Some historical and global examples of tax resistance → United States → Vietnam War, ~1965–75 → Harvard University faculty, 1970 → Herbert C. Kelman

During the Vietnam War, resistance to the federal excise tax on telephone service was very popular in the anti-war movement, including the campus peace movement. Here are some newspaper articles from that period.

From The Cornell Daily Sun, :

Ithacans Spurn Tax In Protest of War

Ithacans who have been refusing to pay their federal telephone tax in protesting the Vietnam war have so far escaped tax free.

“A lot of people are doing this across the country,” said Natalie P. Kent, who suggested withholding the tax at a meeting of the recently formed Tompkins County Peace Association.

The federal tax, which is listed on the itemized bill, was originally three per cent and scheduled to be abolished. In it was raised to 10 per cent, specifically to help finance the war in Vietnam.

Protesters deduct either seven or ten percent taxes from their payments and enclose a letter to the telephone company explaining why they are not paying the full bill.

The telephone company acts only as a billing agency in collecting the federal tax. When an incomplete payment accompanied by an explanatory letter is received, the company reports it to the Internal Revenue Service, said D.J. Martin, manager of the New York Telephone Company.

Since the bills are confidential, no estimate of how many people are refusing to pay is available. The protest action is not coordinated by any organization.

Prof. Carol L. Marks, English, said that the tax withholding, like any protest, is “more for the private satisfaction of the people involved,” because the significance lies in the mind of the person who’s doing it.” [sic]

She subtracts the tax from her bill every month out of habit, and does not expect the government to take action to collect the taxes because “its not worth it.”

Information on such tax refusal is sent to regional Internal Revenue Service offices in Buffalo.

“Sooner or later they (the protesters) will be contacted to collect the tax,” said an Internal Revenue spokesman.

“Now which of you refuses to pay taxes headed for the military and which refuses to pay taxes in support of the swollen welfare bureaucracy?”

From the Watertown Daily Times, :

War Protesters Balk on Paying Telephone Taxes

 Americans looking for a cheap and safe way to protest the war in Vietnam are refusing to pay the federal excise tax on their telephone bills, the Internal Revenue service said today.

But the IRS usually collects the money after all. Last week it issued new rules aimed at speeding up the collection process by cutting out time consuming hearings on war protest cases.

So far, nobody has gone to jail over the telephone tax protests, and IRS officials doubt if they ever will because, as one spokesman explained:

“These people generally only do it once or twice and then start paying again, so the money held back is never great enough to warrant criminal action.”

The bargain-basement method of dissent has been operating around the nation for the past 15 months, according to the IRS. But the number of citizens involved is less than 4,000 once-a-month protesters.

The approach is made to order for the timid soul who wants to clear his conscience over a burning issue but doesn’t want any risk involved.

It’s cheap: The 10 per cent tax on a monthly phone bill is rarely more than a dollar or two, so there aren’t any fines or costly bail bonds to pay.

It’s safe: No getting trampled in crowds.

And best of all, the telephone service continues without interruption as long as the rest of the bill is paid.

The IRS explained that the phone tax is levied against the customer but is collected by the company. So, as long as the service charge is paid, the phone stays connected. All the company does is notify the IRS when a customer pays all but the tax on a bill.

From the Utica Daily Press, :

Must Pay Phone Tax

IRS Dials “No” on Refusal

Persons who refuse to pay the federal excise tax on telephone service during the Moratorium demonstrations could have the tax deducted from their earnings or bank account, according to the Utica office of the Internal Revenue Service. In addition: they could be fined up to $10,000 or imprisoned for up to five years or both.

The Utica Moratorium Committee plans to hand out leaflets in front of the New York Telephone Company’s office building at 270 Genesee Street. The leaflets will urge telephone customers not to pay the federal excise tax which is included in their telephone bills, the Moratorium Committee claims that the excise tax is used to further “the war machine” and says persons refusing to pay cannot be prosecuted.

A spokesman for the IRS yesterday quoted Section 6331 of the IRS Code, entitled Levy and Distraint.

“If any person liable to pay any tax neglects or refuses to pay the same within 10 days after notice and demand, it shall be lawful for the Secretary of the Treasury or his delegate to collect such tax and such further sum as should be sufficient to cover the expenses of the levy by a levy upon all property (except such property as is exempt under Section 6334) belonging to such person.”

