Page 4 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, May 29, 1985 President unveils tax plan POLICE (Continued from Page 1), from 46 percent to 33 percent; curtail full deductibility of mortgage interest write-offs for business meals and on primary homes while limiting the T E S eliminate deductions for business en- deduction for interest on other loans tertainment expenses; cut top capital to $5,000. gains rate from 20 percent to 17.5 per- In general, people at the highest and cent; and repeal investment tax lowest ends of the income ladder Murder arraignmen credit. would benefit most under Reagan's The proposal also: increases the pldIbressong simplocity Reagan'postponed personal exemption to $2,000 and plan. In stressing simp, i ..ty ,a boosts the income threshold where saaol ato l apyr ol have to fill out returns and only one in taxes begin, eliminates deductions for four would find it to their advantage to all state and local taxes and retains itemize their deductions. 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And practice your interviewing skills in the privacy of your own home with the special interactional exercise at the end of the tape. AND MUCH, MUCH MORE. So don't delay. To order: Use your MasterCard or Visa and call TOLL FREE: 1-800-437-0707 (Outside New York) 1-800-942-1916 (Within New York State) or Send Check or Money Order for $49.95 plus $3.75 postage and handling to: Bennu Productions, Inc. 165 Madison Avenue (Dept. MU2) New York, New York 10016 Give yourself the edge you will need in today's highly competitive job market. Reserve your tape today. Specify VHS or BETA. New York State residents please add applicable sales tax. A 23-year-old Ann Arbor resident was stabbed to death during a fight last Friday night, according to Sgt. Jan Suomola of the Ann Arbor Police Department. Gary Harris died shortly after reaching the University Hospital. He was stabbed in the lower neck in his home in the 2700 block of Adrienne, off South Maple between Liberty and Pauline. Police have a suspect in custody but will not release the suspect's name until his arraignment. The arraign- ment, scheduled for yesterday after- noon, was postponed when the prosecutor's office requested more time for investigation, according to police detectives. This is the second Ann Arbor mur- der of the year. The first murder oc- curred last week. Robberies reported A suspect entered the Quik 'n' Pik store at 1926 South Industrial High- way late Sunday and punched a 22- year-old Ypsilanti clerk several times. The suspect fled after taking some cigarettes and beer. A 16-year-old boy from Ypsilanti was robbed of his gold necklace around 10 Sunday. Two suspects ap- proached him at Fox Village, looked at the necklace and pulled it off his neck. Although one suspect pretended to have a weapon, no weapon was seen. The necklace is valued at less than $175. Weekend thefts reporte A burglar entered a home in the 300 block of Oakland through an unlocked door and took stereo equipment valued at less than $275, according to Sgt. Jan Suomola of the Ann Arbor Police Department. A key was used to enter a home in the 600 block of E. Huron on Saturday morning, and the thief stole cash and jewelry valued at less than $250. Two pipes were stolen Saturday evening when a suspect entered a house in the 300 block of South Division through an unlocked door. Police do not know the value of the pipes. Finally, a student's purse was stolen from the Graduate Library Friday morning. The larceny resulted in a loss of $13, said Campus Security Director Leo Heatley. - Laura Bischoff STANLEY H.iKAPL ANH - OAL V 48. C-N ER. IN BRIEF From United Press International Radical Christians relationship to the Danish jet set- ter after telling the judge at von protest in D.C. Bulow's attempted murder retrial WASHINGTON - Radical she had damaging new testimony Christians protesting against to offer. issues ranging from abortion to Explosion injures 16 nuclear weapons fanned out across JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - the nation's capital yesterday in A suspected bomb ripped through a demonstrations that defied the law downtown army office yesterday and resulted in mass arrests. injuring 16 people, as the gover- About 800 people from the United nment attempt to spy on South States and Canada participated in African guerrillas in Angola. the "Peace Pentecost 1985" Witnesses said the explosion weekend sponsored by the Sojour- came minutes after a soldier ners, a communal religious reported a suspicious-looking organization, culminating in the shoebox found on an inside fire acts of civil disobedience. % escape at the army office in down- A total of 250 planned to be town Johannesburg. The buildinig arrested for praying in "restricted was in the process of being areas' at the White House, State was wn th being Department, Supreme Court, evacuated when the blast oc- Department of Health and Human curred. Servces andtheembasie of Police and ambulance attendan-' Services, and the embassies of ts said12wiecviastwba- South Africa and the Soviet Union. ks and 1w white civilians, two blac- ksadtwo white conscripte were Officials fight typhoid injured when an explosion rocked DHAKA, Bangladesh - Yester- the army's regional medical com- .B a .i. t mand headquarters on the second day Bangladeshi officials battled floor of a bank building. to prevent an outbreak of typhoid on islands littered with corpses and animal carcasses following a cyclone and tidal waves the gover- nment said may have killed up to 10,000 people. The death toll from Friday's cyclone, which sent huge waves crashing over hundreds of small islands off the southeastern coast of one of the world's most im- poverished nations, stood at 1,400 confirmed dead and 325 to 420 missing. But the fatality figure reflected only the number of people known to have been buried. voiBulow's former mistress testifies PROVIDENCE, RI. - Claus von Hulow watched his wealthy wife sink deeper and deeper into her first coma and waited until she was on "the verge of dying" before he made a call and "saved her life," his former mistress testified yesterday. Raven-haired Alexandra Isles, a former soap-opera actress flown in from a European hideaway to testify, began detailing her Iran, Iraq, trade fire TEHRAN, Iran - Iraqi war- planes raided the Iranian capital of Tehran twice within four hours yesteray and pounded five other cities, killing at least six people, and Iran retaliated with a long- range missile attack on Baghdad. ' It was the second straight day of air attacks on each other's cities and border settlements following a seven-week lull in the 41%-year-old Persian Gulf war. Military statements in Baghdad said 63 Iraqi warplanes raided the Iranian towns of Iam, Abadan, and Sar Pol-E Zahab and the campsdof Baneh, Mairawan, Khaneh and Ein Khosh early Tuesday. More raids were launched four hours later on the same cities by 42 jets, as well as on the city of Dhalaran, the agency said. In retaliation for the attacks on Tehran, Iranian forces fired a sur- face-to-surface missile on Bagh- dad - the first in more than six weeks - and warned civilians to run for their lives. Vol. XCV -'No. 7-S The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745,967 X) is published Tuesday through Sunday during the fall and winter terms and Tuesday through Saturday during the spring and summer terms by students at The University of Michigan. 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