SI Page 8-Saturday, Februry 2, 1980-The Michigan Daily Miller says Textron payments 'improper WASHINGTON (AP) - Treasury Secretary William Miller said yester- day he will not resign, although he ad- mitted that Textron Corp. made "questionable and improper paymen- ts" to foreign officials while he was chairman of the conglomerate. He reiterated he did not know about the. payments. "I do not intend to resign," Miller said at a news conference: "There has been no communication from the president suggesting such a thing." THE SECURITIES and Exchange Commission"said Thursday in a com- plaint against Textron that the com- pany made $5.4 million in payments to foreign government officials to help secure contracts to sell military, equipment, much of it while Miller was chairman. The complaint also said Miller knew that Textron had spent $600,000 between 1971 and 1q78 to wine and dine Pentagon officials in violation of Defense Depar- tment regulations and failed to properly account for these expenses in its financial statements. Miller, who was chairman of Textron from 1974 to 1978 and its chief executive officer for six years before that, said the entertainment expenses were not improper, that they did not exceed $100 a guest and that they were primarily for meals in connection with contract negotiations. "THIS WAS normal courtesy and hospitality," he said. Miller alsosaid he was unaware Tex- tron was making improper payments and indicated he was misled by dther officials of the corporation. "It is true I was not aware of any such payments . . . I believed I could reasonably rely on assurances given to me by senior people that we had not made such payments. It turns out I was incorrect," he said. "It turns out there were some tran- sactions hidden from me that did, in fact, involve illegal - perhaps not illegal - but at least questionable and improper payments," he added. SEN. WILLIAM Proxmire (D-Wis.), who cast the only vote against. Miller when the Senate confirmed his nomination as secretary of the treasury last August, said he felt the SEC com- plaint was "an extremely serious mat- ter." "It appears there was a cover-up by Textron, when Mr. Miller was chair- man, of~a pattern of bribery, the SEC has now disclosed," Proxmire said. "There was clearly a thought-out calculated policy of bribery." Referring to Miller, he said, "whether he knew about those bribes, we don't know, but he should have known.' THE SENATE Banking Committee, which Proxmire heads, initially disclosed the alleged improper payments during hearings into Miller's appointment as chairman of the Federal Reserve Board in 1978. Proxmire said the committee would decide within a few days whether to conduct a follow-up investigation. But he stopped short of calling for Milleris resignation, saying; "That's entirely up to the president." Treasury sources said President Car- ter apparently had not been in touch with Miller about the Textron matter, even though it could be potentially em- barrassing in an election year, especially since one of Carter's closest advisers, budget director Bert Lance, resigned under a cloud early in his ad- ministration. Carter named Miller chairman of the Federal Reserve Board in 1978 and then appointed him secretary of the Treasury last year to succeed Michael Blumenthal. Carter fired Blumenthal from the treasury post as part of a Cabinet shake-up. 01 l AP Photo and ic~e in a ten-story hotel. The water sprayed on the fire quickly covered the street and the fire-with an eerie layer of ice. Temperatures in the low teens and 30-mile-per-hour winds helped firefighters in Brooklyn Heights, New York fight fire with ice yesterday during a blaze r WINDY CITY BESET BY LABOR, FINANCIAL TROUBLES: Chicaqgo firefihers may sinilie T THE VELVET TOUCH is relocating SELIGOT SALE all of our 8mm regular and super film for only $12.50 VIDEOS ON SALE 215 S. Fourth Ave. DOWNTOWN 668-9755 CHICAGO (AP) - America's second- largest city, beset by related financial and union troubles, is becoming less and less "The City That Works.. Chicago, which picked up the nickname in an advertising campaign, has a cash-flow problem, its teachers are off the job and its newly lowered bond rating will make it harder to borrow money. ANID YESTERDAY, the city's firefighters joined the action when their union's executive board voted over- whelmingly to call the first firefighters' strike in the city's history. However, the board said a strike would not begin before 10 a.m. today, when it hopes to meet with Fire Commissioner Richard Albrecht to work out a plan for emergency fire and ambulance service. Albrecht said while a strike would be a "grave situation," there would be enough officers and non-strikers to protect the city. Chicago has escaped one problem of years past - major snowfalls. Last year's snow-removal crisis helped Mayor Jane Byrne upset incumbent Michael Bilandic. " 'THE CITY That Works' was for 20 years the city that juggled its books," was Alderman Edward Vrdolyak's comment this week. And there is no in- dication of a quick solution for the city's woes. Chicago Firefighters Union President Frank Muscare met yesterday with other union officials to discuss a possible walkout. Negotiations on a written contract broke down Thursday. The union has operated in the past on the basis of a handshake agreement with the city, but now wants its contract written down - and more pay as well. In a private meeting yesterday the executive board voted 11-1 to call the strike which had been authorized by a vote of union members in December. "IF I COULD, I wouldn't give the city 10 minutes warning" before calling a strike, Muscare said. Earlier yesterday, Albrecht said that a walkout would. be illegal and strikers could bg punished. He said that the city's 4,350 firefighters are the highest paid of those in any major city and