Viewpoint L The Battalion Texas A&M University Tuesday March 10, 1981 ( Slouch By Jim Earle] Taxpayers cheat and clamor cu wa ch ck Tour idea of giving an exam on Friday before recess is a good one, but I should warn you that student hostility may manifest itself in the form of a pie in the face, a cow in the office or the air out of your tires. ” Affirmative action produces ‘rage’ By DAVID S. BRODER WASHINGTON — For weeks now, I have been carrying around a clipping from the Boston Globe about Patrick Ewing, a Cambridge high school senior who was admitted to Georgetown University in Washington for next fall, despite an ack nowledged “reading deficiency” and “slow ness in writing.” An official of his high school wrote the colleges he was considering a letter outlin ing Patrick’s special requirements. Among them were “daily tutoring ... (which) must include covering material with Patrick, some level of explanation of new material, proofreading of papers and help with con struction of papers.” The letter also speci fied that he must have “untimed testing,” because “Pat’s slowness in writing does not give him ample opportunity to express him self. ” If these stipulations seem remarkable, let me add that the letter was written by the high school basketball coach and that Pat rick Ewing is a 7-foot center described by the Globe as “one of the most coveted play ers in the country.” I kept looking at this story and thinking that something was sure to be said about its implications. We all remember the furor over the Bakke case, and the wave of indig nation over the fact that Allan Bakke, a white applicant to a California medical school, had lost his place because, it was alleged, an affirmative-action program gave preference to a black applicant with a lower entrance score. That one was so important it wound up in the Supreme Court. Well, here was young Patrick, whose college admission score was “relatively low” according to his coach, taking someone’s slot at the highly selective Georgetown University. Where was the protest? Strangely enough, none appeared. And then last Wednesday in the Washington Post, Patrick’s fellow- townsman, Harvard political science pro fessor James Q. Wilson, weighed in with a powerful essay attacking affirmative action programs. He expressed the “rage” he said most people feel at policies that aim not at “equality of opportunity” but at “an in crease in the number of blacks, Hispanics, women and minorities” in a school or office or plant. Reading along, I felt sure that my friend Professor Wilson was going to cite the Ew ing case as an example of the invidious re verse discrimination implicit in such prog rams. I could not have been more wrong. “A college,” he declared — perhaps with the Ewing case in mind — “may decide that its purpose is not simply to find the bright- Warped April 15 is still weeks away, I know. But the horrors of filing the annual certi ficate of debt arrive before the last day. I reserve the first weekend following Valentine’s Day to do my taxes, better to claim more business deductions, my dear. I once thought that filling out the 1040 would be a simple matter, and for many years it was. I watched as dad did the re ferencing across tables, looking for depen dents and write-offs. But right-off, when I looked at my first tax form, the Grim Revenuer looked amusedly on. I couldn’t file the short form, that time preserver of the non-self employed. I had my own business, and the records were just incomplete enough that H&R couldn’t help. I learned that I was not a chip off the old block. I had my long 1040 and various other attachments necessary for completing it, most notably the “C” schedule, a form for declaring specific profits and losses in a business. I had to compute a self employment tax, then add all my phone bills, entertainment, car costs and a variety of other deductions to arrive at my profit for the year, which then went on the 1040 form. Total time? Eight hours. The work didn’t bother me too much. I knew that by simply declaring income with out the work, I would lose a substantial chunk of money, having only myself as a dependent and not being over 65 or blind. So on that count I had no gripes. But I was bothered by who paid the most Leftovers By Todd Woodard anyway, guess who’s left. The middled r A6 The system has the single income tins ( wa maker by the ball point pen. Hecan’tts much, because the W-2 says in white just exactly what money went (I j ^ the pike. He can’t afford to invest mo® i shelters because the pressures of ini: eat his buying power from beneathhkl | b e can’t tie up money for six to 12 — " fim declare capital gains. He can’t hidema ; cle because he doesn’t have it, and if lit pul tax. Supposedly, the graduated income tax, which Americans could not stomach in per manent form for more than 100 years, drained people according to their ability to pay. I determined that to be a lie. There are, overgeneralizing here, four groups of taxpayers: the poor, the middle class, the rich and the illegals. While the poor have many problems, taxation is not one of them. Incomes at low levels, if you’ll look at your tax tables, don’t carry high percentage brackets. The rich, who are supposedly taxed at fantastic percentages, 70 percent for incom es of $200,000 or more, often pay conquer able percentages to the poor, because of loopholes their influence has won for them. They’ll be damned if they let fewer loopholes cut into their yachting money. The illegals, like prostitutes, can never file a return and be relatively safe, consider ing the 70,000-person Internal Revenue Service doesn’t have a statistical chance to catch illegals. So, if the rich control taxes by weight of money, and the illegals are incon spicuous, and the poor don’t pay many taxes have it, it wouldn’t be worth hiding,; i the the it sau sai< de: cut ate possible audit. About the only