Punishment for non-payment is covered in Section 7201 of the same code:

“Any person who willfully attempts, in any manner to evade this title or payment shall, in addition to other penalties provided by law, be guilty of a felony and upon conviction thereof, shall be fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned not more than five years or both, together with the costs of prosecution.”

The Moratorium Committee decided at its meeting to picket the Internal Revenue Service in addition to passing out leaflets in front of the Telephone Company.

From The Cornell Daily Sun, :

Cornell Mobe Committee Endorses Tax Resistance

The Cornell Vietnam Mobilization Committee has stated that it “endorses tax resistance as a protest to the continuing war in Vietnam and urges people to refuse to pay the federal telephone excise tax which was levied expressly and retained to help finance the Vietnam War.”

According to the committee’s statement, “The Vietnam Moratorium Committee, The New Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam, Clergy and Laymen Concerned,” and several other groups “are working together with the War Tax Resistance to build the largest tax movement possible.”

The War Tax Resisters will hold workshops on tax resistance during the America is Hard to Find Weekend at 10, 11 and noon Saturday and at 11 a.m. Sunday in the Willard Straight Kimball Room, said the statement.

Father Daniel Berrigan, S.J. and 45 other members of the Cornell University staff and their wives have “declared their intention to refuse payment of the federal excise tax on their telephone bills as a gesture of protest against our government’s policy in Vietnam.”

“To refuse to pay the federal excise tax one merely deducts the amount from the telephone bill and sends a note with his bill explaining the action,” according to the Cornell Mobilization statement. The telephone company has made assurances that phone service will not be interrupted, the statement said.

The Internal Revenue Service sends a bill after three months to a person refusing to pay the tax. After one more contact, “the IRS attempts to seek out a bank account or salary check from which they can deduct the unpaid amount plus 6 per cent interest, said the committee.

One who “willfully fails to pay” the phone tax could be charged with a misdemeanor under the Internal Revenue Code.

From The Harvard Crimson, :

Tax Resisters Hold Phone Tax Protest

by Jeremy S. Bluhm

A group of about 70 young and old people joined in a quiet lunch-hour march to New England Telephone and Telegraph’s Boston offices to protest the use of phone taxes to support the war.

At the phone company, they paid their phone bills-minus the tax. The tax money, which totaled $112, was presented to Marces Muncis, a New England representative of the United Farm Workers. The Farm Workers will use the money to help support a clinic in Delanos, California.

The money was collected in a helmet which symbolized the 101 Americans who died in Southeast Asia during the past week. The marchers obtained this figure-which represents the highest toll in five-and-a-half months-from the Record American on the way to New England Tel and Tel.

The Roxbury War Tax Scholarship Fund and the Boston Tax Resistance organized the “tax march.” The Roxbury group, which is about three years old, now has about $25,500 in unpaid income and phone taxes in its accounts. The principle is held in escrow, but the interest is donated regularly to community projects. In , the Roxbury fund gave $354 to the Storefront Learning Center in Boston.

Boston Tax Resistance, a newer group, has collected about $2500 in unpaid phone taxes.

The Internal Revenue Service now collects about one-and-a-half billion dollars annually through the phone tax, which was instituted to provide funds for the war.

“It seems like a small thing when it’s tacked on your phone bill, but this [the $142] shows that it really adds up,” a woman from Boston Tax Resistance said at the phone company rally .

From The Harvard Crimson, :

Group Asks Phone-Tax Resistance

by Micrael S. Feldberg

A group of peace activists is calling on Harvard students and Faculty to risk imprisonment and fines by not paying the Federal excise tax on long distance telephone calls in protest against the Indochina war.

Calling itself TaxPax, the group is circulating a petition which urges members of the Harvard community to refuse to pay the tax, which the group calls “born in war, and regressive in effect.”

The Harvard Indochina Teach-in Committee is also endorsing the tax strike, and two Faculty members — Everett I. Mendelsohn, professor of the History of Science, and Herbert C. Kelman, Richard Clarke Cabot professor of Social Ethics — will be circulating similar petitions among the Faculty.

