Pae 10--Friday, March 13, 1981-The Michigan Daily 300 taxpayers hail new Tisch tax plan 0 LANSING (UPI)-About 300 angry property taxpayers hailed the introduc- tion of the "Tisch III" tax slashing proposal outside the Capitol yesterday while inside key lawmakers neared agreement on a more modest plan. Shiawassee County Drain Com- missioner Robert Tisch's third tax cut- ting proposal was introduced in the Senate earlier in hopes legislators can be persuaded to put the proposed con- stitutional amendment on- a planned May special ballot. "WE'RE EITHER going to be on that ballot or we're going to'raise particular h-e-double-l," Tisch shouted to the demonstrators, most of whome were from Oakland County. Boisterous members of the newly formed Citizens Urging Rollback rallied outside the governor's open of- fice window-where inside he was meeting with top lawmakers on their own tax reform plan-chanting ''We want Milliken." Their earlier attempts to meet with the governor were unsuccessful. THE NEW TISCH proposal, billed by sponsor Sen. John Welborn as "more moderate" than the two previous plans rejected by voters, would reduce property taxes by one-third over the next two years and cost the state as much as $2.7 billion annually. The Tisch plan would cut property taxes by 16 percent this year and by a total of 25 percent in 1982. Senior citizens would be exempt from most property taxes, and property assessments could not be increased by more than two percent' annually without voter approval. IT ALSO REQUIRES a two-thirds vote of the legislature or approval of a majority of voters to increase such state fees as hunting licenses and college tuition more than five percent in a single year. Welborn, (R-Kalamazoo) said he will attempt to trade support for placing the Milliken-legislative plan on the May 19 ballot for votes to put the Tisch proposal before voters at the same time. LAWMAKERS have only until next Thursday to put any plan on the ballot. AP Photo OVER 300 TAXPAYERS rally outside Governor William Milliken's office window yesterday to hail the introduction of "Tisch III." Robert Tisch's new tax plan would reduce property taxes by one-third over the next two years. SURGICAL SCRUBSUITS Authentic, Comfortable & Roomy COLORS AVAILABLE: White Jade Green Blue Misty Green SIZES: Small, Medium, Large Shirt-$7.75 Each; Pants-$8.75 Each Complete Set $14.75 SPECIAL GROUP OFFER (Buy I dz. SETS any mix) $14.00 Each Set ADD 754 EACH ITEM FOR POSTAGE & HANDLING Mail Check or Money Order To: DR. TOPS 1000 South 21st St. Paducah, Kentucky 42001 Allow 4 weeks delivery, Add 5% Sales Tax in KY. PAKISTAN AGREES TO FREE POLITICAL PRISONERS: Hi'ackers to free hostages From UPI and AP DAMASCUS, Syria-Minutes before the threatened execution of three Americans, Pakistan gave in to the demands of three Pakistani terrorists yesterday and agreed to release 55 political prisoners in exchange for 102 hostages held aboard a hijacked jet for 11 days. The breakthrough came literally moments before the terroirsts, who have already killed one hostage, threatened to "execute" three Americans among their hostages, including an Iowa millionaire, ac- cusing them of being CIA agents. PAKISTANI SOURCES said Pakistan also agreed to pay $50,000 ransom, and a Pakistani official an- nounced the hijackers would seek asylum in Libya. "It is over," Pakistan's ambassador to Syria, Safraz Khan, told reporters at Damascus airport. "There is no longer any deadline. It is a matter of time now and I don't anticipate any difficulties at all in the process.'' But Khan, a major general, added that it could take several days to work out the details for releasing political prisoners jailed in Pakistan. He said the prisoners were held in scattered locations in Pakistan and that six of the activists were not in jail as far as the government knew. THE HIJACKERS said they would release their prisoners as soon as the details of the exchange had been completed. The hijackers, who seized the Pakistani airliner 11 days ago and flew it first to Afghanistan and then to Damascus, had also threatened to blow up the plane, themselves and more than 100 hostages unless their demands were met by 11 a.m. EST. President Reagan spoke to reporters shortly after the Pakistani government agreed to the hijackers' demand for the release of 55 political prisoners. "I think they zeroed in, of course, on the@ Americans," Reagan said. "The threat was aimed at them. I hope they're free and safe." A WHITE HOUSE press spokeswoman said the Reagan administration brought no pressure on Pakistan to free the political prisoners. "We did nothing to tell the Pakistanis to release any people," said White House deputy press secretary Karna Small. The administration applied "absolutely no pressure on Pakistan to release any prisoners," she said. "It's our hope that the culprits be brought to justice," she added. Atlanta police suspect 'copy cat' killers exist In concert march 25 hill cud ATLANTA (UPI) Publicity surroun- ding the deaths of 20 Atlanta black children may have created a "copy cat killer," the county district attorney said yesterday. Public pressure prompted police to create a special task force last July, almost a year after the first child disappeared, and Fulton County District Attorney Lewis Slaton said he tends to lump together the six or seven deaths that began in August. The tast force currently lists 21 cases. including the disappearance last Sep- tember of 10-year-old Darron