m OPINION Saturday, January 17, 1981. Page 4 The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Higgins - Vol. XCI, No. 92 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 © 19 H NL'6' Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Looking at Milliken's plan 6 IN HIS STATE of the State address on Thursday, Governor William Milliken outlined a significant tax-cut proposal similar in tone to his ill-fated Proposal C. Although he developed the proposal without consulting legislative leaders, Milliken has indicated that his plan is flexible and open to debate. What the governor really wants, it is clear, is to present a clean, simple plan to the voters-regardless of its origins-that is likely to be approved in time for relief from July property tax billings. Milliken has the right idea. His plan, which would cut most property taxes by more than a third, would utilize a one-percent hike in the sales tax tohelp replace lost revenues. Although the sales tax weighs somewhat more heavily on those of lower incomes, it has been shown that a one-percent in- ciease is quite manageable. (For in- stance, the increase would cost someone earning $20,000 a year only $70.) Further, the sales tax is paid by, tlhe many tourists to our state, easing tle revenue burden on Michigan residents. SThe plan has three additional features to recommend it. First, it is a genuine tax reduction (revenues would be decreased by $250 million) rather than a tax shift-the proposal will therefore appeal to the growing sen- timents that government is too large and must be trimmed back. Second, the plan offers to knock the wind out of inflation by calUing. for mandatory rollbacks in local millage rags equal to annual. increasesbin property tax assessments. This would effectively freeze assessment rates against inflation unless local officials voted to permit increases to take ef- fact. Finally, Milliken's proposal offers a special property tax exemption for senior citizens, meaning that about 95 percent of Michigan homeowners age 65 or over would pay no property taxes. There are problems with the gover- nor's plan, however. By its very nature, it calls for a huge reduction in state revenues, the burden of which must be borne by state and local governments equally. The effects of this reduction on schools, already ex- periencing severe funding problems, gives us pause. Also, because the plan features a 35 percent property tax cut, rather than an across-the-board assessment exemption, it favors upper-income homeowners. Proposal C, which would have provided for a $7,100 assessment exemption, would have favored lower- and middle-income homeowners who need tax relief most desperately. To illustrate: Persons with a $15,000 income and an annual tax bill of about $500 would receive $77 in net tax relief under Milliken's new plan. Under Proposal C, they would have received about $245 in relief. But those with a $50,000 income and a $1,700 tax bill would have a net tax reduction of $340, compared with $80 under the earlier ballot proposal. Clearly,' then, Milliken's plan requires legislative discussion. We hope our representatives have com- passion enough for the beleagured tax- payers of the state to resist political in- fighting and work with the governor on a single tax relief proposal. I tiley refuse and another confu ing ballot fiasco similar to that in Novem- ber results, the oppressed Michigan taxpayers will not sit still for long. A full-blown tax revolt is primed to ex- plode. _r ..} 1 , .2..'. .> :.. ill N. V .:.,'I , >~, _.1ill/ fP t 6 6 r. 4 - Ke on the rise I',., A hero's horrible reward The last months of 1979 and the year 1980 brought a reemergence of a particularly virulent white racism to the very center of American society and politics. Throughout U.S. history, there have been periodic groun- dswells of mass support for anti-black, an- ti-semitic, and/or anti-Catholic ideas: the nativist Know-Nothing movement in Nor- thern cities during the 1840s and 1850s; the white reaction against black reconstruction in the late nineteenth century; the xenophobia and racist/anti-Semitic dogma of the "second" Ku Klux Klan of the Harding and Coolidge administrations; the segregationist South's "Massive Resistance" to the civil rights legislation of the 1950s and 1960s. Only the terrible Red Summer of 1919, when hun- dreds of blacks were slaughtered, lynched, and in some instances publicly burned, ex- ceeded the racial crises of the more recent past. Examples of this new' level of racist terror are almost endless: a cross burning at the home of a Somerset, New Jersey, black community activist in November, 1979; the vicious execution of 22-year-old Jimmy Lee Campbell, a black deaf man, by two white hunters because "they failed to bag a