“This tax on phone calls raises money directly for the war,” James Henry , one of the organizers of TaxPax, said . “It was raised from three to ten per cent in at the peak of the escalation of the war, and even Mills [Congressman Wilbur B. Mills (D-Ark.), Chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee] has said that the money is for the war.”

TaxPax organizers estimate the tax raises $1.4 billion annually.

According to Henry, people who refuse to pay this tax are liable to a one year jail sentence as well as a $10,000 fine. In addition, they could be charged with attempting “to evade or defeat” the phone tax, which carries a penalty of five years imprisonment.

“So far,” Henry said, “the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) hasn’t prosecuted anyone over the phone tax. What they’ve been doing is levying a lien on the person’s bank account to get the money. They don’t want to put people in jail, they just want the money.”

Henry estimates that following up on tax evaders costs the IRS $400 per case, in addition to adding a lot of paperwork and confusion to the system.

A spokesman for the IRS seemed less than concerned about the proposed tax resistance.

“We respond the same way to people who evade the phone tax as to all other tax delinquents,” Edward Callanan, Public Information Officer of the Boston IRS said . “We send a bill to the person who hasn’t paid the tax, and if we don’t hear from him in another month we send another bill. If he still doesn’t pay, then we’ll take the money from his bank account or any other personal assets.”

TaxPax is following the example of the Boston War Tax Resistance League, a group which has been active for over a year collecting money that would have gone to phone taxes. The group has raised over $25,000 which has gone to community action projects.

From The Harvard Crimson, :

1150 to Withhold Phone Tax As Indochina War Protest

About 1150 Harvard and Radcliffe students have signed an agreement to withhold payment of the tax on their phone bills as a protest against the Indochina war.

TaxPax, an organization of Harvard students and faculty members, started circulating a petition to withhold the phone tax . The petition included the stipulation that the names of the signers would not be made public until 1000 people had signed it. That number was reached on .

Everett I. Mendelsohn, professor of the History of Science, and Herbert C. Kelman, Cabot Professor of Social Ethics, plan to solicit similar commitments from faculty members.

Mendelsohn is now drafting a letter which he will send to some 800 members of the Faculty urging them to withhold their phone tax.

TaxPax and similar organizations, including the Boston War Tax Resistance League, oppose the tax on long distance phone calls because its revenues finance the Vietnam war.

“The tax on phone calls makes money directly for the war,” said James S. Henry , one of the TaxPax organizers. TaxPax organizers estimate that the phone tax raises some $1.4 billion annually.

Although refusal to pay the tax can result in imprisonment and fines, the Internal Revenue Service normally gets the money by attaching the delinquent taxpayer’s bank account. Henry said that this method of tax collection is being challenged in the courts.

TaxPax will also encourage the resisters to contribute the tax money to antiwar or community groups such as day care centers. And TaxPax founders may try to get people who signed the agreement to participate in non-violent activity in Washington, D.C. this spring.

From the Daily Illini, :

Linked to Vietnam war

Phone tax boycott called

by Gary Raether
Daily Illini Staff Writer

War Tax Resistance (WTR) is calling for a boycott of the ten per cent federal telephone excise tax as a means of protesting the war in Viet Nam.

“It is clear,” said Rep. Wilbur Mills, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, “that Vietnam and only the Vietnam operation makes this bill necessary.”

War Tax Resistance sees the refusal to pay this “war tax” as means of showing the government that people are willing to break the law in their opposition to the war. It also creates “a thorny collection problem for the Internal Revenue Service (IRS),” according to WTR.

Life Funds

According to Robert Calvert of the New York headquarters “People’s Life Funds” are being created around the country for people to send the money they would normally pay in telephone excise taxes to.

Refusal to pay the telephone tax is a misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment for up to one year and a fine of up to $10,000.

According to Calvert, nobody has yet been arrested for open tax resistance. “The government is not willing to publicize it because it may spread.”

Service stop?

The telephone companies as a rule do not interrupt the service of a tax resister if the rest of the phone bill is paid. They merely contact the IRS and leave it up to them to collect the tax.

The IRS then contacts the resister by mail with a demand for the unpaid amount and may pay him a visit. The IRS will finally seek out a bank account of or payroll check from which to deduct the amount, plus up to six per cent interest.

