4 -pmm mmmm m m m mm -m m m m mmmmmm==== - m w5* of FREE GAMES EVERY MONTH WITH YOUR STUDENT I.D. at 1 1 1 FLIPPER McGEE'S and the ICROSS-EYED MOOSE.! * 4 FREE tokens with this Ad 1 m mm m m m m m mmm m m m ==== mm== m mmm m mn m 1 Page 6-Friday, January 21, 1983-The Michigan Daily Reaga atmidpoint ishoeu I ft 4 p 4 4 4' '.4 Celebration of Jewish Arts presents GEULA GILL World-renowned Israeli singer T Z Z i + " + +T i (Continued from Page 1) dle their own affairs," he added,. stressing that no final decisions have been made. Reagan's comments came a day after his chief economist, Martin Feldstein, disclosed that the administration also is studying an overhaul of the tax system to tax income that is spent on consumer goods and services and exempt income that is saved and invested, such as in stocks and bonds. MEANWHILE, administration of- ficials said the president also may propose soon a tax plan that would let parents defer income taxes on money Harris poll Reagan imu WASHINGTON (AP) - On the second anniversary yesterday of Ronald Reagan's inauguration, pollster Louis Harris said a majority of Americans are losing patience with the president and many believe he should not seek re-eleciton. "Now people have grown to accept as part of their expectations that the next 12 months will bring more business bankruptcies, no relief from the high rate of unemployment, more factories shutting down, more homes and farms being foreclosed, more people going hungry and no healthy recovery," TONIGHT A T SECOND CH ANCE MA SQUE RA DE 516 E. Liberty 994-5360 set aside in special savings accounts set up to pay for their children's educations. These officials, who spoke only on condition that their names not be used, said the idea of an Independent Education Account is similar to the existing Individual Retirement Ac- couts, under which federal taxes can be deferred on income set aside for retirement. While indicating that he likes the flat- rate idea because of its simplicity, Reagan said there are critics who have suggested that the administration might be favoring a flat-rate tax "as if shows age fading Harris saia. THE PRESIDENT'S rating on overall job performance has slipped to 38 percent approving his actions, while 61 percent disapprove. This compares with the 52 percent to 47 percent ap- proval rating a year ago. Among those who said Reagan should not run, 74 percent said they would vote for either former Vice President Walter Mondale or Sen. John Glenn(D-Ohio) two of the leading Democratic conten- ders in 1984. Harris said there was "ample evidence" that the Reagan coalition of two years ago had shattered and that a "counterforce" made up of women, en- vironmentalists and the pro-nuclear freeze movement will dominate American politics for the rest of the 1980's. we are making it possible for those in the upper income brackets to do bet- ter." According to a study by the Treasury Department last year, a pure flat-rate tax system would mean a $40 billion tax cut for people making $50,000 a year or more and a tax increase of the same amount for those making less. A pure version would convert the present range of tax rates, which rise up to 50 percent as income levels rise, into a single - or flat - rate for people of all incomes. Under this concept, the rate of taxation could come down drastically by eliminating all or most of the current deductions, such as mor- tgage interest payments, medical costs and state and local taxes, which now can be subtracted from an individual's taxable income. However, administration officials say Reagan is contemplating a less drastic version. Reagan said he foresaw ''an American economy and an America on the mend." He laid out no timetable for how long it would take to heal the coun- try's economic ailments. The president said "nearly every economic indicator shows us heading into recovery," but he did not mention that unemployment has increased from 7.4 percent when he took office to 10.8 percent last month. NOR DID Reagan, who originally promised a balanced budget by 1983, say anything about the high deficits that have plagued his budgets. The fiscal year 1984 dificit is expected to be about $190 billion. Aides now say Reagan is aiming for a balanced budget by the end of the decade.' After the president's appearance, 4 I Saturday January 29 8pm Michigan Theatre Tickets: $12.50, 10.00, 7.50 Students: $6.50, 5.00, 3.50 GROUP RATES AVAILABLE Advance tickets at the B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation, 1429 Hill St, 663-3336; and at Herb David's Guitar Studio, 302 E. Liberty; IRagan ... entering "a season of hope" Democratic National Chairman Charles Manatt issued a response saying Reagan had put the nation on a course of unfairness and mismanagement, and suggesting the Republican president was seeing things differently from the rest of the country. Without divulging any details of the 1984 budget he will present to Congress on Jan. 31, Reagan promised it would be "fair, realistic, and will pave the way for a strong sustained recovery." "For all our troubles," Reagan summarized, 'midterm finds this ad- ministration and this country entering a season of hope." Although he recently has been besieged with criticism - from business leaders, blacks, and conservatives this week alone - he brushed aside his problems, saying, "You must be doing something right when you're getting rocks thrown at you from both sides." New housing law proposed (Continued frorp Page 1) Crisis Center, the Michigan Student Assembly, and the Public Interest Research Group in Michigan are among the groups which have endorsed the proposal. Ann Arbor Police Chief William Cor- bett and Ann Arbor Fire Chief Fred Schmid have also voiced support for the ordinance, and Peterson said he expec- ts the list to grow. r Save on Classical Blank1 Cassettes and [ape during our Month of Savings Sale! Police notes .) 14 For maxiinum reproduction, tape it on Maxell. Choose from hundreds of high quality Vox/Turnabout Classical Cassettes. Two caught in steam tunnel MAXELL LN 90-Minute Cassette 2-Pack Sale 4*49 Cassette 12-Pack Sale 24.99 t COPLAND Billy the Kid, Rodeo. 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