deer in their day's hunting trip," in Oroville, Califor- nia, January, 1980; a nine-year-old black girl shot in Wrightsville, Georgia, in the wake of a rally demanding an end to housing and job discrimination; four black churches firebom- bed in Far Rockaway, New York, in May, 1980; two black teenagers killed by sniper fire in Cincinnati as they walked to a neigh- borhood store in June, 1980; the near-fatal shooting of Vernon Jordan, executive director of the National Urban League, at a motel in Fort Wayne, Indiana; two young black men killed by sniper fire in Salt Lake City, where only days before a burning mattress was thrown on the steps of a black church, and the mysterious murder of at least eleven black children in Atlanta, Georgia. PARTICULARLY TRAGIC were the racial incidents in Youngstown, Ohio. Throughout October, 1980, there were widespread rumors that the Klan intended to plant a bomb at a black high school. Several blacks were chased off the streets by gun-wielding whites. Black-owned automobiles were deliberately shot. Finally, a group of white youths decided to shoot "a couple of niggers" at random. Their victim was a young teenaged black girl who had been playing along the sidewalk in front of her home. The father of one of the By Manning Marable white youths admitted later that he allowed them to use his truck, even though he knew of their plans in advance. At the root of many of these incidents is the black community's historic enemy, the Ku Klux Klan. In its "glory days" of the early 1920s, the KKK entered state and local elec- tions with great success. During 1922 and 1923 the Klan elected governors in Oregon and Georgia, a U.S. Senator from Texas, and hun- dreds of sheriffs, states attorneys, mayors, judges and police commissioners. In 1924 it helped elect governors in Colorado and Maine, won almost complete control of the state of Indiana, and claimed between 3 and 5 million members. On one notorious occasion in August, 1925, over 40,000 robed Klansmen marched down Pennsylvania in Washington. Between the Great Depression and the eve of the modern Civil Rights movement, the Klan almost disappeared as a national force. Yet, according to U.S. Justice Department statistics, from 1954-1965 the KKK was "responsible for 70 bombings in Georgia and Mississippi, 30 Negro Church burnings in Mississippi, the castration of a black man in Birmingham, 10 murders in Alabama, and 50 bombings in Birmingham." AFTER A BRIEF period of decline, the Ku Klux Klan returned as a national force of political importance in the mid-1970s. The hallmark of this newest version of the In- visible Empire might be termed "respectable racism." Klan leader David Duke is typical of the trend. "(Exchanging) his mask and white robe for a three-piece business suit, (Duke) cloaks white supremacy in misleading slogans such as 'reverse discrimination' and neighborhood schools.' He urges his followers to file law suits and the 'use the legal system to reverse the gains of the civil rights movement.' " Even though the facade of respectability exists, the gutter tactics of Klan terrorism remain the same. In 1977 the Klan made headlines by running vigilance patrols along the U.S.-Mexican border in a well-publicized effort to keep undocumented Mexican laborers.from entering the country. In 1978 the Klan mounted a major political offensive in northern Mississippi against the United League, a grassroots coalition of black activists and residents. IN 1979, THE Klan was active in the U.S. Navy yards in Norfolk, Virginia, distributing racist literature and attempting to incite riots between black and white sailors; working closely with anti-busing for- ces in campaigns to halt public school desegregation; brandishing sawed off shotguns and submachine guns, shooting at SCLC marchers at a Decatur, Alabama Civil Rights demonstration; cruising through the black neighborhoods of Birmingham while shooting randomly into blacks' homes; firebombing houses in Atlanta and burning crosses at black'churches, schools and homes in hundreds of cities across the country. In April, 1980, two Klansmen fired their shotguns and wounded four black women on a street in Chattanooga, Tennessee, shortly af- ter two burning crosses were discovered in the black community In July, one of the Klansmen was convicted on a reduced charge after he admitted shooting his gun. The other two Klansmen were acquitted on all charges. The most publicized incident of Klan violence occurred in Greensboro', North Carolina, on November 3, 1979. Ap- proximately 75 anti-Klan demonstrators were meeting in a black housing project in preparation for a march. About 4 armed Klansmen and Nazis drove into the project and provoked an argument. As demon- strators scattered, the racists