From The Cornell Daily Sun, :

Cornell Mobe Sponsors Protest Against Federal Telephone Tax

By Maia Licker

In order to publicly demonstrate resistance to the Federal telephone tax that was instituted to fund the Vietnam war, the Cornell Mobe is sponsoring a demonstration at the Ithaca office of the Telephone Company and at Southside House, a local community center.

People who refuse to pay “the war tax” are urged to assemble at at the telephone company office, at 208 E. Buffalo St. The plan then calls for a march from the telephone office to Southside House, at 305 S. Plane St., where demonstrators will be asked to donate the money they withheld from their phone bills.

According to Douglas Kenyon, the money will be donated to Southside’s Early Childhood Development program, as a demonstration that “people want their money to be used for the development of children here, not the destruction of children in Vietnam.”

“This act compels the participants to examine their own depth of commitment to help to end this war.”

According to war resistance organizations in New York City, people who refuse to pay the tax could possibly be charged with a misdemeanor, under Section 7203 of the Internal Revenue Code. They could be imprisoned up to a year and fined up to $10,000.

However, experiences of people who have refused to pay the tax indicate that the government does not press criminal charges in these cases.

For example, Carl Kukkonen, a Mobe member who has not paid the tax in over a year, stated that the IRS has not threatened him with criminal charges, nor has his telephone service been cut off. Kukkonen said that he received letters from the IRS, which threatened to “seize property” if he did not pay the $4.32 plus a 13 cents interest charge they claimed he owned them. About a year after he stopped paying the tax, the IRS deducted that amount from his bank account.

From The Cornell Daily Sun, :

Demonstrators Voice Protests Of Phone Tax

“This is one way to make our point to the government in the most basic terms, and that means money,” said Prof. James Matlack, English, after a War Tax Resistance demonstration at the Ithaca telephone company office .

After meeting at the telephone company office on Buffalo Street, 13 tax resisters marched to Southside Community Center where they donated $62 that they withheld from their telephone bills.

The contribution represented the 10 per cent phone tax that was levied to help finance the Vietnam war.

The sum withheld was donated to the Southside Day Care and Child Development program, in order to demonstrate the belief that tax revenues needed for health and education programs are instead being spent on war.

“We insist that funds be spent for growth, nurture and healing, not for maiming and destruction — spent for life instead of death,” wrote Matlack in a letter to the Internal Revenue Service.

According to Section 7203 of the Internal Revenue Code, people who refuse to pay the tax could possibly be imprisoned up to one year and fined up to $10,000. The telephone company is not responsible for enforcing tax payment and will not discontinue service.

Tax resistance demonstrations similar to ’s protest are scheduled to be held once a month.

From The Cornell Daily Sun, :

Group Protests Fed Excise Tax

A group of Ithaca residents plans to gather in front of the New York Telephone Company to protest the war in Indochina.

The members of the Telephone War Refusal Group are opposed to the use of the 10 per cent Federal excise tax, which they content is used to support the war. They plan to give the tax money instead to Ithaca’s Southside Community Center.

At the Telephone Company offices, the group members plan to pay their telephone bill minus the excise tax. They will then walk over to the Community Center to donate the tax money.

The group issued a statement to the Internal Revenue Service to explain its actions.

It said, “To show our opposition to the U.S. involvement in Indochina, we are refusing to pay the Federal excise tax levied on our telephone bills to supply revenues to continue the war… Instead of supporting death, we choose to support life and growth.”

From the Columbia Missourian, :

War Protest Diverts Telephone Excise Tax To “Alternate” Causes

By Candy Louis
Missourian Staff Writer

Protesters of the Vietnam War who are refusing to pay their telephone excise tax are sadly misinformed about their efforts, Jerry West, Internal Revenue collector says. If they wanted to stop paying taxes on the war they would have to stop eating, buying sugar, and driving a car. And those who have refused to pay are sorry because of the complications involved when the Internal Revenue Service receives the case for collection.

Not so say coordinators of the Columbia War Tax Resistance. Refusing to pay the telephone tax is an easy and viable protest method because the telephone excise tax was specifically increased from 3 to 10 per percent to pay for the strain caused by the Vietnam War. The Internal Revenue Service may attach a bank account or salary check for the unpaid amount plus 6 per cent interest but the time and money involved in the collection far outweighs the money that would be involved in non-payment of the tax.

