Page 8-Wednesday, March 31, 1982-The Michigan Daily Rightists claim. victory in S a vador (Continued from Page 1) liberalization of Salvadoran society that justifies continued U.S. military aid. In the election campaign, the Ngtional Conciliation Party said it favored land reform, but that it had. been poorly carried out. THE 60-SEAT constituent assembly elected Sunday is empowered to name an interim government and write a constitution leading to new elections, possibly next year. The votes were still being tabulated yesterday. It appeared the Christian Democrats, even if they could form a coalition with Democratic Action - the most moderate of the rightist parties - would fall two or three seats short of the necessary 31-seat majority. ' That left National Conciliation; which apparently will get about 14 seats, as the only party capable of swinging the balance solely to either the Christian Democrats or the ultra-right Republican Nationalist Alliance - ARENA - led by former army Maj. Roberto d'Aubuisson. The total vote of 1 million or so ap- peared to be a record for El Salvador,, which has a population of about 5 million. House begins debate on, nuclear- WASHINGTON (AP) - The House yes- N terday launched a debate on nuclear r arms control, pitting proponents of an s immediate U.S.-Soviet freeze on atomic a weapons against supporters of s President Reagan's longer-term ap- t proach toward mutual arms reduction. a To reject an immediate halt to, nuclear arms proliferation "is to give o up on the concept of reduction as well," c said Rep. Jim Leach (R-Iowa), one of d the prime sponsors of the debate. 'The s desire to maintain a freeze and to make t it work would be an important new n pressure to secure new reductions." BUT THE president - and suppor- N ters of a rival congressional resolution c - say an immediate freeze would lock c the United States into a position of p nucler inferiority. U Sponsors of the debate, led by an ar- p ms-control caucus known as Members of Congress for Peace Through Law, b said they hoped the series of speeches b would be likened to the first real d congressional debate on the Vietnam b War. That debate occured during a a night session in October 1969. t House Speaker Thomas O'Neill (D- n freeze Mass.), who has endorsed the freeze resolution, was among several peakers who reminded colleagues that Republican president and career oldier, Dwight Eisenhower, first aler- ed the nation to the perils of a nuclear irms race. "IT'S TIME that all of us as national officials stopped and thought about the onsequences of a nuclear conflict and dedicated ourselves to taking those teps necessary to reduce and even- ually eliminate the possibility of a nuclearwar," O'Neill said. But House Republican leader Bob Michel of Illinois said: "It must be learly understood the major issue of onfronting the world today is not the ossession of nuclear arms by the United States, but the defense and reservation of freedom. "The current debate, as I see it, is etween those.who think freedom can e protected without a credible nuclear eterrent on our part and those who elieve - and I am among them - such deterrent is necessary unless and un- il the Soviet Union possesses no uclear threat," Michel added. Doily Photo by DIANE WILLIAMS, Song sung blue With a little help from Dale Minus' harmonica, the now-regular crowd on the Diag can kick the blues and have sunshine on a cloudy day. MMr First Ward candidates express views on issues DAILY CLASSIFIEDS (Continued from Page 6) Spacious 2 bedroom apt. avail. for Spring and Sum- mer terms. Ideal location, air conditioned, large pic- ture windows, free parking and laundry, fully fur- nished. Rent negotiable. Call 663-8092. dU0402 FALL OPTION SUBLET. Individual rooms available in house NEXT to OLGA'S and FRIEZE Building. Parking, GREAT LOCATION. Call 663-2611 PERSISTENTLY! 22UO404 Albert Terrace Summer Sublet/Fall option. 2 bedroom, A.C.., dishwasher, parking, laundry, balcony. Call 761-8370. 19U0401 SUMMER SUBLET-$75.00/room. Large 3-bedroom house one block from campus. 