BREAKING AN ARMS PROMISE See editorial page .: ' LIEt i ai1 CRYSTALLINE High 23 Low- 100 See Today for details Vol. IXXXViII, No. 93 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, January 22, 1978 Ten Cents 8 Pages Plus Supplement I-mo Carter proposes cutting taxes and business deductions From Wire Service Reports WASHINGTON - President Carter yesterday proposed a $24.5 billion tax cut - designed to help ease the pain of higher Social Security taxes and infla- tion - aimed at low-and moderate-in- come people who file uncomplicated tax returns. Carter also proposed a more exten- sive tax "reform" program than antici- pated, including an end to tax deduc- tions for many state and local taxes such as gasoline and sales taxes, sharp curbs on medical expense deductions and new curbs on tax shelters. BUSINESSES also would pay lower taxes and would benefit from several new incentives, including an expanded investment tax credit - but would lose such advantages as deferral of taxes on foreign operations and most entertain- ment expenses. CARTER'S TAX proposals come down hard on some of the business com- munity's favorite - and sometimes most pleasurable - practices, saying they are financed at the expense of gov- ernment revenues. - As widely anticipated, the admini- stration's proposals would cut by 50 per cent the amount of currently deductible business entertainment expenses for food and beverages. MOST OF THE individual tax cut was aimed at low-and moderate-income taxpayers, with 94 per cent of the bene- fits going to those making less than $30,000, he said. For a family of four, taking into ac- count $3.9 billion in recently enacted So- cial Security tax increases, the average Carter tax cut would amount to $216 at $15,000 income, $150 at $20,000 income, and $24 at $30,000 income. A family making $40,000 would pay a tax in- crease of $80, however, and at $100,000 income the tax increase-would be $888. Here is a breakdown of the proposals: " $23.5 billion in individual tax cuts in 1979, brought about by lower tax rates and a new $240-per-person individual tax credit to replace the current $750 per person deduction. A credit general- ly is more valuable than a deduction to taxpayers in lower brackets, and the new credit would benefit those making about $22,000 or less. " $6.8 billion in net individual tax "re- forms" to offset the above cuts and leave a net reduction of $16.7 billion. Most reforms involve curbs or elimina- tion of itemized deductions such as the end to federal deductions for state and local gasoline and sales taxes, and lim- iting medical and casualty deductions Carter to amounts in excess of 10 per cent of income. Medical deductions now are limited to the excess of 3 per cent of in- come. " $8.4 billion in corporate tax rate cuts from 48 per cent to 46 per cent at the highest income level and a libera- lized investment tax credit, which would permit business structures such as buildings to be claimed for the first See CARTER, Page 3 Chic sheik skis His headdress flapping in the wind, Sheik Abdul Haddad of Lebanon, wea'ring the latest in "chic sheik" skiing apparel, demonstrates his Middle Eastern ski technique on the slopes at Winter Park, Colorado. U. S. ARMS TO EGYPT R EQUESTED: Sadat raps Begin in address From Wire Service Reports CAIRO, Egypt President Anwar Sadat accused Israeli leaders-yester- day of sabotaging peace negotiations and sdeclared, "They are in the defendants' box before the court of world history." In a speech clearly aimed at arousing Israeli and U.S public opinion against the administration of Prime Minister Menahem Begin. Sadat told the Egyptian parliament there is "hopelessness in our breasts" and that Israeli intransi- gence resulted from U.S arms sales to the Jewish state. DURING A meeting Friday with Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, Sadat said, °he asked the United States to sell Egypt the same kinds and quantity of weapons Israel is allowed to buy. U.S. policy has been to sell Egypt only small quantities of non-lethal weapons. "I have asked him (President 'Carter) not to put an embargo on us," Sadat said in the emotional, sometimes angry, speech, which was broadcast live on national television and radio. "I'm telling the U.S. people here is the result of the limitless arsenal that you gave, which makes a person like Begin say he does not need the recog- thing of an anti-climax because Sadat offered no new proposals for resuming the negotiations, broken off last Wednesday when he recalled his foreign minister from Jerusalem. SADAT TOLD the assembly Israeli leaders had deliberately undermined his peace initiative, begun in Novem- ber when he visited Jerusalem. The only way to achieve peace, he said, was for Israeli leaders to aban- don "their expansionist aims" and stop negotiating with deceit. "I say the door to peace is still open," Sadat said, "but on one condi- tion - no treading on sovereignty or on land, here or there." The Egyptian leader revealed that in preliminary talks with Israeli Defense Minister Ezer Weizman in December he had threatened war if Israel insisted on keeping 20 Jewish settlements