David Bray, one of the local organizers, suggests that all money ordinarily paid to the excise tax be channeled to an “alternative fund,” a program that uses tax money to finance grants to community groups sponsoring such programs as day-care centers, drug abuse programs, or doctors working with Vietnamese children injured by the war.

The movement is not purely local: it has groups in 179 centers and alternative fund programs in 23 cities. The importance of the program, Bray says, is its symbolic value. Tax funds are being used to directly benefit the people. He cites the historic tradition of American protest against taxes in the Revolutionary War, specifically the Boston Tea Party and the Stamp Act Rebellion.

Telephone company officials act only as collectors for the government, alerting them if a subscriber has refused to pay his excise tax. They cannot discontinue service as long as a customer’s service bill is paid. A case sent to a federal court in Mississippi was settled in favor of the defendant and service was restored.

Richard Randall, Columbia office manager for the General Telephone Co., says the local office forwards all refusals to pay tax to its home office in Grinnell, Iowa. From there these letters are sent to the Internal Revenue Service and followup begins.

Bray says the general policy of the telephone company has been to send out a letter saying that you have refused to pay your tax and do you want to reconsider — a type of second chance letter. After this, the refusals are forwarded.

West and Larry Schreiber of the Internal Revenue Service say that the money going for the war from excise tax wont won’t even begin to pay for the expenses involved. They point out that only 8 cents of every tax dollar represents excise tax and of that amount 37 per cent goes for the war while 63 per cent is channeled into health, education, and welfare. West says “Every time someone tells me he is refusing to pay his excise tax in protest of the war, I tell him he is taking food away from a hungry child.”

The 720 Quarterly Federal Excise Tax Return lists the following services as covered by excise tax: Toll telephone service, teletypewriter exchange service, local telephone service, transportation of persons and property by air, use of international air travel facilities, policies issued by foreign insurers, the manufacture of pistols and revolvers, truck, bus, and trailer chassis and bodies, tractors, auto chassis and bodies, parts or accessories for trucks, fishing rods and artificial lures, firearms, shells, and cartridges, sugar, diesel fuel and special motor fuels, gasoline, lubricating oil, tires, inner tubes, tread rubber, and fuel used in non-commercial aviation.

All this money goes into one pot and it is impossible to determine what money is channeled for which program, West says.

In some cases, Bray says, IRS officers have tried to auction off a subscriber’s car to get the non-paid telephone excise tax money but the publicity has caused more harm than good. Friends buy the car and then get their money back after the IRS has subtracted the amount of the unpaid bill.

Money collected by alternate programs in Boston and Philadelphia is in the $25,000 and $50,000 range. Payments are being made off the interest collected on the money. All money is channeled into a local bank and donors receive a receipt for their contributions. All participants have a say in deciding to whom the money is granted.

Locally, organizers hope to be able to make a sizable contribution to a group by , the deadline for filing ’s income tax returns. They have established offices in the Help Yourself Center, 915 East Broadway.

And, as proof of their beliefs, they quote Rep. Wilbur Mills, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, “that Vietnam and only the Vietnam operation makes this bill necessary.” (Congressional Record .)


Let’s cast ourselves back, shall we, to , by which time the American anti-war movement had really hit its stride, and war tax resistance was prominently on the agenda.

From the Niagara Falls Gazette:

Day of Reckoning

Tax Revolt: Refusing to Pay for the War

(Newsweek Feature Service)

As approaches, most taxpayers are studiously calculating how much to turn over to the Internal Revenue Service. A small but growing group of citizens, however, is just as studiously determining how much they will refuse to pay the tax collector.

In the latest, and perhaps the ultimate, form of antiwar protest, hundreds and possibly thousands of taxpayers are preparing to hold back, or have already held back, anything from a symbolic few dollars to the 10 per cent war-born Federal surtax on their whole income tax for the year.

At the very least, these irate citizens hope their actions will register as formal protests against the Vietnam war. The more optimistic among them envision the war-effort’s being actually affected, should enough people hold back on their taxes.

