Thursday, May 8, 1986/The Battalion/Page 9 ‘‘enate leaders say tax bill should be approved easily /ASHING! ON (AP) — Senate leaders on Wednes- lay predicted easy approval of a tax-overhaul plan, en- I lorsed by President Reagan, that would affect the taxes ^Virtually every American — cutting rates while wip ing out some deductions favored especially by middle- ncome families. jwfajority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., said, “There are Ttrong indications this bill is going to sail through the Seriate.” It will pass easily, he added, because it is “true reform.” hOmilen Bob Packwood, R-Ore., the plan’s chief author, — jiirl he believes the bill is going to pass in much the form as it came out of the Finance Committee ;arly Wednesday on a 20-0 vole. fjMle proclaimed it “a great victory for America — a bill ,o| can truly defend.” ■ he Reagan administration, which is sympathetic to I ttpM of the bill, signaled its concern about two high- yL- trlhle provisions: elimination of the deduction for Hr ppsi lndi\ idual Retirement Accounts and repeal of the . raditional tax preference for capital gains. ■ven though repeal of the IRA deduction for work ers covered by company pensions would hurt many aimlies, Packwood said, most of them would still come lulwinners because of other parts of the bill. ■ he bill, most of which would become effective in 1917, would cut individual taxes by about $100 billion ~ J tvei five years, with the reduction averaging 6.2 per- :eni The burden on corporations would increase by JCMgMQ" billion. Packwood estimated that 80 percent of Americans would be taxed at the bill’s lower rate of 15 percent. A typical four-member family could earn about $42,000 before any of its income was subject to the higher, 27 percent rate. The “winners” — and Packwood said middle-income families would be at the top of the list — would benefit from raising the personal exemption to $2,000 and from significant increases in the standard deductions. To pay for those changes, the bill would take away some widely used deductions. In addition to the IRA and capital-gains changes, the proposal would end de ductions for consumer interest and state and local sales taxes. The medical-expense deduction would be vir tually eliminated. The deduction for miscellaneous ex penses, including union dues and job-related publica tions, would be killed. The big losers, Packwood said, are upper-income in vestors who have been able to shield their salaries from taxes by writing off artificial losses arising from a cer tain partnership arrangements, especially in commer cial real estate. Tougher “minimum taxes” will hit the profitable companies and well-to-do investors who have been able to save dramatically on taxes through judicious use of large deductions. Packwood said, “We will say to the average Jane and Joe making $40,000 that . . . your taxes are being low ered because we’ve raised taxes on people who have not been paying taxes.” icy 1 n Earthquake (continued from page 1) nn§isured its strength at 7.7. on the tpcn-ended Richter scale. ■reliminary reports from the - \dnk Naval Air Station indicated Milv minor damage, such as “a cou- )le of .books being knocked off shelves,” said ft. Col. Arnold Wil iams, a Pentagon spokesman. ■ > eople were being evacuated to higher ground, said Kathi Alexan der, a civilian employee for the Navy :ontigent of about 5,000 people on Adak. ShAt Atka, a village of 93 people about 100 miles east of Adak, many residents headed for higher ground, ■r'cesg G’odoc&adif a worker at (S/e Death Act village store, said he was putting away newly arrived stock before he headed for safety. He remembers other tsunami alerts. “We’ve had some before, but it came to nothing,” he said. Geophysicists estimated a wave could reach Astoria, Ore., by 10:02 p.rn. PDT and San Francisco by 9:47 p.m. The first earthquake Wednesday had a magnitude of 4.4 on the Rich ter scale and struck at 11:44 a.m., said Finley. It was followed 22 sec onds later by a 6.0 earthquake and two hours later by the magnitude 7.7 earthquake, said Don Finley of the k r SGS id iVas’h/ng/on, 2?.C. Three more quakes that struck two to three hours after the large tremor measured 5.9, 5.9 and 5.4 on the Richter scale, and were not ex pected to generate further tsunamis, said the Warning Center. Earthquakes of magnitude 6 or greater are capable of causing severe damage in a populated area. How ever, the Aleutians are sparsely pop ulated. In 1964, a great earthquake regis tering 8.5 on the Richter scale and centered near Prince William Sound, southeast of Anchorage, stirred seismic waves that killed 114 people in Alaska, where it wiped out the vthage of Chenega. Zalif., :)ved bee: her the -' e relied “ die East,” package (continued from page 1) aulder fi sites, Florida, Iowa and Louisana, :s, Hatjn combined the options concerning a and ' proxy and treatment of comatose ;s. patients. trfShe added that the Texas act is now one of the most progressive and useful of any state. BA release from the Texas Medical Association stated that all written di- (rectives take effect if the patient be comes comatose, incompetent, or mentally or physically incapable of communication. But the wishes of any patient who remains competent always override the wishes of a writ ten directive, the release said. iinio jase id AP) - ft , a “Tj'.Hln addition to the two protections, Mn llin l ^ C amen( led act allows terminally ill M1K patients to express their wishes ver- ™>llv, provided it is observed by two ’ <0 c|ualified witnesses and the patient’s phvsician. The witnesses cannot be v ((|r related to the patient by blood or lid for i mai | t a g e and cannot be included in were told lhe P^ient’s will, fitioners traffic e of the F It also allows specific persons to carry out the wishes of patients who are under 18. The persons, in order of priority, are: the patient’s spouse, if over 18; the patient’s parents and the pa tient’s legal guardian. Authors Eugene Boisaubin and Rebecca Dresser defined a termi nally ill patient as someone who has an incurable illness or injury, which, in a physician’s medical judgment, will result in death — despite life- sustaining procedures. Boisaubin, in a phone interview, said that the problem now is making patients aware of their new choices. Boisaubin added that patients should not write directives without consulting family members although the written directive would still be technically binding. Dr. John Hall, a member of the medical ethics committee at St. Jo seph Hospital, said that the law is on the side of the patient if he was com petent at the time of writing the treatment directive. “If a patient is mentally capable of making that decision, then the doc tor must honor that decision,” he said. “If the physician has problems himself, turning off the machine, he can refer this question to the medical ethics committee at the hospital.” Hall, 56, said that the doctor also can refer the case to the ethics com mittee if the family disagrees with the patient directive. If the case is extremely compli cated, the committee can appeal to the courts, he said. The authors noted that one of the act’s shortcomings is the lack of guidance concerning incompetent patients who have no available rela tives. In a phone interview, Dresser said that hospitals and physicans don’t follow any hard and fast rules in such a case. 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