began shooting. Five unarmed people, all members of the Communist Workers Party, were killed and eleven were wounded. Only 16 out of 40 Klansmen and Nazis at the shooting were indicted, and of that number only 6 were eventually tried. The district at- torney refused to order two U.S. government agents who had infiltrated the groups to testify as witnesses. Defense attorneys forcei all blacks off the jury, and an anti-Communist Cuban exile was selected as jury foreman. Despite overwhelming evidence on television videotape, the all-white jury found the two Nazis and four Klansmen not guilty of riot or murder. The Greensboro executions and the subsequent acquittal of the murderers seemed to many activists to provide legal ap- proval for future Klan/Nazi terrorism. Manning Marable is a leader of the newly formed National Black Independent Political Party and teaches black politics at Cornell University's Africana Studies Center. .0 0I RUMORS ARE circulating in Europe this week that a World War II hero, once believed to have died shiortly after the war, may still be alive-if not well-and living in the Soviet Union. Raoul Wallenberg, a Swede who directly helped save 20,000 East European Jews and who indirectly assisted some 100,000 others, disap- peared toward the end of the war when Soviet troops marched into Budapest, where he had been working. It was believed at the time that the war hero, whose mission had been organized by an American Jewish committee, was being detained by the Soviet military under suspicion of being an American spy. Wallenberg's brand of heroism was unusual. A college graduate (not of a war college but of the University's own School of Architecture), Wallenberg did not participate directly in the war,; but rather intervened to keep innocent civilians from suffering the grisly con- sequences of Nazi policy. It is not clear why the Soviets reacted suspiciously to the magnificent work the Swede had been doing--on paper, at least, he ought to have been a hero to the Soviets as well. Yet despite the fact that most parties concerned firmly believed that Wallenberg was in Soviet custody, the Kremlin denied ever having had con- tact with him. Reports in 1957 that returning prisoners of war had seen him forced the authorities to change their story; they reported that they had been mistaken originally, but that Wallenberg had died in 1947. Understandably, the Swedish gover- nment has never accepted the Soviet version of Wallenberg's fate. Reports have periodically come out that Wallenberg has been seen in Soviet prisons, including the testimony of an ex-prisoner that he met Wallenberg several months after the Soviets say he died. A commission of inquiry is now at work in Stockholm. With perseverance and luck, Wallenberg may yet see the recognition and honor he has coming. It's about. time. 04 LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Questions To the Daily: residen The controversy that has been want a created in the last several weeks tions F regarding the proposed use of Dr. borhoo Kambly's University Center as a truth to "halfway house" for pre-paroles examin returning to Washtenaw County bors ar from Michigan correctional potentia facilities has generated many 1) Is questions. 60-70 p It is easy to say that the halfway about I ts in the area just don't Department of Correc- Facility in their neigh- d. There may be some that statement, but let's e the questions the neigh- re asking themselves and al problems. a building that can house re-paroles a residential y house or a Department he halfway of Corrections institution? student 2) By increasing the number of 6) S convicts in halfway houses, is the require Department of Corrections just of min( taking a convenient way to consid alleviate overcrowded prisons? which 3) Will people feel safe about munity walking, day or night, getting Thou the mail, sunbathing, leaving concep their homes unattended? probler 4) Should residents have to en- at theA dure a substantial decrease in Hearin property value predicted by two 21st.at area real estate agents and the Fire Sta city assessors office? the stre 5) Is a residence of this size to see y located appropriately, that is, in - house t facilities? hould area residents be ed to sacrifice their peace d or should Dr. Kambly be ering more positive options would benefit his com- 9 gh I am not opposed to the t of halfway houses, these ms are real. I intend to be Zoning Board of Appeals g. Wednesday, January 3:00 p.m..in the Central ation on Fifth Ave. (across eet from City Hall). I hope ou there. -Rob Ewing 0 A woman 's lament, To the Daily: A friend tells me that I may not walk him home. There have been women and why are friends who are men either confused or em- barrassed if I hug them? Why is m