It all began , with an organization of New Left and pacifist opponents of the war called War Tax Resistance. WTR’s headquarters is a littered office on Manhattan’s Lower East Side. The group also claims 62 resistance centers around the country, a number that has more than doubled . And it plans nationwide demonstrations at IRS offices on .

The group’s “coordinator” is Bradford Lyttle, a seasoned pacifist who led a peace march through the U.S. and Europe to Moscow a decade ago. WTR dispenses the usual paraphernalia of protest buttons, newsletters, and posters.

One poster shows a sprawl of dead children under the pronouncement “Your Tax Dollars at Work.” But mostly the propaganda treads a careful line between evangelic encouragement to defy the tax-coliector and occasional cautions that doing so could land the tax resister in a heap of trouble, perhaps jail.

The tax resisters also point to respectable historical precedents. Quakers and Mennonites refused to pay taxes for the French and Indian War and the Revolutionary War. And Henry David Thoreau is spiritually summoned forth from his night in jail in for refusing to pay taxes in protest against the U.S. invasion of Mexico.

“If a thousand men were not to pay their tax bills,” Thoreau said, “that would not be a bloody and violent measure, as it would to pay them and enable the State to commit violence and shed innocent blood.”

But tax resistance leaders warn that Thoreau’s imitators cannot be sure of getting off as lightly as he did.

“As we develop a broad movement of tax resistance,” cautions a Chicago-based WTR group, “we must anticipate a certain number of criminal prosecutions, and many merciless attempts to collect from tax resisters. Here is a good rule of thumb for all would-be resisters: if you can’t stand heat, don’t put your hand in the fire.”

Such warnings generally are played down in tax-resistance circles. Instead, there is a tendency to emphasize that the IRS so far has shied away from criminal action in favor of attaching salaries or seizing bank accounts.

There are, of course, other frustrations. WTR guidance on how to go about not paying taxes inevitably confronts the fact that a good many people already have — through payroll withholding taxes, and that getting tax money back is obviously a more difficult matter than not paying up to begin with.

One tax resistor from Minneapolis claims to have at least temporarily beaten the withholding system. He listed 40 million Vietnamese as dependents on his 1040 form; and the IRS, he says, has already sent him a refund.

He hopes this was one more example of the fallibility of computers, but tax resisters expect the human arithmeticians at IRS to be after the refundee soon enough. All the same, stretching the definition of dependents is one of the main tactics tax resisters are proposing.

“We must explicitly reject the standards defined by a blind bureaucracy and affirm instead definitions that spring from our own consciousness of human solidarity,” goes a bit of neo-Orwellianism from the Chicago WTR center.

The resisters are also zeroing in on other Federal taxes, most notably the 10 per cent Federal excise on telephone charges. According to telephone officials, many tax resisters have already begun subtracting the 10 per cent before paying their bills.

The telephone tax resisters evidently feel somewhat encouraged by telephone company policy: to accept the truncated payments, to continue service, and to leave the collection of the 10 per cent tax up to the IRS.

Income tax resisters have been a smaller band in recent years than telephone tax non-payers. But their numbers have been growing of late at a far greater rate.

In , when the IRS first began to keep tabs on tax protesters, some 375 were counted. In , there were 533, and , 848.

Resistance leaders feel that even if the amounts of nonpayment are small, symbolic sums, they could have significant impact by snarling the tax-collecting machinery. In a hand-lettered flier, titled, “No money, no war,” poet Allen Ginsberg asserts:

“If money talks, several hundred thousand citizens, refusing payments to our war government will short-circuit the nerve system of our electronic bureaucracy.”

The IRS has already formed a group of agents to go after conscientious non-payers, but an IRS spokesman stolidly denies that the electronics of the tax-collecting machinery can be jammed or ultimately evaded by the resisters. With the folk wisdom of civilization on his side, he says: “You can’t avoid your tax bill.”

To which WTR coordinator Lyttle, portentiously replies: “We’ll find out.”

Next, from the Daily Illini, :

War protesters plan action…

: Day to withhold taxes

by Steve Melshenker
Daily Illini Staff Writer

The government is a business proposition supported by a faith in its institutions which brings value to the dollar and the collection of dollars through taxes, which supports the government institutions.

