A= A =WiM am= a I cr m 0 0 a 7- v I = r. r.l -l l war. r fm Jffj mr 1 rlG IV%1%-T71V!'%IN UtNI1.7 I I u.J.y, I ULI 1.1.11y I1./ I 7 1 I Jaworski says Nixon won 't release evidence Local Big Brothers' help fatherless kids I (Continued from Page 1) THE PRESIDENTIAL decision portant to a complete and thorough to cut off Jaworski from further investigation and may contain evi- acess to tapes and documents he, dence necessary for any future requested set the stage for a new trials." conflict. There was no mention in the' lengthy letter of whether Jaworski In his State of the Union mes- might go to court to seek the mate- rial, as did his predecessor .Archi- bald Cox. Cox was fired last Oc- Faculty barga tober for refusing to agree not to press his case further through thet courts. I it was believed unlikely Jawor- break-in and cover-up case be- (Continued from Page 1) cause new litigation would delay the MERC system, except that it indictments expected later this would be contained within the Uni- month. versity, according to UMACB. Nothing to do tonight? CULTURE CALENDAR provides a complete listing of all that happens EACH DAY! Check it out! sage last month, President Nixon signaled a hardening in the amount of cooperation he was giving the prosecutor, saying "I believe that I have provided all the material that he (Jaworski) needs to :on- clude his investigations." iners urge Ize GEO "It all should be done now," said Fusfeld. "It could avoid the prob- ability of a TF strike." FLEMING later contended that the issue also involves the ques- tion of whether or not a TF is a student or a University employe- hence entitled by law to unionize. In other discussion before the Regents yesterday, Housing Direc- tor John Feldkamp presented the proposal to- make Stockwell Hall co-ed. University housing needs 150 male spaces, and Stockwell, ac- cording to Feldkamp, is "the least popular and the last of our dorms to fill each year. Maybe making it co-ed would make it more popu- lar." The Regents will vote on the proposal today. (Continued from Page 1) 1 contacts the child's mother once a month. Alvin Steward '75 has been a big brother for a year. He praised the program: "I sure needed a big brother image when I was lit- tle." But he complains that he has been "always tight on time." Because of a job and classes, Ste- ward is planning to quit soon. The mother of Velker's "little brother" Tom said BLR "did won- ders" for my child: "It gives kid§ an opportunity to learn a lot. Tom- my was spoiled and uncontroll- able. He needed a mannish influ- ence." THROUGH the efforts of cur- rent 'Y' director John Williams the group got assistance from Big Brothers of America. But the 'Y' found BBA's help insufficient and withdrew its membership two years ago and renamed the pro- gram. Big and Little Brothers is now financed through the United Givers Fund. The Y provides no "big-little sister" program, but Clark says that they "hope to get one off the ground soon." DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ¢},vt.Y.:"3: "?k'? "SS A. ":i;:. YSr .: S: ;:;a;{:?. Friday, Fehruary 15 Day Calendar Indus. & Op. Engineering: L. Groner, Syracuse U, "Concurrency in Hashed File Access," 305 W. Engin. Bldg., 11 am. Hospital Comm. for Women: W10410 Hosp., noon. Educational Media Ctr., A-V Ctr.: Wiseman's "Law & Order," Schorling Aud., SEB, 12:15. Astronomy: C. Chester, Monterey Inst. for Res. in Astronomy," The MIRA Project: An End Run Around the Job Situation," 296 P-A Bldg. 4 pm. Anatomy: W. Brudon, "A eBr fiisH Anatomy: W. Brudon, "A Brief His- tory of Medical Illustration," 4804 Med. Sci.II, 4 pm. Mathematics: J. Coombs, Indiana U, "The Bound State Problem for Ions," 3201 Angell Hall, 4 pm. Hockey: U-M vs. Colorado College, Yost Field House, 7:30 pm. Music School: University Chamber Choir, T. Hilbish, conductor, Bach's "B Minor Mass," Hill Aud., 8 pm. Career Planning'& Placement 3200 SAB, 764-7460 City of Phoenix Mgt. Intern Pro, gram, for students who will have MA in Public Admin or related area. One year program covering municipal research and admin systems study. Salary $8-10,000 yr. Deadline March 1. Stop by for details. Seniors interested in Jewish Educa- tion careers as curriculum planners, principals, etc. may apply for fellow ships of $2,000-$5,000 at Institute for Jewish Life, 65 William St. Wellesley, Mass. Deadline soon. Student Personnel Assistantships for Grad students at U of Vt. $3200-4600: Write Office of Residence Halls, Bur- lington. Vt. Deadline March 1. International Dev't Intern Program with AID for students with master's in econ, finance, bus ad, leading to po- sitions in Africa, Asia, & Latin Amer- ica. Apply before March 15. A Public Service This Newspaper & The Advertising Courd This ad is the work of Orrie Frutkin and Gavino Sanna. 0 Would you be willing to tell the world, "I did this?" After all, you're pretty good at what you do. Probably proud of it, too. Well, most of us will never get to sign our work. And maybe that's a shame. Because as good as we are, it might make us better. And we can afford to be. Whether we're teachers or short-order cooks, farmers or k steaaitters, sales managers or city ,*.. managers.:. We'll all have more to show for it. More money, for one thing. Because we'll be giving Bring in your old pants and J.Riggings will give you $5 off on any new pair in stock. Choose from a wide selection of both casual and dress pants. Offer good through February 23rd. J. RGIG ~~- i each other our money's worth" for the products, the services and even the government we pay for. For another thing, we'll be giving Amer- ica a better chance to take on our foreign IAL business competitors. Not just here. All around the world. That would help bring the lopsided balance of payments back onto our side. And make your dollar worth more. Best of all, as we hit our stride, we'll be protecting jobs here at home. For ourselves and the future. And we'll have a.V deeper sense of satisfaction in the e jobs we've got. You don't have to sign your work to see all these things happen. And more. Just do the kind of work you'd be a{$} a