Tuesday, June 25, 1974 THE MICHfGAN DAILY Page Three Kissinger daims Moscow talks may mean future pact Saxhe asks harsh 'dirty trik'penalties COEUR D'ALENE, Idaho (AP - Atty. Gen. William Saxbe said yesterday "the message has got to go out all over the country-there will be no more dirty tricks for any reason'" Saxbe, addressing a meeting of the National Association of Attorneys Gen- eral, also said, "It is hardly reassuring when one ian goes to prison for years for theft while another man involved in a conspiracy to steal our freedom is in and out of jail in the wink of an eye." "NO ONE is suggesting that the thief should not goato jail," Saxbe said "He should. And so should the man who is convicted of failing the public trust." But Saxbe, questioned by a reporter, said it was not his intent to suggest in his speech disappointment with the sen- tences handed to those convicted of Wat- ergate-related crimes. "I was talking about the whole con- cept of the judicial process and some of the problems that all attorneys general have," Saxbe said. "I've been asked in Washington many times what I think about the sentences and I say every time that I will not second guess these judges." SAXBE ALSO mentioned former Vice President Spiro Agnew. He said "there are people who say that prisons are out- inoded, that no one should go to jail. But, at the same time, with Agnew, they say 'throw the book at him."' "If prison 'is a correctional institution, what can you expect to correct in an Ag- new? What can prison do that has not already been done to people like them to humiliate them." In commenting on "dirty tricks," Sax- be warned that "criminal violations can- not be tolerated on the part of anyone- no matter what position of public trust they may have held, no matter how glib their attempt at justification may be," Saxbe told his state counterparts. WASHINGTON W.-- President Nixon and Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev are unlikely to complete agreement at the Moscow summit on a comprehensive treaty limiting nuclear weapons but may make substantial progress toward a fu- ture pact, Secretary of State Hlenry Kis- singer said yesterdiy. In any event, Kissinger told reporters the third annual summit meeting begin- ning Thursday could produce a partial ban on underground weapons tests and an agreement in principle to harness fast-moving nuclear technology further. "FOR THE United Sttes not to make a major effort in this field is something no future generation could possibly un- derstand,' Kissinger said. Kissinger said he expects and even welcomes the "contentious debate' that will follow in the wake of the summit. Btit, he staid, tie administration will not be deterred liy allegations of bad- faith diplomacy designed to bluit the congressioral inpeachment d r i v e against Nixon. NUCLEAR technology is 'i aaling so rapidly, Kissinger said, "there is a very definite time pressure" At the sane timei. e denied negotiat- ing a secret 'greement with the Soviets in 1972 increasing their sea-based mis- sites by 70 and reducing the American total by 54. "Those arguments are totaly false in every detail and have no merit whatso- ever," Kissinger said of newspaper re- ports that circulated here over the past three days KISSINGER acknowledged that the Russians were asked to sign an "inter- pretive" statement after the trety was negotiated to clarify how their sea-based missiles would be counted. This state- ment was not submitted to Congress but the nature of the understanding was well known, he added. The secretary said he "had no reason to doubt the sincerity of those who have raised" the issue on the eve of the sum- mit session. After Kissinger's news conference, Sen. Henry Jackson (D-Wash.), renewed an assertion that "a secret clarification" of the 1972 SALT agreement gave Russia more missiles than announced at the time. BUT JACKSON said "there is specula- tion" that in recent days the United States made concessions in "a still fur- ther secret agreement" to bring the number of Soviet submarine missiles down again." Jackson's statement said the issue is not "70 missiles more or less," but the withholding from Congress of a secret agreement which htd the effect of "al- teritig the terms of the SAlT interins agreement." He said the "secret clarification" clearly required congressional approval by law, In virtually ruling out a comprehen- sive nuclear weapons agreement, Kis- singer indicated that the summit would have set the stage for prolonged negotia- tions. le said the specific calculations given him by Brezhnev in the Kremlin -last spring were unacceptable to the United States. With the greatest of ease .. . A Big Wheel bicycle virtuoso shows her stuff Sunday at the Pioneer High School carnival, where the Wheelnen demonstrated their antique bikes and raced as part of the area's sesquicentennial celebration. To cavort in Ann Arbor, the flashy cyclists rode 13 miles from Dexter. Council debates budget cut in wake of millae defeat By CHERYL PILATE During a working session last night, City Council discussed proposed budget cuts necessitated by the defeat of the 1.7 mill emergency levy which appeared on the June 10 ballot. The millage, which voters turned down by a 60-41 margin, was a one-time levy that would have generated about $1 mil- lion to help balance the fiscal 1975 budget. C IT Y ADMINISTRATOR Sylvester Murray, who drew uap the proposed budget cuts, .suggested reductions in nearly all departmets-incltsding fire, police and human rights. If Murray's cutbacks are approved by council, the area hardest hit by the mill- age defeat will he social services. Originally allocated $1,000, Conma- alty Otrachs is now slated to receive only $,A. OTER PROPOSED reductions include a freeze on all employe layoffs as weh as extensive personnel cutbacks. About 15 employes may be laid off, including clerical workers, adninistra- tive aids and police cadets. Council vticed-few objections to Mar- ray's prcposed outs, although seme con- cern was voiced over the possible lay- offs. "I'D LIKE to make sure we're not laying off people in departments that are already hard-pressed," said Council- woman Carol Jones (D-Second Ward). In other business, Council: -voted to convene a special session at noon today to discuss and act upon the possibility of placing a millage on the Aug. 6 ballot to raise money for road improvements; -discussed amendments to the R2B zoning district which would legalize the presence of the rooming houses which already exist in the Washtenaw - Hilt area; and -approved 6-4 a resolution ordering the Police Department, in light of its "alleged" harassment of the Argus pic- keters, to "protect as required," the strikers and all other parties. 'U' panel to rule on sex bias charge By STEPHEN BERMSI A three-member University panel is expected to rule this mosth on a com- plaint filed by clerk Vicki Conoel charg- ing sex discrimination in her job classi- ficatios. with- the Plant Department, which handles campus maintenance. Testimony on the case at a May hear- ing aheged that the Plant Department hires women at lower wvage classifica- tions and assigns them fewer nonclerical duties than men. HELENH UBSON, student ad hoc ad- vocate representing Connel, reported several other cases of alleged sex dis- crimination in the Plant Department at the hearing. Hudson contended that these cases indicated a pattern of sexist policy. Hudson said the alleged discrimination is in clear violation of an amendment to the 1964 Civil Rights Act and the Univer- sity's Affirmative Action program which dictate equal pay for equal work. They also bar retaliation against em- ployes filing sex discrimination com- plaints. WHEN CONNEI was hired as a pre- ventive maintenance scheduler in No- vember, 1972, her job as assigned the classification "C-3." The woman who preceded her, however, was classified Connel's job classification was lowered because of an audit by University com- pensation analyst John Forsyth, who sug- gested the change. The audit was re- quested by Plant manager Richard Wedge. Walter Brauninger, who has worked See PANEL, Page 10