662-9751 after mid- night or 6-7 pm. 18U0404 Attractive house on Old West Side for summer sublet at $500 per month. 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths, laundry. parking. Fall option available. Call 996-2953 anytime. 88U0402 Rooin in spacious house.Semi-Cooperative. Pleasant CHOCOLATE-LOVING Housemates. Parking. Near IM. Rent $100 negotiable. Paul 668-6286. 91U0401 SUPER SUBLET: Bi-level, Air cond. 2 bath, 3 bdrm.'need two toommates, 3 balconies, close to campus 662-7739. Rent negotiable. 63U0403 Unique Summer Adventures: Northern Ontario Canoe trips. Great Lakes sailing cruises, survival workshop, Upper Peninsula Bike Tour. Combine in- struction, recreation. Academic credit available. For brochure, Viki, 996-5501. 86P0401 R~OMMA- (Continued from Page 1) party, but is running "to shake up city council." Gallatin said that in addition to the one-sixth of his salary he will donate to the Tenants' Union, he will donate another sixth to a senior citizens' organization to sponsor inspection of facilities and care of senior citizens' homes. A THIRD SIXTH would be donated to establish a soup line in Ann Arbor, which Gallatin says "there is a great need for." Gallatin proposes that the soup line by operated once a week, with additional funding for it coming from the city's general fund. IN ADDITION to his salary proposal, Gallatin said he will issue a challenge to the mayor and the other members of city council if he is elected. Gallatin said he will reduce his council salary by one dollar for each dollar foregone by members of City Council. "I dare them to take me up on it. I don't think one of them will. I don't think one of them will give one dollar," Gallatin said. The two candidates have directly op- posite views regarding the ballot proposals. There are six proposals, which ask for a tax increase to fund various projects, such as the Michigan Theatre and pothole repair. Gallatin said he does not support any of them. ''People don't need more taxes now,' he said. Hunter said he supports all the ballot proposals, noting that the increase in taxes is slight. "The city is facing layof- fs right now," Hunter said, "and the city's general fund can't afford it (to pay all the money for the bonds.)" FE LLOW SHIPS AVAILABLE The Department of Linguistics at the University of Illinois at Chicago offers work leading to the MA in theoretical and applied linguistics, including an MA in TESOL (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages). For the 1982-83 academic year, the Department of Linguistics will offer a generous number of Fellowships to qualifying graduate-students - which will include a Tuition and Fee Waiver, plus a stipend of $1,500 at minimum. In addition, other kinds of financial aid are available to prospective students. The deadline fbr applications is April 30, 1982. For applications and information, write to: The Head, Department of Linguistics University of Illinois at Chicago Box 43,48 Chicago, Illinois 60680 ~ IfiSat Chicago p I. 4 Subscribe to The Michigan Daily CAMPUSUM AVAILABLE MAY 1 WE ARE CURRENTLY LEASING A FEW MOD- ERftN EFFICIENCIES AND 1-BEDROOM APAR- TMENTS FOP. SPRING/SUMMER. FROM $E0/MO. STOP9Y OR CALL DAHLMANN APAR- TMENTS, 543 CHURCH, 761-7600.' cUte CHEAP SUBLET-Rent negotiable. Location second to none. 662-7527. dU0402 2 large rooms in house. FREE WASHER/dryer. 1 2 large. rooms in house for $225/month fully fur- nished) 'FREE washer/dryer. l block from Business school. Call 665-5829. 58U0403 INTRODUCING the lease that you. don't need a calcUlator to f igUre out! Law students seeking 2 graduate or mature un- dergraduate women to share coed house on S. State. Convenient, $200/month. Call after6 p.m. 662-3814. - 12YO406 Nonsmoking sublettors wanted in roomy house near IM Building. $100/month, plenty of parking and sun- deck. 668-7204 evenings. 05U0403 CAMPUS MANAGEMENT has listings of present tenants looking for sub-tenants. Give us a call for in- fo. 663-4101. cUtc Single bedroom available to woman for Spring- Summer sublet in large furnished apartment Asking §150. Call Jenna, 662-2438. 