Ninety-Two Years Off Editorial Freedom E Litv IEIII BLEAK Partly cloudy today, windy with, a chance of showers, and a high in the mid 56s. Teret e ae 1 XCII. No. 142 Copyright 1982, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, March 31, 1982 Ten Cents Jen Pages Right ists claim *victory in Salvador SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador- The right-wing National Conciliation Party, ousted 2 years ago in the coup that in- stalled El Salvador's ruling junta, emerged yesterday as kingmaker in post-election maneuvering by six par- *ties to form a new government. A National Conciliation leader said one thing was certain-moderate Jose Napoleon Duarte, president of the civilian-military junta, would have to go. Duarte's Christian Democrats won the most votes in Sunday's assembly elections, but fell short of a majority. MEANWHILE, the Salvadoran military scored a new success in its war against leftist guerrillas, retaking the eastern City of Usulutan in heavy fighting. Fifteen soldiers, more than 100 guerrillas and an undetermined num- ber of civilians were reported killed in, the four-day battle for the nation's fou'r- th-largest city. The U.S. government, which before the election solidly backed the centrist Christian Democrats, appeared yester- day to be moving cautiously closer to the five other parties. Those parties, all right-wing, seemed to hold the upper hand after Sunday's voting. THE SALVADORAN left denounced the election as a "farce" and boycotted it, saying any of their candidates would have risked assassination by right-wing "death squads." A takeover by a right-wing coalition could jeopardize the junta's land redistribution program, which the U.S. government has cited as evidence of See RIGHTISTS, Page 8 City police apprehend gunman A lone gunman who barricaded him- self in a downtown house and opened fire onto First Street with a .22-caliber rifle was apprehended by police late last night after an exchange of fire with a police sniper. The 26-year-old. man first began firing from the house at 314 N. First St. onto the 300-block of the street at 7 p.m. as police, alerted by the man's room- mates, were on their way to the home. THE POLICE officer who first' arrived at the scene was pinned down by fire while other officers and sheriff's deputies arrived and surrounded the house, police said later. After a three-and-a-half hour standoff with police, the man again opened fire, this time on a police sniper stationed on the roof of a house next door. The officer returned fire with a high-powered rifle, splintering the wooden windowsill from where the man was shooting, and in- juring the man's face. The man, who police referred to only as "Bill," took no hostages during the standoff and no ode was injured in the exchanges of bullets except the gun- man, police said. Following the exchange of bullets, the man, bleeding from his chin abandoned his weapon and moved from the up- stairs bedroom to the living room downstairs. Police officers, seeing the man was unarmed, kicked in the front door and apprehended the man who did not resist. SHORTLY AFTER the brief ex- change of shots; at about 10:40 p.m., police led the man from the house and ushered him into a waiting squad car. Police Major Walter Hawkins said the man had been suffering "crying spells" since he quit his job as a janitor for the city's school system two weeks ago. "HE'S GOT some severe mental problems," Hawkins said. "He's been getting messages from the TV and the radio ... but not the messages you're supposed to'get from the TV-it's been telling him to do things. The man's roommates said they became concerned yesterday afternoon when the man, who had been upset for several days, returned home after buying a rifle. Police said the man had been smoking "considerable amounts" of marijuana throughout the day and con- tinued to demand "more reefer" throughout the telephone negotiations, with police. CORBETT, speaking in a City Hall press conference immediately See POLICE, Page 2 AP, Photo Injured paratrooper Soldiers in Barstow, Calif. carry an injured paratrooper to a waiting helicopter after he was hurt when he had a partial chute malfunction during a massive air drill yesterday. Four paratroopers died during the practice drop. See story, In Brief, Page 2. 1st Ward hopefuls outline issues Columbia lands after perfect eight days By STACY POWELL The two city council candidates from the student-populated First Ward disagree on the philosophy of city 'government and its services. The First Ward elections should bring in the greatest number of student votes, since it has more students in it than any other ward. On April 5, Republican Jef- frey Gallatin will oppose Democrat Larry Hunter, both newcomers to city council. The ward is generally acknowledged as a "safe" Democratic ward. GALLATIN IS a real estate broker and builder who considers tenants' rights a priority of bity council. Hunter city elections 982 has focused on human services and in- creasing citizen participation in gover- nment. Gallatin, 38, has a somewhat unique platform; if he is elected to city council, Gallatin said he will "take one-sixth of my city council salary (about $5,000), and donate it to the Ann Arbor Tenants' Union." Gallatin said he would like to help the "abused tenant" in Ann Arbor get better tenants' rights and con- ditions. He said the donation will be given in the name of Jonathan Rose, who founded the Ann Arbor Tenants' Union. f Larry Hunter, tihe Democratic can- didate, is stressing "the city's priorities on providing needed human ser- vices-moderate and low-income, health and dental care and jobs for the unemployed." HUNTER, 30, is supported by the Democratic party and has worked previously in city government. He ser- ved as the Director of Youth Program for Model Cities, a program for inner- city Ann Arbor youth and worked in an emergency housing location program for the city. He is currently employed by the American Friends Service Committee, a Quaker organization,,as a program associate on the Anti-Death Penalty Campaign. Another issue on which Hunter is focusing is continued support for the new nighttime taxi service for Ann Ar- bor. "I also want to see adequate tran- sportation for outlying areas, like Arrowwood