Dnilv Phntn b IAAKRtl7 Save the sealsI Susan Kornfield (holding sign) along with about 15 other protestors marched in front of the Power Center yesterday in an International Campaign to Save the Seals. The campaign has been waged against the Canadian government that allows the slaughter of 180,000 newborn seals each spring for commercial use. Canadian Conservatives win tight race TORONTO (AP) - Canada's now must look to the New Democrats, the end of the country.... T'here is national elections made it more clear who captured 26 seats, or the Social strong federalist sentiment in Quebec," than ever - there are two Canadas - Credit Party, which won six, to form a Stephen Lewis, a leftist New Democrat one French, one English. Keeping them coalition minority government. leader and astute observer of Canadian together will be the chief task of Prime The prime minister-elect struck a politics, noted as Tuesday's election Minister-elect Joe Clark. responsive chord with divided results poured in. Only two of the 136 Progressive Con- Canadian voters with his campaign that The Conservative takeover is expec- servative members of Parliament who charged it was time for a change; that ted to bring little direct change to U.S.- make up the 39-year-old Clark's new Trudeau had built a massive, un- Canadian relations. Clark's decen- government are from predominantly workable bureaucracy and that the 16 tralization might allow his home French-speaking Quebec, which has years of Liberal Party domination had province of Alberta, eager to fully ex- one-quarter of Canada's population. caused the nation's economic woes - ploit its vast resources, to export more One of those two is of English ancestry. eight per cent unemployment and in- natural gas to the Midwest. Clark in- CLARK WON a tight race, his party flation running at nearly ten per cent tends to boost Canada's NATO defense falling just six votes short of the 142 annually. spending, a move that might relieve the needed for an outright majority. He "THERE IS polarization but it is not U.S. burden slightly. Judaism gave the world Christianity, Islam, Marxism and Ethical Humanism. .. - The world famous Brandeis-Bardin Institute conducts two one month summer sessions for 75 men and women (ages 19-25). Those accepted experience the- intellectual and emotional challenge of their lives. ' At the Brandeis-Bardin Institute the world's finest Jewish scholars and philosophers advocate Judaism. The Institute, located on 3,200 beautiful acres in Southern California, is open to anyone with leadership potential. Along with the Institute's intellectual programming, there is music, dance, art, crafts and drama; also horseback riding, swimming, tennis and other forms of recreation. Consider spending a month with the original. 1979 -- 2 SESSIONS, (June 24-July 22), (July 24-August 19), Tuition $495, Scholarships Available. For information, write: BCI Director Brandeis-Bardin Institute CI Brandeis (Simi Valley), Ca. 93064, (213) 348-7201,(805) 526-1131 The Brandeis-Burdin Institute is not affiliated with any organization or movement, religious or secular. House rejects 1980 target budget WASHINGTON (AP) - An unusual coalition of House liberals and conser- vatives joined forces yesterday to reject a compromise 1980 target budget, leaving stunned Democrat leaders scrambling to piece together a new package. The defeat of the spending proposal, on a 260-to-144 vote, reflected liberal anger over House concessions to the Senate's higher levels for defense spen- ding and lower amounts for social programs. Conservatives objected to the overall spending levels as too high. WITHIN MINUTES of the House vote, Rep. Robert Giaimo, (D-Conn.), Budget Committee chairman, met with his Senate counterpart, Edmund Muskie, (D-Maine), to discuss ways of approving a target budget before the long Memorial Day weekend. Giaimo and Muskie reportedly discussed the possibility of the Senate amending its budget proposal to meet some of the liberals' objections. If such an arrangement cannot be worked out, the target budget would go back to a House-Senate conference committee where a new compromise would be developed. That, however, would further delay the congressional budget process, already two weeks behind schedule. THE COMPROMISE target budget called for $532 billion in spending and a $23 billion deficit for fiscal 1980, which starts Oct. 1. The spending proposals were very close to what President Car- ter had recommended. The compromise was reached last Friday when House conferees largely accepted higher Senate spending levels for defense and agreed to cuts in social programs, favored by liberals. Prof speaks on restraints in Israel Continued from tage 1 States, England, and other countries to continue their degree programs. Nasir said whenever Palestinians at the university tried to demonstrate their "free ideals," Israelis disbanded the protest. Nasir charged that Israelis suppressed every mode open to Palestinians to express their human rights. IN ADDITION to Bir Zeit University, Nasir said, another college and four West Bank high schools have been closed and may not re-open in the near future. After the 1967 war, Nasir said, "We felt like developing ourselves as we saw fit ... and that we must develop a university." Six years later, Bir Zeit University was an internationally ac- credited university. "IT'S OUR responsibility as Palestinians to speak out on whether our fate will be determined by Israelis or Arabs," Nasir explained. "Our only weapon is a fountain pen and a few pieces of paper. They (Israelis) have guns around the campus." "We will continue to reaffirm our right to speak our mind," Nasir con- cluded. I I