Like any other business, the government is not pleased when its customers, the American people, do not pay their bills on time, and upset with some fail to pay at all.

However, there are those who believe the product for which they are paying is not up to company standards. That product is the Vietnam war. And so, these same people believe, if they don’t like the product, why should they pay for it?

Protest rekindled

On the war tax resistance moves en masse. All across the country protests are scheduled and various resistance groups are urging taxpayers to withhold part of all of their taxes in protest of the Vietnam war.

The war tax resistance groups do not oppose all taxes, just those going toward the war.

Various methods of resistance could be applied toward this purpose.

The method presently stressed by the resistance movement is refusing to pay at least $5 of some tax owed the government.

Or one might just refuse to pay part of his taxes, such as the additional income, the ten per cent surtax, or the telephone tax.

One might refuse to pay the percentage of his tax going toward the war. He could base his refusal on the percentage of the total national budget used for war, on the cost of the Vietnam war, or on other calculations.

Some people pay part of their tax and contribute the rest as a “peace tax” to the United Nations or some relief agency. Generally, these people contribute to organizations engaged in peaceful, constructive work.

But even though the government is not a profit making organization, it does not like to accumulate unpaid bills.

Don Werner, acting group supervisor of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) explained a six per cent interest and six per cent penalty charge accompany that part of the taxes due to the government and withheld by the taxpayer.

Werner said IRS offers “every opportunity to pay” the tax and the first step toward collection takes the form of letters to the delinquent tax payer. A bill is sent out and if it is not paid within ten days, the task of collection is turned over to a collecting officer.

Extreme measure

The most extreme measure the internal revenue office can take is to levy on all property belonging to the individual. However, certain property items are exempt from this levy, such as tools and books necessary for the person’s trade, business, or profession. A complete list can be found in the internal revenue code.

Beyond all this, IRS can recommend the U.S. Attorney’s office take legal action against the delinquent taxpayer.

Richard Makarski, chief of the tax division for the U.S. Attorney’s office, said the maximum penalty for tax evasion is five years in prison and a $10,000 fine.

Before any penalty is handed out, he said, the case is reviewed by the tax division of the justice department and if felony is involved a grand jury indictment is issued.

Makarski said that cases of this type were rare and “I don’t see the government taking much action against war protesters.”

He said only major cases of evasion were prosecuted.

So the war tax resistance movement is not likely to cause much damage to the war process, but in the words of one member of the Vietnam Moratorium committee, “it will show the government people are willing to do something assertive to protest the war.”

Sylvia Kushner, executive secretary of the Chicago Peace Council said the withholding of the phone tax will cause no damage to the individual and at worst the government will take the tax out of that person’s bank account.

The nationwide protest on has as its theme, Who pays for the war? Who profits from the war? And in no small way the peace guys are focusing ’s protest on the answers to those questions.

From the Harvard Crimson:

Five Members of Faculty Will Withhold War Taxes To Voice Vietnam Dissent

By Scott W. Jacobs

Five Harvard faculty members and nine M.I.T. professors — including two Nobel prize-winners — have announced their intention to withhold portions of their taxes to protest the Vietnam War.

In identical letters appearing in the Crimson and the M.I.T. Tech this week, the professors said they will refuse to pay portions of the 10 per cent surtax or the telephone tax “as a sign of our personal opposition to the continuing Vietnam War.”

Salvador E. Luria, M.I.T.’s Nobel laureate, and George Wald, Higgins Professor of Biology and a Nobel winner, each signed the letters to their colleagues. Other Harvard signers are Harvey Cox, professor of Divinity; Everett I. Mendelsohn, professor of the History of Science; Herbert C. Kelman, Richard Clarke Cabot Professor of Social Ethies; and Mark Ptashne, lecturer in Biochemistry.

The signers asked other faculty members who have also decided to withhold their taxes to join them in a press release on  — the same day that tax resistance rallies are scheduled around the country.

The Boston professors are among the first groups in the country to announce a systematic plan for withholding taxes. Several individuals — most notably Joan Baez — have withheld taxes to protest the war in the past.

In most cases the government has simply appropriated bank accounts or pay checks to get the revenue, although tax resisters are liable to jail sentences.