48U0409 Summer, rent negotiable, own room in 2 bdrm. apt., Spacious, modern, new carpet and furniture, storage, parking, A/C, laundromat. 761-9274. 87U0403 SUMMER SUBLETS If you need a place for the summer * just call us- Modern Management provides a free subletting service to our tenants . . . let us match you up with them and end your search-we have lots to choose from. Our list of low-priced sublets for spring & summer of all sizes of furnished apartments is now available. MODERN MANAGEMENT 668906 663-3641 "Quality is a bargain" Thomas Pursel-Grab your best girl and head on over to the Daily to collect your two free tickets to the State Theatre. - dY0331 Needed 2 female roommates to share apartment for 82-83. Clean, considerate, crazy, junior. Call Roxan- na 761-8302. 74Y0401 FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted for a spacious, modern two-bedroom apartment 4 blocks from cam- pus. 8 mo. lease, $185/mo. 662-5769. 80Y0401 Male nonsmoker for roomy five bedroom house, $182.50/month plus heat, May-May lease. Ten minutes from campus, 668-7204 evenings. 08Y0403 Looking for Kosher M/F to share beautiful, inexpen- sive E. University apartment. Call 996-0887. dY0331 3 roommates needed to share large house. Cheap, separate rooms. Robert/Hal 665-6660. 14Y0410 CAMPUS: One bedroom, furnished apt. No pets, May-May lease. $300 plus utilities, 663-5861. 18Y0316 Gorgeous HISTORICAL HOME-Fireplace, laundry facilities, antique furniture, needs 2 non-smoking females to share double. Call 995-8764 until 1:00 am. 69Y0331 THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS ARE A GREAT WAY TO GET FAST RESULTS CALL 764-0557 Price Breakthrough! Now only $3090 from California for '23 days in China. Why not go with Professional Col- leagues instead of with a Herd of Tourists? June 19 - Education & Schools (Chinese schools close in Mid-July) or July 31 - Health Care System Write or Cail Today! Prof. Robert Hef nor 580 Union Drive, Rm. 459 Ann Arbor, Mich. 48109 (313) 763-4355 Univ. of Michigan Credit Available e 1 cl AfIt kawot t fE 0 O EIPOIEU" UAIVF/ YT OWERiS Mactor inth e to /twio additiojuat henefis for 4, very differenial eyudio,; (POOL) +(RECREATION RXM)+ (TV LOUNGE)+(STuDY ROOM)+ $1oz05o0- .,6 4, 4. cUtc this summer Tradition and the future meet at the Harvard Sum- mer School, the nation's oldest summer session, featur- ing open enrollment in a diverse offering of day and evening liberal arts courses and pre-professional pro- grams. The varied curriculum includes courses appropri- ate for fulfilling college degree requirements as well as programs designed for career development and profes- sional advancement. The international student body has access to the University's outstanding libraries, muse- ums, athletic facilities, and calendar of cultural activities, as well as the many events available outside the Univer- sity in Harvard Square, Cambridge, and nearby Boston. Housing is available in Harvard's historic residences. LIBERAL ARTS Undergraduate and graduate courses in more than 30 liberal arts fields offered at convenient hours. Inten- sive foren language and writing programs are available. Among the many areas represented are Anthropology, Computer Sciences, Fine Arts, Mathematics, Psychol- ogy, Music, and Visual and Environmental Studies. PRE-PROFESSIONAL AND EDUCATION Harvard Summer School offers all basic courses necessary for ore-medical preparation. Of interest to 11! ;" 4 u' r s ° " t ' . J ..-' - r :., t ,: "t : "*" , . :.. . Mi \, . (LAUNDRY FACILITIES)+ (CAMPUS LOCATION) EQUALS ONE OUTSTAN*DING VALUE! ACADEMIC CALENDAR JUNE 21 - AUGUST13, 1982 For further information, return the coupon below or contact: HARVARD SUMMER SCHOOL Department 20 Garden St., Cambridge, MA 02138 (617) 495-2921 information (617) 495-2494 line open 24 hours a day for catalogue requests ---...----- .------- Please send Harvard Summer School catalogue and I i application for: C Arts & Sciences and Education i i UNIVERSITY TWRS South Universitv at South Forest I E it