Page 8-Tuesday, July 11, 1978-The Michigan Daily . Gi f l V Tax cut LANSING (UPI) - The tax revolt stormed the state capital yesterday, carried by cheering supporters of a California-style tax cut who filed petitions to place the issue on the November ballot. The first hurdle behind them, they vowed to continue to fight expected challenges from hostile bureaucrats and elected officials as well as proponents of rival tax reform measures. "THIS WILL BE the damndest political fight you've ever seen in your life," Shiawassee County Drain Commissioner Robert Tisch boomed to supporters after entrusting boxes of petitions bearing 328,000 signatures to state election officials. They needed 266,000 valid signatures to qualify for a spot on the ballot. "If for some reason we are not on the ballot, somebody had better be prepared for the biggest march on Lansing and the biggest housecleaning in the legislature you've ever seen in your life," Tisch said. "And I'll be first in line." ESTABLISHED politicians and candidates already have lined up on both sides of the Tisch plan - most of them among the opposition. Gov. William Milliken said the tax cut would have "a very serious im- pact on the support of schools at the local level. It would have a very serious impact on the ability to sup- port local law enforcement organizations, for example, the local sheriff departments." He said a rival tax limitation plan is 'a very responsible and very carefully drawn proposition" - although he stopped short of giving it his personal endorsement. TISCH, AUTHOR of the measure to cut property taxes in half and limit other taxes patterned after Califor- nia's voter-approved Proposition 13, abandoned his plan to camp out on the Secretary of State's doorstep until the petitions are validated - or rejected - by the Board of State Canvassers. But he and his followers, who moun- ted an apparently successful petition drive to amend the state Constitution in just over two months, still fumed with suspicion of state officials. heads for ballot AP Photo ROBERT TISCH holds up a petition bearing signatures that were not counted as part of the 328,000 signatures presented to the Secretary of State's office in Lansing yesterday, just one hour before the filing deadline. Ed Stepan of Warren, a sales "People were so anxious to have engineer who brought nearly 33,000 this thing go through that they, of signatures to Lansing he said were their own will, printed their own collected in four days in Macomb petitions. But they failed to print them County, was asked if he was a public on the back. They're no good. official. "It's an indication that people have had enough of Michigan's damn "NO. I WORK for a living," he said. government up to here and we're not Tisch, an obscure county official going to take it any more," he said. before he started his petition drive He described a rival proposal to April 29, said all obviously defective limit state taxation and spending petitions were weeded out. Some of near current levels as a "bunch of them, he said, were homemade. crap." When ev( Years got 1 the si the fi the m cared ratin TO peof to kt elect samel So. porC one I tionl THREATENS TO BLOW UP OFFICE IN SKYSCRAPER: I Machinist takes four hostages NEW YORK (AP) - A Polish- IT WAS NOT clear how Fraczek, law. speaking machinist who wanted more from Brooklyn, could have gotten 8 "Be evidently spent it and told us he money for an on-the-job injury took four pounds of explosives into the building was not working and he insisted upon persons hostage yesterday in the World as he claimed, receiving more money," Cooperman Trade Center and threatened to blow up A tesm of police negotiators was said. The board chairman added that the office where he was cornered with cashed in under the command of Capt. Fraczek was told he would have to what he said was 80 pounds of Frank Bolz to negotiate release of the present proof that the amount he dynamite. hostages. The team, trained to avoid already had received was insufficient "I haves bomb here and I'm going to overt actionsathat might trigger violen- compensation for the injury. This effort set it off it I don't get money," the man, ce, also called ina Polish interpreter. apparently had bogged down in a series Ladislaw Fraczek, in his 50s, was said The four hostages were identified as of delays, angering Fraczek. have told his lawyer, who was among Workers Compensation Board referee Cooperman said he had been told that he hostages. outs Jerome, court reporter Clarence Fraczek had picked up considerable THOUSANDS OF office workers Douglas, state insurance fund lawyer knowledge about explosives during were evacuated from one tower of the Salvatore 'Ciaccio and Fraczek's World War I. He came here from twin-towered, 110-story skyscraper, the lawyer, whose name was not im- Poland abut four yesrs ago, was city's tallest.mediately known.ar g At one point, Police Lt. Frank Reilly studying for his citizenship and was said: ARTHUR COOPERMAN, chairman taking English lessons. "He said he had 80 pounds of of the compensation board, said Frac- At Fraczek's request, Bloeslau Wier- dynamite. I'm no explosives expert but zek lost two fingers in an industrial ac- zbianski, editor of the Polish Daily if that went off it would take out two or cident in 1975 and was awarded $6,000in News, was summoned. So was a Roman .,.. --------compensation,-the maximum under the - -Catholiepriest-. --