Glass, but Slaton says he doubts that all were the work of a single killer. In an earlier interview copyrighted by the Atlanta Constitution, Slaton said the mystery may involve as many as 10 different killers, only one or two of whom committed more than one slaying. Enlarging on that, Slaton said there have almost always been a few deaths of children between the ages of 9 and 15, recalling that a half dozen occurred in 1976. He said he believes the only the last six or seven killings - beginning withO the death of 12-year-old Charles Stevens last August - are related. He said ex- ceptions to that involve three deaths earlier in the case. 1 r Tickets are $11.75, $10.75 and $9.75 and are available at the Michigan Union boxoffice (11:30-5:30 M thru F, no checks accepted), and CTC outlets (now at Ware House Rec- ords). A MAJOR EVENTS PRESENTATION Tr-SHIRT 'P DINT!N Ann Arbor's fastest! From 10-800 T-shirts screenprint- ed within 24 hours of order.' Multi-color printing our specialty. You supply art or use our expert design staff. Hundreds of surplus T-shirts only $2. each. Located behind the Bind Pig Cate 208"ts First St Phone 994-1367 AR There's (Continued from Page7) In the past, Rebecca Stucki's charac- terizations have been burdened with a certain flatness and in- distinguishability. Here, under the capable direction of Terryl Hallquist, Stucki exudes a vivid charm and inner beauty that overshadow her less remarkable roles of years past. Perhaps the secret is simply that for once she has been cast in a role bearing some general correspondence to Stucki's actual age, rather than her usual role as an overbearing hag. IT WOULD HAVE been nice if James Pawlak had seen fit to study the quiet elegance with which his colleagues convey their affections. As Jay's brother, Ralph, Pawlak is supposed to project a persona of boisterous loutishness-but why must he do it so loudly? The man's prominent un- pleasantness and his vast reservoir of bubbling insecurity could as easily (and far more movingly) have been played in a lower register. Yet with that single exception, the cast is consistently and delightfully proficient. Alex Miller has left his customary cuteness over at the Ann Arbor Civic Theatre (where it belongs), Elizabeth Gordon goes about her silent suffering quite eloquently, Warren Eveland gets up a nice head of bluster as Mary's father, and Sheridan Hunt is up to something deliciously quirky as Aunt Hannah. Ten-year-old Jonathan Lax, too, of- fers a relaxed naturalness quite un- common his side of puberty. He, like director Hallquist, seems to have lear- ned the unlearnable beauty of under- statement that here so thoroughly com- plements Mosel's thoughtful wistful drama. To be briefer about it, the play is wor- th all 250 pennies of the ticket price-and then some. New All Media production weaker than earlier efforts no play like 'Home' 46He is young, handsome, an absolutely professional actor and the possessor of a well-focused baritone voice - it projects well and is used with security. - The New York Times (Continued from Page 7) power-pop hilarity ("Sexland") to limp Alice Cooper paranoia ("Angry Poodles"). Lead singer Mazure is cursed with an uncanny facial resemblance to Mick Jagger, which doesn't suit his style at all: he sings in a pleasant, monotone shout, and frisks around stage like the local paperboy on a tear. The rest of the ensemble, Pat Grimes on guitar, Joe Jakubiec on drums, bassist Jim Osborn, and Rob Simnonds, syn- thesizer, definitely have it together. Hopefully, we'll be hearing more from them. THE LIGHTING and stage effects are nice: Mazure, a union stagehand who's designed lights for the B-52s and the Talking Heads, put them together with spectacular, if rather conventional results. The rather dull slide projec- tions are a disappointment, as are the video interludes; they are boring, tacky, and add nothing to the show. White Lies' set began with a mock TV news broadcast announcing that dogs are taking over the White House, as a lead-in to "Angry Poodles". This, like Dr. Snow's Cooking On The Run", a video skit reminiscent of Cheech and Chong's druggy stuff, isn't very funny, and falls rather flat as a result. Mazure and company have the skill to put across a lot of messages, and an in- triguing method of doing it - if only they could find something to say. The Banned, which opened for White Lies Wednesday and Thursday nights, is a decent collegiate group, composed of Tom Keating-vocals, Jim Osborn- bass, and, a drummer whose name I didn't catch (sorry, local band freaks). They played what sounded like a mix- ture of Clash and Bruce Springsteen, good-sounding rock noir. Contraband, a Detroit-based combo, will warm-up for White Lies tonight and Saturday. WOODWORKING WORKSHOPS STUDENTS STAFF/FACULTY ALUMNI akan Hagegard, Baritone Schubert: Five songs Wilhelm Stenhammar: Florez and Blanzeflor Ravel: Don Quichotte ai Dulcin&e Ture Rangstrom: King Erik's Songs Frank Martin: Six monologues from "Jedermann" Brahms: Three songs eaturdayMarchl4,at8G30 Basic Woodworking Skills Tuesday: 7-10 pm First Class: March 17 Intermediate Woodworking Skills Monday: 7-10 pm First Class: March 16 Class limit: 12-2/3 enrollment reserved for students. Instructor: DAVID FAUMAN FEES: Students-$18; Staff/Faculty-$27; Others-$36 Basic Carving: One Day Only-Sunday March 15-5-9 pm FEES: Students-$4; Staff/Faculty-$8 Alumni Other-$12 YWejW- ---m m u mmm 1 1 Your choice of 5 popular , Olga "wrapped sandwiches. 6