that "their demands are pie in the sky." Byrne said before the strike was' called that "We have attempted every means to work with the firefighters. In our view and according to law, if the ac- tion takes place, it is an illegal strike." EFFORTS ALSO were under way to get teachers back to work - now that the money is finally on hand to pay them.' Chicago Teachers Union President Robert Healey met yesterday with school board officials. Healey called teachers to a meeting Sunday "to make the most important decision of your careers" - whether or not to continue the job action. The teachers have been off the job since Monday, demanding full pay for the school system's 48,600 employees. Few teachers and students went to school this week. PAV FOR three weeks' work was due yesterday, and officials scrambled to complete paperwork to get checks to employees. Board 'officials said th were considering opening district o fices during the weekend so workers could pick up checks. Healey also has demanded the school board's decision to eliminate 683 teaching jobs be rescinded before teachers return to work. The board cut the jobs in reducing its budget by the $60 million required by the Chicago School Finance Authority as part of a plan to bail out the financially strapp4 school system. The city suffered another blow when Moody's lowered its ratings on bonds and sport-term notes on Thursday, saying said the school crisis con- tributed to its decision. The rating dropped from AA to A for long-term notes, the third highest rating. For short-term notes, the rating dropped from MIG-1 to MIG-2, the second highest of four possible ratings. f Aw AATA pushes new city-wide ride sharing (Continued from Page1 ) assistance needed to establish a program,'.said Hackley,"but would let the employers run them." Hackley ex- plained that this could include helping the employer rearrange work schedules so interested employees could ride together or trying to find funding for administrative costs. THE CITY of Ann Arbor started a carpool program last August using city- owned vehicles. Currently 12 cars and about 40 people are involved, according PA to the program's coordinator, Tom Pendalton. He said the city's program "costs very little to run" since the pool cars are the same ones already owned by the city for use by employees 'during business hours. In addition, the city charges from 13-15 cents per mile depending on the car's size, with the cost shared by the driver and riders. One restriction in the city's program prohibits the car's driver from using the car evenings and weekends. But a recent rule change, said Pendalton, allows immediate fafnily members of the pooling city employees to ride along.+ THE UNIVERSITY has the largest ride sharing program, which includes both cars and vans. Employees in- terested in forming a car pool can apply for a special parking sticker and, if there are at least three people in the pool, they can request a reserved parking place in one of the University's lots or structures. Each member of the pool pays the- appropriate fraction of a parking sticker's cost (currently $41.25 through August 31) and then receives a per- manent sticker for his or her car and a transferable placard to hang on the. mirror of the vehicle used on that day. A two-person pool can split the cost of the parking sticker but will not get preferential parking privileges. The vanpool program involves 11 vans, owned by the University, and about 120 people. In this case, the drivers qre responsible for van upkeep and collecting fares'from riders. The largest park-and-ride lot is also University-sponsored. During the week, the Crisler Arena parking i. serves as a terminal of the University ' Commuter Bus, which is free and runs through Central Campus to the Medical Center. Recently, another 250-space lot was established on North Campus, also serviced by a free commuter bus. One problem that AATA could en- counter is defection of bus riders to ride sharing. However, Hackley said that isn't likely. He said that most of the early interest in ride sharing will probably come from people who li outside the city limits, which is als beyond the reach of AATA buses. "People are rather attached to their cars," noted Hackley. "Ride sharing is an attempt to break down the privacy barrier and' stereotypes people have about mass transit." STAR 109A A PPEA RING TON BA N. Main St.-769-0109 IGHT: CARTUNES "Ann Arbor's Original Honky Tank Dance Bar" Nation s unemployment . level reaches 6.2% Texas Instruments For today... and tomorrow, The Slimline TI-35 is an economical scientific calculator for students and professionals, with Constant MemoryTM feature. Combines advanced state-of-the-art power and 'versatility with attractive slimline portability. $22.50 (Continued from Page 1) the jobless report provided a "puz- zling" picture of how weak the economy might be. "YOU HAVE a picture where women continue to troop into the labor market and get jobs in service industries, while men are being laid off in certain manufacturing sectors, largely autos," Cox said. "Whether they (layoffs) spread to other sectors remains to be seen." Treasury Secretary G. William Miller said the administr1tion will move cautiously and not consider anti- rec.ession measures, such as tax cuts Vooor-m for individuals or business, unless it sees the economy going into a steep decline. "We should hold our powder dry and we should act only if we see deterioration actually taking place," Miller said. IN WASHINGTON, the Labor Depa'rtment said Michigan's unem- ployment rate for January was by far the highest among the 10 largest states. New York was second at 7.7 per cent and Pennsylvania third at 7.2 per cent. During the past 12 months, according to the Labor Department, unem- ployment has risen by 610,000 people, while employment has increased by 1.7