in the Sinai Peninsula after it was returned to Egypt. "If you are serious about this," Sadat said he told Weizman, "please tell Begin that I will not allow a single settlement or give up a square inch of my land even if this requires that I fight you to the ends of the earth." Renter's tax credit Sadat nition of Egypt," Sadat declared. "FOR THE information of the stupid Soviet Union, I broke off the negotiations because Israel did not agree to specific mention of with- drawal from the (Syrian) Golan Heights, the (Jordanian) West Bank and Gaza before mention of Sinai,"' Sadat said. The Soviets and Syrians have accused Sadat of seeking a separate peace with Israel at the expense of Egypt's former Arab allies. The 102-minute speech was some- yields By MITCH MAR Michigan apartment have a tax credit coming the time to read their sta booklet. Although somewhat con 1977 General Property 7 available to renters in p come Tax form MI-1040 C renters a similar credit to owners. ACCORDING TO the should multiply your tota by 17 per cent ( .17) . The figure your share of the a fee of your apartment (s agement agent for this an' The next step is to " household income by 3.5 p and subtract the income t rental total. happy. returns, GO - The final step is to multiply the num- renters may ber you have left by 60 per cent (.60) te income tax and the remaining figure is your prop- erty tax credit. nplicated, the According to the booklet, this credit Tax Credit is may not exceed $1,200. art III of In- AS AN EXAMPLE, if your total rent R-4, and gives and annual'fee for 1977 was $1,440 ($120 that of home- a month) and your total income was $2,000 you are entitled to a property tax e form, you credit of $44.80 on your income tax. A rent for 1977 - To include the credit in your Michi- n add to that gan income tax report, the final figure innual service should be carried to line 22 of the MI nee your man 1040 form and the entire 1040-4 form eeourshould be attached to your income tax multiply your return. er cent (.035) As part of your income tax return, the total from the property tax credit claim is also due April 17, 1978. Daily Photo by PETER SERLING Engineering student Ken Urtel plugs away diligently at his Saturday night studies in the Undergraduate Library snack bar. ef Academc1 anxiety jitters m--ore nerves Escaped Cambodian describes atrocities By DENNIS SABO Tuition and dorm rates aren't the only student problems on the rise around campus. "Generally speaking, there has been an increase in emo- tional and physical problems among students," said Ken Newbury, a pilot program aca- demic counselor. Newbury said the problems students are facing, especially those of freshpersons, range from depression and muscle tension to ulcers. "The problems students are facing are real," Newbury added, "I've seen students crying after doing well on an exam. It's not uncommon for someone to get an 'a' on an .See ANXIETY, Page 2 WASHINGTON (AP)- Pin Yathay escaped from his native Cambodia after two years of seeing starving people in hospitals hide the bodies of the dead so they could eat them. He saw his parents, his brothers and sisters, and his children die, one by one. ' Yathay, a 34-year-old civil en- gineer, arrived in Washington Fri- day, telling his story under the auspices of the American Security Council, a private group which supports and lobbies for American military spending. He said at least 2.5 million people, of a total population of six million, have died since the communist Khmer Rouge took power in Cam- Rouge took power. After a moment of stupefaction, all the people in the city were happy. They acclaimed the victors. We thought peace had ar- rived and we'd be able to work after five years of disaster and destruc- tion. "But after a few hours, the order came to evacuate the city of Phnom Penh. Everyone had to leave - soldiers, civilians, monks, the wounded and sick, even women giving birth. "WE WALKED in single file. A lot of the children and the sick died on the way. After 10 days, we crossed a river and reached Cheu Khmarr. The next day, the work in the fields began. We worked 12 hours a day; l .._. AN OUNCE OF PREVENTION: Women targets of night crime By JULIE ROVNER It is 11:10 on a Wednesday night. A woman emerges from the Undergraduate Library, anxious to get home. She sighs in disgust as she realizes the next Nite Owl bus won't leave for another 20 minutes and decides to walk. As she gets further from campus she begins to get college campuses: it's dangerous to walk around at night alone. In the past few weeks, with the reports of slayings of three women in a sorority house at Florida State University and a series of knife attacks at Michigan State, women here have become more aware, but not necessarily more careful. "People aren't taking as many precautions as don't sit around and talk about it anymore, but nobody walks alone, either," she said. "I think last year there was a lot of peer pressure not to go out by yourself," said Berke. "People would get yelled at by their friends if they did.it, so they rode the bus or found an escort." Escort services are still available for those who