The Michigan Daily-Sunday, April 4, 1982-Page 7 Storms slice tlru Midwest By UNITED Press International Scattered tornadoes and a "bizarre" near-blizzard pummeled the South and Midwest yesterday, the violent remnant of twisters and winds that crashed through a triangle of more than a dozen states from Ohio to Georgia and Texas, killing at least 32 people and injuring hundreds of others. Volatile thunderstorms spawned more than 70 tor- nadoes late Friday and early yesterday from the Mississippi Valley into the Tennessee and Ohio valleys. NEAR BLIZZARD conditions were reported throughout western Michigan. Probably the hardest hit area was Muskegon Coun- ty, where strong winds blew in off of Lake Michigan, knocking down power lines and leaving as many as 10,000 residents in the dark. The Grand Rapids area was under a blizzard war- ning yesterday afternoon and evening, as forecasters predicted windy and cold conditions. Weather of- ficials said the west Michigan area would receive up to three inches of additional snow last night and wind gusts of up to 60 miles per hour. BUT WEATHER service officials said the threat of flooding was minimal, as temperatures were expec- ted fall below the freezing mark last night. The deadliest storms in nearly 1% decades raked a six-county area in Arkansas, killing 13 people, in- cluding a family of five in Hope as they huddled under a mattress. Damge in Arkansas was estimated at $8 million. RESCUERS SEARCHED for more bodies in a 1,200 -foot by 4-mile swath of destruction in Paris, a nor- theast Texas city of 25,000, where 10 people were con- firmed dead and more than 200 others injured. A dozen skiers, including six members of the University of California, Berkeley, ski team, repor- ted missing when they failed to return from a six-day trek through storm-ravaged Sonora Pass of the High Sierra "skied out" unharmed yesterday. New Salvador govt. is still being formed DIRECTORS SOUGHT The University of Michigan Gilbert and Sullivan Society seeks a dramatics director, music director, scenic designer, and costume designer for its fall 1982 production. Shows under consideration are Gondoliers, Princess Ida, and Sorcerer. From AP and UPI SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador- The shape of El Salvador's next gover- nment will depend on how badly the rightist majority wants to roll back the modest reforms instituted by the ruling junta. A week after hundreds of thousands of Salvadorans ventured to the polls despite continuing civil war closed door talks are being held to determine whether the U.S.-backed Christian Democratic Party will participate in the next government. THAT WILL determine what track can be taken in negotiating with or bat- tling the leftist rebels who boycotted the March 28 elections but failed to disrupt them. It also will affect the Reagan ad- ministration's support for the Salvadoran government in the 2/2-year- old civil war that has cost more than 33,000 lives. President Reagan said last week it would be difficult to support a new regime that retreats on any of the reforms instituted over the past two years by junta President Jose Napoleon Duarte. BUT THE first thing the rightist alliance vowed was to exclude the Christian Democrats from any gover- nment unless they dismiss Duarte. He has offered to step aside if it will help El Salvador on the road to peace and economic reconstruction. The left was severely weakened by the elections, when 1.5 million people-more than twice what gover- nment optimists predicted-ignored the boycott call and turned out to vote. UNTIL THEN, no one had known how successfully the government controlled Salvadoran territory. Guerrillas roam through much of the countryside, and voting was not held in 66 of the nation's 261 municipalities because of the strife. Many voters said they went to the polls to avoid possible government reprisals. But there was an excitement and good cheer in the long lines of voters that could not be blamed on in- timidation. CANDIDATES SHOULD CALL 761-9622 AFTER 5:00P.M. Messages can be left at 761-7855 any time of day or night. --y Thinking of Bung An English Teacher? Professional Semester-EnglishDept. ORIENTATION MEETING Drop in any time between 4:30 and 5:30 p.m. MONDAY, APRIL 5 7627 Haven Hall For more information call Alan Howes 662-9895 (Home); 