The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, May 8, 1984 - Page 3 SECOND FRONT PAGE 'U' MAY REIMBURSE WITHHOLDING TAX Congress to solve TA tax conflict By PETE WILLIAMS The question of whether the University must withhold federal taxes from teaching assistants' paychecks may be decided in Congress this month. A joint Congressional committee will try to recon- cile differences between proposed House and Senate bills, which would allow TAs to take home the ap- promiately $75 presently withheld from their salaries each month. "'TAS RECEIVE a tuition waiver that equals about one-third of their tuition," said Daniel Gamble, the University's manager for compensation and staff relations. "When the Interal Revenue law expired, that waiver was considered taxable income so a cer- tain amount of tax was withheld from their paychecks." The University began withholding the federal in- come tax last January when an Internal Revenue Service ruling, section 127, expired. According to University attorney William Lemmer, the expiration of that law left the University no legal choice but to withhold the money. But Celeste Burke, president of the Graduate Student Employees' Organization, the teaching assistants' union disagreed with the University claim. Although the University "may not be wrong in withholding," she said, there was no legal reason for it. BURKE SAID the University chose to withhold the tax to protect itself from federal punitive measures. "It's just a high-priced insurance policy purchased at the price of the graduate students," she said. The decision to withhold the tax shows an insen- sitivity toward teaching assistants, Burke said. "At best, it was just carelessness, and at worst, it was out and out maliciousness," she said. THE UNIVERSITY offered interest-free loans to TAs who were having financial difficulty because of the withholding. Thomas Butts, the University's representative in Washington, said he is working to get the congressional bill passed. "The University is very. concerned about passing the law," he said. "We're not at all happy with the present situation." GEO earlier this year cited a U.S. Treasury memo, which, according to Burke, shows that IRS had never intended for employers to change withholding prac- tices prior to 1985. THE MEMO reads, "The Treasury" Department and the (IRS) will not issue any regulations or rulings altering the tax treatment or non-statuatory fringe benefits prior to January 1, 1985. Present ad- ministrative policy will not be changed during this period." University attorney William Lemmer said GEO was interpreting the treasury memo incorrectly and that, despite Burke's claim, the University has no legal choice but to withhold the money. "They have got an apple and they're trying to make an orange," Lemmer said. "That memo doesn't ap- ply to what we're doing." Both GEO and University officials feel that the issue will soon be resolved with the passage of the 'congressional bill. "The University has a very strong opinion that the bill will be passed," said Gamble. "We are already working on a way to refund the withholding." I Students get choice in dispute over degrees By DAVID VANKER Michigan, passing the exam is man- A student yesterday withdrew her datory in some states and for anyone threat to sue the University over the who intends to become a consultant. degree she received from an unac- IN ADDITION to the choice between credited program in the College of degrees, Klein gained the right to take Engineering last month. the P.E. exam through an appeal to the Mary Klein and five other April accrediting b ard in which she proved graduates will be given a choice bet- she had met their design requirements ween a Bachelor of Science (B.S.) and a through electives. Bachelor of Science in Engineering "All I ever wanted was the degree I (B.S.E.) degree, Associate came in for (B.S.E.) and to take the Engineering Dean Charles Vest said P.E. exam," Klein said yesterday. "I yesterday. wanted to show that my education has KLEIN AND twenty-eight others in been equivalent with other engineers'." the Engineering Physics program last Engineering Physics, separated in month sent a petition to the colleges 1980 from the Engineering Science Executive Committee after they lear- program, provides students with a ned that, contrary to the listing in the stronger background in physics than is college's 1982-83 bulletin, the Ac- available in other engineering depar- crediting Board for Engineering and tments. Technology had refused in 1981 to ac- "To generalize," Vest said, "the credit the program. students who go into a program like According to Vest, Engineering Engineering Physics tend to be more Physics, oriented toward the theory interested in the science than the design rather than the professional practice of and they usually go on to graduate engineering, lacks the engineering school." design credits necessary for cer- Previous Engineering Physics tification. graduates received the B.S.E. degrees, Completion of an approved program - and the issue of accreditation went un- makes a student eligible to take the mentioned until the students filed the Professional Engineers' (P.E.) exam. -petition last month. Though not required of all engineers in Say cheese A Papua tribesman takes a souvenir picture of Pope John Paul II during yes- terday's mass in New Guinea. See In Brief, Page 4. Faculty salaries dropping, report says By GEORGEA KOVANIS University professors' paychecks are far slimmer than those received by their peers at private colleges across the country, according to a report issued by a faculty committee. The report, prepared by the Commit- tee on the Economic Status of the Faculty, showed faculty salartias at the University have been nosediving during the last decade. THE LOSS in faculty salary is because the amounts have not in- creased at the same rate as inflation the report says. Faculty salaries, when adjusted by the consumer price index, fell 17.3 per- cent from 1973-1983, according to the report. Even when using a more con- servative price index - the GNP deflator - as a basis for comparison, faculty salaries dropped 8 percent. The report blames the decrease on the lack of adequate state ap- propriations for higher education. "YOU CAN easily show a 25 percent decline in state support for the Univer- sity of Michigan," said Prof. John Gross, who presented the report to the University regents at their April meeting. Compared to Michigan State and Wayne State Universities, the Univer- sity "has been systematically under- funded," said Gross. As a result, he The salaries fell 10.5 percent compared said, the salaries have decreased. to those at Columbia, 13 percent com- Faculty salaries have dropped pared to MIT, 15 percent compared to significantly below those at other Princeton and 21 percent compared to universities, according to the report. See SALARIES, Page 12 'U'doesn'twant$20,000Byoe gift By GEORGEA KOVANIS English professor, has been trying to The University isn't paying any at- give the University a $20,000 gift it just tention to the old adage that says: Don't won't take. look a gift horse in the mouth. It won't SOUND Ridiculous? even accept the present Prof. Bert Hor- Most professors are assigned to teach nback has to offer. For four months Hornback, an See'U', Page 14