Hills Co-op, a moderate- income housing unit." Hunter said he woild also like to see "more cooperation between the University and city government on the subject of crime prevention, especially rape prevention, using seminars and education programs. It can be done with mutual cooperation." Hunter said, however, that more police protection is not necessarily the answer to the WHITE SANDS, N.M. (UPI)- Astronauts Jack Lousma and Gor- don Fullerton swooped to a desert landing in the shuttle Columbia yesterday to cap a "perfect" eight- day mission in space. The spaceplane streaked across the Gulf "of California, southern Arizona and New Mexico and touched down just after 11 a.m. EST, a day late, on the Northrup Strip at White Sands Missile Range. "IWELCOME home," ground communicator Steve Nagel told the astronauts r as the winged spaceship' s main landing gear touched down. "That was a beautiful job." The touchdown was not as smooth as the two previous ones at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. Rolling along on its two main wheels, Columbia nosed up abruptly, but then leveled out and command pilot Lousma eased it down on the nose wheel. With the landing, delayed by Mon- day's sandstorm at White Sands, the astronauts racked up a shuttle en- durance record of 8 days, 4 minutes and 49 seconds. Hunter ... stresses human services problem. "IT'S ONE OF the options, but-that's (more police) not the only thing that can be done. If the need is there, we should get more police," Hunter said. "But, if the need isn't there, we shouldn't." Republican candidate Gallatin said he is not supported by the Republican See FIRST, Page 8 Gallatin ..concerned with tenant abuse Another *U-Cellar chief calls it quits By KEVIN TOTTIS Citing personal difficulties with the store's unor- thodox managerial structure, the University Cellar general manager announced he will quit April 15, leaving the financially-strapped Cellar without a general manager for the second time in little more than a year.' Bob Carlson submitted a letter to the Cellar's Board of Directors in mid-February announcing his resignation from the $26,000-a-year position. Carlson had been with the Cellar since last August. After suc- ceeding Tudor Bradley, who was forced to resign last January. BOTH MEN cited the Cellar's non-traditional managerial structure as a reason for their resignations. Unlike most stores that have a hierar- chichal structure and a specific chain of command, the Cellar is decentralized and employees take part in the store's decision-making. Two union members sit on the board of directors. (Cellar employees are members of the Industrial Workers of the World.) "I'm from a very traditional kind of (business) orientation," Carlson said. "You like to get things done, but it's very hard for someone to come into this store from outside." But the 35year-old Carlson defended the store's structure. "The system can work if everyone wants to put a lot into it," he said. "It's a good organization if, in fact, you've grown up with it." MARY ANNE Caballero, chairwoman of the Cellar's Board of Directors, acknowledged that managers from outside the Cellar had met with See U-CELLAR, Page 2. StateHouse 'passes redistricting 'bill LANSING (UPI) - The House, on a up his estimate were not representative virtual party-line vote, passed and sent of the state's voting population. Griffin to an uncertain future in the Senate had used statistics from prior years' yesterday a plan for redrawing elections to the State Board of Michigan's congressional districts. Education. House Elections Committee Chair- Republican Rep. James Defebaugh of man Michael Griffin (D-Jackson) who Birminham said 'the plan would squired the bill through the lower "devastate" the fifth and sixth districts chamber, said thehplan provides for now held by Republican U.S. Reps. nine Democratic-majority districts, Harold Sawyer and James Dunn, eight. Republican-dominated districts respectively. He said other Democratic and one swing seat. seats, including the seats now held by Don Albosta, Howard Wolpeand David DEMOCRATS currently hold a 12-7 Bonior would be "solidified." edge in the state's congressional Griffin's analysis of the plan differed, delegation, but one of the state's 19 however. He said one- of the nine seats will be lost because of population Democratic-leaning districts is cutren- shifts. tly represented by a Republican, U.S. Republicans, however, challenged Rep. Robert Dais, and that Albosta and Griffin's statement of the fairness of Wolpe would be put into nominally the plan, saying statistics used to back Republican districts. TODAY- Don 'tpanic-they're here! HEY'RE HERE ! The. Fall term schedules arrived. T yesterday at various points around the campus. much to the delight of bright-eyed students, eager to take on another term. Deliveries to the usual distribution points specified by the various schools and colleges should be completed today, according to a Also on this date: the College of Engineering, LSA, and the School of Natural Resources. ADVICE is available in Angell Hall near the LSA Counseling Office on the first floor. O UAIYERSITY OF CHIG A WIfiTER 1982 EDITion Jolly Jello Jumpj This Saturday, The Muscular Dystrophy Association, Pi Beta Phi Sorority and Phi Gamma Delta are sponsoring a "Jello Jump," To participate in this unique fundraiser, organized by Tanya Leinenger of the Pi Phi House, students must purchase a $1 ticket from a member of one of the houses, and hope that your ticket is a winner. If it is, then the fun begins. Winners will gather on the diag at noon to jump (or have a Pi Phi or FIJI jump for them) into a 4-foot by 8-foot hexagonal vat of green, bouncy jello. Jumpers Also on this date : * 1933-The cinema league presented its first "talkie" in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. " 1955-A New York paper declared that the Salk polio vaccine was found 100 percent effective in testing. * 1961-The MSU dean of students went on the lookout for suntanned students, saying any student who could afford a trip to Florida during vacation would be denied a loan. * 1976-Ann Arbor's City Council made life tougher for dog owners by approving controversial "leash" and "scoop" provisions in the Animal Control Act. Q A D)V i i i