choices Mr. } has is to moonlight or cheat. Ifheirj lights, or his spouse or children worlj cash basis, they can bypass paying tai small sums. Or he can cheat. But with the spectre of audits looi > Wl informers being paid a 10 percentfo Iran information, computers looking over rious filings for oddities, cheatingisM good. So how do taxes and school and relate? Someday, you may be facedwitli cheating dilemma. I have. I didn’t!; ^ possible effects of getting caught, stayed honest. Most college grads do make highersl *By ] ies than non-college workers. Well* , the higher brackets, just high enoughto; (^ j big percentages, but without the do: L s protect our interests. ibnts So you have a clear choice. ClamsK-oni reduced rates and equitable distribuc keet taxation, or wonder whether the Grin: of th venuer will visit you tovuotTO'N. Ov'Gente iater. i"'' est students and make them still brighter but also to have a competitive athletic prog ram, retain the support of generous alumni and offer to students an opportunity to mingle among young persons of different backgrounds, talents and interests” — pre sumably including individuals of exception al height, coordination and agility. But, he said, that principle does not apply to institutions where access “is judged solely, or principally, by the merit of its members and the excellence of its prac tices.” Specifically, it does not, according to Professor Wilson, apply to the faculty of arts and sciences at his own Harvard University, whose dabbling with affirmative action hir ing apparently had triggered his denuncia tion. When I read that, I knew what I wanted to say about the Patrick Ewing story. First, I am glad he is getting a chance at a George town education and I hope he makes it. One of the many virtues of that great university is that it has recognized its special obliga tion to the city in which it is located by running an effective program to identify promising minority students and giving them the financial and academic help they need to reach their potential. Few of them, incidentally, are 7-foot centers. But I felt a lot less comfortable about what the Ewing case said about the value- system that most of us whites, Harvard pro fessors or not, accept. Most of us were nev er outraged about busing, so long as black kids were being bused past white schools to their own segregated classrooms. It was only when white kids were put on buses to go to previously black schools that the prac tice became controversial. It s your turn Assistantships are opportunities Just so with affirmative action. There will be no squawks from Professor Wilson or anyone else so long as affirmative action is confined to 7-foot centers who want only an undergraduate education and are no threat for a faculty job or any other position a better-educated white might want. After all, “a competitive athletic prog ram” does “retain the support of generous alumni,” to say nothing of adding to the enjoyment of the millions of us who have been watching the tournament games on TV this week. But don’t mess around with the Harvard faculty in order to bring in more minorities or women. And don’t give a black kid of average height a medical school slot that “belongs” to a white, just because the black kid might open an office in the ghetto, in stead of the suburbs. That, to quote Professor Wilson, is guaranteed to produce “rage.” Editor: An open letter to teaching assistants at the University of Houston who are calling in “sick” in a dispute for more pay: My colleagues and I will be the first to admit that graduate assistants are not paid well. However, assistantships to graduate students should be viewed as an “opportun ity” rather than an “occupation”. The assis- tantship offers the convenience of working at a place on campus and an environment which will provide experience for the fu ture. For these reasons, there is usually a much larger number of students wanting assistantships than positions available. It amazes me that you feel calling in sick is the only way you can get the attention of the administration at the University of Houston. Students in your classes and re search projects in which you are involved should not have to suffer because of your perceived inequities. May I suggest you take a higher paying job off campus and let those more concerned with academics and less with economies take your place. W.R. Pasewark Thieves aren 9 t Aggies Editor: The Aggie Code of Honor states: “Aggies do not lie, cheat, or steal nor do they toler ate those who do. ” The recent rash of burg laries exemplifies that some students on this campus no longer live by this code and in our opinion do not deserve to be called Aggies. It seems sad that at a University which prides itself on honesty we must live in fear of having our valuables stolen from our own rooms. Furthermore, the lack of effective support and sincere concern on the part of the campus police illustrates the ajor i Inf chwai tom V fact that they too have become tolerate the behavior of those who upon the rights of fellow students. ^ rt campus police fail to even make an apf* L e p or j ance at the scene of a burglary totaling®^ than $300, it is difficult to believe adequate attempt to solve the crime being made. The theft of personal property is as? loss in itself, but must Aggies also toll having their whole lifestyles altered,* the long-standing integrity of jeopardized by the actions of a few, ant inaction of others? Eileen Corrigai Cindy Page! By Scott McCullar The Battalion MEMBER l S P s Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Congress Editor Dillard Stone Managing Editor Angelique Copeland Asst. Managing Editor Todd Woodard City Editor Debbie Nelson Asst. City Editor Marcy Boyce News Editors Venita McCellon, Scot K. Meyer Sports Editor. Richard Oliver Focus Editor .. 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