Tuesday. August 13, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Michigan Bell has tentative accord with area workers By DELLA DIPIETRO A tentative agreement was reached this weekend bewteen employes and the Michigan Bell T e I e p h n e Compan, which should put an end to sporadic wildcat strikes across the state. Employes have been striking for wage increases and better working conditions. ACCORDING to 1H a r r y Kenworthy, spokesman for the phone company, the agreement reached Sunday night pri- marily involves an adjustment of the pay scale for employes outside the De- troit area. Cities and towns across the state are placed on pay scales which vary according to the desirability of the area and differences in cost of living. A nationwide contract between the Bell system and its employes was work ed out earlier in the month. The wage increase was handled pri- marily on the national level said David Sarah, vice president of Communica- tions Workers of America, local 4011. "I think everyone is getting a 10.7 per cent increase, which is not a hell of alot," he commented. Originally nation- wide negotiators had been seeking a 14 per cent wage hike. KENWORTHY estimated that the state and national contract will cost Michigan Bell $34 million during the first year, with an approximate total of $100 million for the total three year period the contract will cover. The agreement will be retroactive to July 18, three days after most of Bell Telephones contracts expired. Dther issues settled in the state agree- ment include one additional holiday per year, amnesty for everyone involved in the strike, and full 40 hour pay during jury duty, Sarah reported. SARAH SAID, however, that Ann Ar- bor traffic controllers, which include all information and assistance operators, have not yet been totally appeased. Last week's wildcat operator strike here ended Friday afternoon as manage- ment officials met with operators' spokespersons. A list of 20 demands were presented and local management agreed to 18 of them, saying the other two were out of their control. Ilasically, Sarah isserted, the oper- ators were objecting to "the wiy they were treated -like little children. For instance, they don't need to raise their linds like little girls when they have to got) to the hathroomi." A\pparently, their grievnces ire beitg worked out, although Sarah would not be specific. Kenworthy would only say that nian- agenent is "pleased" that the strike ended and they are operating according to the current contract. Nixon adite obstruction of j ustice,AB president says HONOLULU Ui)-The president of the American Bar Association (ABA) said yesterday that former President Nixon's admission that he withheld evidence per- tamning to Watergnte 'was tantamount to a confession of obstruction of justice." ABA chief Chesterfield Smith of Lake- land, Its., said he wtis referring to, Nixon's statement last Monday -- three days before he resigned- that he was releasing additional tape recordings whichecontained information previously withheld, "I believe that when President Nixon released the tapes of June 23, 1972, and made the statement that he did, he was giving what in my mind was tanta- mount to a confession that he had par- ticipated in the obstruction of justice. "AS TO whether he ought to be pro- secuted for that, I think that should be left to the authorities. I don't believe in a blanket immunity to Mr. Nixon sim- ply because he is a past president," Smith said, "I don't want to be a blood-thirsty fellow," Smith told a news conference See ABA, Page 10 AP Photo JOHN VALENTINE, left, and Norman Sherman, partners in a computer mail firm that operates out of Bloomington, Minn., pleaded guilty yesterday to aiding and abetting illegal corporate donations to political campaigns by milk producers. Former Humphrey aide took illegal donations ST. PAUL, Minn. A)-Sen. Hubert Humphrey's former press secretary pleaded guilty yesterday to aiding and abetting illegal corporate donations to political campaigns by milk producers. Norman Sherman and his business partner, Jack Valentine, who also plead- ed guilty, each posted a $1,000 personal recognizance bond in U.S. District Court at St. Paul. Each man faces a maximum sentence of one year in jail and a $1,000 fine. JUDGE EDWARD DEVITT ordered the probation office to conduct a pre- sentence investigation. Sherman and Valentine were named in a criminal investigation by the Water- gate prosecutor's office. It said the two aided and abetted the use of money from the Associated Milk Producers Inc. to purchase computer-mail lists used in Humphrey's 1972 presidential campaign and in a number of other Democratic campaigns, including that of South Da- kota Sen. James Abourezk. Both Humphrey and Abourezk have said they were unaware of the nature of the contributions. SHERMAN WAS Humphrey's press secretary when the Minnesota Demo- crat was vice president. Sherman and Valentine later formed a computer mail firm with offices in Minneapolis and Washington. Valentine and Sherman have said they accepted the corporate money on legal advice from Humphrey's campaign man- ager at the time, Minneapolis attorney Jack Chestnut. Chestnut involked the Fifth Amendment and refused to testify about the incident before the Senate Watergate Committee. The charge, filed July 30, said the Associated Milk Producers Inc., the na- tion's biggest dairy-farmer cooperative, used $82,000 in corporate money to buy the computer lists from the Valentine- Sherman firm, The money, according to the govern- ment complaint, was given to the pair from July 19 to Dec. 21, 1971, for voter lists in Minnesota, South Dakota, Iowa and other Midwest states. The lists were used only in political races, and did not give any business benefit to the coop. Watergate strains show in Nixon's handwriting "There's nothing left," a handwriting expert s a y s after studying Nixon's sig- nature. "Only a shadow. His ambitions are over." NEW YORK () - A handwriting ana- lyst claims that since Watergate Presi- dent Nixon's signature disintegrated markedly, evincing "a person sinking within himself." Felix Lehmann, who runs a printing concern and is interested in graphology, discussed Nixon's signature in connec- tion with a scheduled auction of auto- graphs, including two by the former president. "HIS autographs became much more valuable than before he became involved in the scandalous affairs of Watergate," -said Charles Hamilton, a dealer in auto- graphs and letters, who is sponsoring the auction. Lehmann studied three examples of Nixon's signature - the first written shortly after he took office in 1969, the second several months ago and the third very recently. 'tTremendous capitals," Lehmann said of the first signature, "show pride, but the long thread at the end of his name shows he wants to leave room to maneu- ver. The striving for recognition and am- bition are overpowering in his handwrit- ing. I would say he came froma non- descript family and wanted to make good for himself. That is shown by the Richard being more clear than the fam- ily name." See NIXON, Page 9