from perverts. How can you justify this? -Mary Howard '73 April 16 Picking weed o i. t' J91 51 U F7r-