“Dragging One’s Feet”

“All of us confidently expect the government will collect the tax before this is through,” Wald said . “We are expressing our disapproval of what our country is doing and making it more expensive to collect these taxes and do it.

“You understand that one is essentially dragging one’s feet.” he added.

“We are clearly engaging in a conscious form of civil disobedience,” Mendelsohn said. “We are judging the war. We are saying it is wrong, and we are consciously cutting ourselves off from the war in the ways that we can.

Cox, who is now on sabbatical from the Divinity School, said the purpose of the action is to involve non-draft-age people in the anti-war movement.

“We’ve been asking young people to take a lot of risks — burning draft cards, resisting the draft, marching. I think it’s time to spread the risk through the whole life cycle,” he said .

The tax withholding is aimed primarity at the telephone tax and the 10 per cent surtax which were approved as means of financing the rising cost of the war.

Harvard is forced to deduct the surtax on salaries monthly, but taxes on royalties and honorariums must be assessed privately every year by the April 15 tax deadline.

From the Cornell Daily Sun:

Call Off the War

To the Editor: The undersigned members and wives of the staff at Cornell University declare their intention to refuse payment of the Federal excise tax on their telephone bills as a gesture of protest against our government’s policy in Vietnam. This tax was specifically retained by Congress as a revenue measure to provide funds for the war.

By our action, we signify our unwillingness to pay for that brutal, immoral war, one which has brought death and destruction to the Vietnamese, their land, and their culture. We refuse to sanction further waste of lives and treasure in defense of a corrupt and totalitarian regime in Saigon. The Vietnamese must be given true self-determination. American troops must be brought home. The War Must Be Stopped.

Andreas and Genia Albrecht, David and Carol Jasnow, Douglas and Marie Archibald, Jack Kiefer, Michael and Judy Balch, Jack and Mary Lewis, Father Daniel Berrigan, S.J., David Marr, David and Eloise Blanpied, Jim and Jean Matlack, Stephen Chase, Chandler and Katrina Morse, John and Sandra Condry, Reeve Parker, Robert Connelly, George and Julie Rinehart, Fred Cooper, Walter and Jane Slatoff, Vincent and Jill De Luca, Michael and Eve Stocker, Douglas Dowd, David Stroud, Daniel and Linda Finlay, Moss and Marilyn Sweedler, Bill and Maggie Goldsmith, Winthrop and Andrea Wetherbee, Neil and Louise Hertz, Tom and Carol Hill.

From the Cornell Daily Sun:

Anti-Tax Rallies At IRS Offices Protest Vietnam

By The Associated Press

Opponents of American policy in Vietnam massed in Boston and New York , while similar protest demonstrations — some objecting to the use of tax dollars to support the war — were staged in cities and towns across the country.

Crowds in Boston Common were estimated at 60,000, in New York’s Bryant Park, 20,000, but generally turnouts were below that of previous moratoriums. Tea was dumped into the Mississippi and Cedar rivers as reenactments of the Revolutionary era’s tax defiance — the Boston Tea Party.

Demonstrators at Internal Revenue Service sites numbered 4,000 in Chicago and in New York City, and ranged down to about 700 in Washington, D.C., 200 in Boston, 150 in White Plains, N.Y., and 16 in Oklahoma City.

Violence flared during demonstrations at the Berkeley campus of the University of California; demonstrators at Pennsylvania State University seized and damaged the administration building, and a brief melee erupted between police and protesters in Detroit.

In Washington, David Dellinger of the Chicago 7 urged a youthful, largely white crowd of 2,000 near the capitol to withhold their taxes as a means of forcing change in the United States.

“I advocate overthrowing the government by force but not by violence,” he told a rally, “and tax refusal is but one of the cutting edges and forces that are available to us.”

Young demonstrators burned two American flags during an earlier rally, drawing murmurs of disapproval from the rest of the crowd.

“We are going to make sure that this is a not so silent spring.” said Sam Brown, national coordinator of the Vietnam Moratorium Committee, one of several groups sponsoring the Boston rally. The crowd on the common was about 40,000 short of the 100,000 who gathered there .

In New York City, William Kunstler, a defense lawyer in the Chicago 7 conspiracy trial, told the Bryant Park gathering: “The time has come to resist illegitimate authority by any means necessary.”