763-2269 (Office) TUESDAY LUNCH DISCUSSION APRIL 6-12 Noon "Repression and Resistance In Guatemala: tend Sfruggle ofA Mayan Indian Village" (WITH SLIDES) Speaker: ELISSA MILLER, U.M. Student who lived and worked in Guatemala for five years. Bicycle in the sky Either the thief was unsuccessful, or the rider decided to try a different ap- proach to locking a bicycle. The airborne oddity was on S. Division between Hill and Packard yesterday. Fallout-shelter condos planned At the International Center 603 E. Madison Street I Lunch $1 .00 For additional information, please call 662-5529 (Continued from Page 6) .Large 2 room efficiency on Packard available May 1, fall option, $250,662-5510. 10U0401 SUMMER SUBLET-$75.00/room. Large 3-bedroom 'house one block from campus. 662-9751 after mid- night or 6-7 pm. 18U0404 CAMPUS AVAILABLE MAY 1 WE ARE CURRENTLY LEASING A FEW MOD- E9RN EFFICIENCIES AND 1-BEDROOM APAR- _MENTS FOR SPRING/SUMMER. FROM $150/MO. STOP BY OR CALL DAHLMANN APAR- TMENTS, 543 CHURCH, 761-7600. cUtc SUBLET: For 1 Female, share attractive 2 bedroom apt., laundry, parking, a/c. Near Med. and Central i-Campus. Ohly $70/month! 663-0073. 35U0406 Live in Luxury! 6 bedroom house on Hill near Law and Business Schools. Large living and dining room. Modern kitchen with dishwasher and disposal, 2 huge attic bedrooms. Sundeck and porch. Plenty of parking. $110/month. Call persistently. 663-0690, 994- 509,996-9470. dU0404 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 iyith 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 668-6906 . 663-3641 "Quality is a bargain" cUte 1,CAMPUS: One bedroom, furnished apt. No pets. May-May lease. $300 plus utilities, 663-5861. 18Y0316 OWN ROOM IN NICE COED HOUSE $118, garden. Call 662-5948 or 764-2430. 72Y0408 Female Roommates needed to share beautiful, 2- tiedroom townhouse, $175/mo. 662-3578. 57Y0407 3 roommates needed to share large house. Cheap, W separate rooms. Robert/Hal 665-6660. 14Y0410 Law students seeking 2 graduate or mature un- Lr dergraduate women to share coed house on S. State. Convenient, $200/month. Callafter 6 p.m. 662-3814. 12Y0406 LA VERKIN, Utah (UPI) - High in- terest rates have crimped a developer's plans to- sell fallout-shelter con- dominiums costing from $26,000 to $95,000 each, but hard times haven't campened his enthusiasm for the idea. Lane Blackmore, head of Survive Tomorrow Inc., said company plans for a fallout-shelter community near Zion National Park have already been ex- panded to include nationwide marketing of "modular survival shells." He said the units-'would, be similar to condominium-type storage sheds - but underground. "We all love recreation and we all have junk to store," said Blackmore. "Why not build facilities for recreation and storage that could be used for sur- vival in case of nuclear war?" Blackmore, a building contractor, got into the survival condo business two years ago while toying with an idea he calls "free enterprise, civil defense." He is convinced that nuclear war can be survived-4bt it shouldn't be left to the government. "The government can't provide per- sonal security, he said. "It can only come up with a civil defense plan for the average person." All the units are equipped with sur- vival gear and enough food for a year. When complete, Blackmore said, the community will have the latest in air filtration equipment, an entertainment center, a jogging track, a medical clinic, and a militia-type guard force composed of residents. Co-Sponsored by: The Ecumenical Campus Center, The International Center, Church Women Vnited In Ann Arbor. uhe fop! 'ft I f featuring - -iable * * * * * * * t ; idual leases pensive heat dlud d furn ed a arn v. \ \ s \ t nenks ndiv alA idea cat, withi resta video clothir books travel -C two blocks ;rants, nigt dames, fo~ igstores, ores, pos bureau. of camp oIc nd off ice, I is, heater ng, ank, 1 or 2 female roommates for '82-'83 bedroom house. Call 662-9336. to share three 36Y0404 I GIANT FLEA MARKET Every weekend 150 dealers. Household items, fur- niture, antiques, bargains, plants. 6 pm-10 pm Fri.,' 10 am-6 pm Sat. & Sun. 214 E. Michigan at Park. fDowntown Ypsilanti. 'cW121U I ann I ___I__-__1,__--01 \\ ; .4~ -.j-t.4 I I - - .1r,- -- isi 66: I El L U a a e. DOWNTOWN ANN ARBOR ROOMS STILL AVAILABLE C~ ~nw §A TrU UNIVERSITY TOWERS