The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 31, 1986-- Page 7 YES, YOU CAN LIVE AT: 1206 CAMBRIDGE CT. -5 BEDROOMS -MODERN KITCHEN w/dishwasher -2 NEW BATHS -LAUNDRY FACILITIES -FRONT PORCH (great for parties!) GREAT LOCATION CALL 662-6017 No Student Slum 4-BEDROOM HOUSE Nicely Furnished HILL STREET Other great amenities: * Free Parking " Dishwasher " Backyard " Front Porch " 5 minutes to Union RENT NEGOTIABLE 761-1435 MAY - AUGUST SUBLET SPACIOUS 7-BEDROOM HOUSE " Located 5 minutes from diag. 3 minutes from B-School " Washer /dryer in basement " Reasonably Priced * 720 Arbor CALL 761-6408 EffiCIENCY MAY-AUG. Furnished, Carpeting, Laundry, Utilities included, except for phone & electricity. $225 /month 307 THOMPSON APT. 204 994-8617 R1LEEL 3 BEDROOM " Available Spring/ Summer " Plenty of room for 5 * Mocrowave, A/C, Balcony " 1 Minute from B-school and Law school " 911 Oakland, Apt. No. 6 663-2346 " $550/mo. Negotiable SPACIOUS HOUSE Spring /Summer Sublet Very reasonable Rent, 4 large bedrooms, Great location (2 blocks from Charlies) Full kitchen, 2 bathrooms, front porch and lawn for tanning, GOOD FOR PARTIES!!! If interested, Call Alec Dan Mitch 665-4722 Greg SUBLET 1 BEDROOM 2 PERSON APT. IN HOUSE 5 min. from campus Furnished, Lots of Windows with all utilities included, many extras. $200/month Negotiable CALL 994-0365 SUBLET Ho etl Living " 5 Bedroom " 2 '/2 baths " newly redecorated "-laundry facilities " cable " private parking . screen enclosed porch " dishwasher * ultra-modern kitchen 523S5. FOURTH price negotiable CALL: 764-4963, 764-9 701 or 764-4925 SPRING /SUMMER SUBIET Forest Post Apts. PREMIUM LOCATION S. FOREST & HILL Sublet Available MAY-AUG. 1 bedroom in a 4- bedroom bi-level. Rent will include heat, water, dish- washer. Laundry facilities next door. Convenient to Frieze and Rackham. PRICE NEGOTIABLE 663-2386 r MAY-AUG. et 3 bdrm., bi-level on Oakland AIR, PARKING 668-7816 after 5 Excellent Summer Loeation on S. State NEEDING 2 MORE ROOMMATES right next to Campus Corner and other stores. Reasonable Rent negotiable which includes HOT AND COLD WATER, AIR CONDITIONING. Call Rob or Eric At 761-5556 For information or appointments. Spacious Efficiency * separate kitchen " high ceiling " lots of windows " quiet and sunny " bathtub w/feet! " great for couple " price negotiable only one minute from Union CALL NOW LOU 663-4708 SUMMER SUBLET HERITAGE HOUSE APARTMENTS " 2 Bedrooms " Fully Furnished " Air Conditioning " 2 Balconies * Dishwasher " Washer/Dryer " Carpeting CALL STEPHANIE 763-2881 AUDREY 764-3853 SPRING /SUMMER SUBILET Large, Fully Furnished 4 Bedroom Apt. Available LOTS OF EXTRAS! RENT NEGOTIABLE CALL 764-9775 SPRING /SUMMER SUBLET HUGE 4 BEDROOM BI-LEVEL HOUSE BEST LOCATION. Church Street Beautiful two bedroom APARTMENT Close to. B-School, Law-School, V.C. Rick's, Charlies INCLUDES: Air Conditioning Cable Ready Good Security Laundry New Furniture RENT IS NEGOTIABLE 711 Church 996-2641 North Campus Furnished Bedroom In Comfortable Huron Towers Apt. SPRING SUMMER OR MAY TO MAY " Discounted Monthly Rent " A/C, Free Parking and Pool " Share Kitchen, Bath and Thirty Foot Balcony CALL 936-0231 WEEKDAYS 663-2041 EVENINGS Spacious 6 Room House PERFECT LOCATION ON CENTRAL CAMPUS " Large Kitchen 420 S. DIVISION CALL ANDY 761-7463 GREAT Summer Sublet WILLOW TREE TOWERS June 1- August 31 * 2 Bedroom, Lakefront Apt. " Furnished w/couch, loveseat, kitchen table, living room table, queen size bed " Swimming pool " Tennis Courts " Free Parking " Just a short walk from Free University Bus Service. " $485 Monthly 994-5088 SPRING-SUMMER SUBLET 1320 S. Univ., No. 24 PARK PLAZA 1 bedroom, fully furn. With air cond. and extra large second floor balcony. Room for 2-3 people Only 2 min.from campus. RENT NEG. Call 761-1308 MAY-AUG. ALBERT TERRACE 1700 GEDDES Spring break riots end in, California (Continued from Page 1) subtenant and the landlord because landlords hold tenants responsible for any damage or unpaid rent during the summer. Subtenants are "less likely to pay the rent and more likely to cause damange," said Rumsey. "From the landlord's point of view, he's already got someone to go after, and that is the original leaseholder." Eric Lipson, an attorney for Student Legal Ser- vices, said he has seen cases when either the prime tenant or the subtenant-sometimes both- fail to pay the entire month's rent. "WE OFTEN see cases where a subtenant is paying his portion of the rent to the prime tenant, but the prime tenant is not paying his share to the landlord," Lipson said. In other cases, the subletter simply doesn't pay his portion of th erent, and the landlord sues the prime tenant. "The answer to these things is to know who you are dealing with," Lipson said. Rumsey recommends that tenants get agreements in writing from their subletters, although verbal agreements can be legally bin- ding too. Students should also use an inventory checklist and get a security deposit for up to 1':, months rent, Rumsey said. SOME CONTRACTS give landlords the right to meet and approve any subletter, although they cannot withhold approval unreasonably, Rumsey said. Sublets are rented out at 50 to 75 percent of the original rent, but prime tenants are still respon- sible for making sure the landlord receives all rent. Rumsey added that it is important for prime tenants to keep checking throughout the summer to make sure that the rent and utilities are being paid. Ann Crowell of Spears and Woltersom realtors; said her company does not screen subletters, but it does ask for a copy of an inventory checklist. Melanie Preston of Campus Management said tenants should collect a security deposit and check references because students are eager to find subletters and "that's when the student gets_ stung. We check references. They should too." Lipson suggests that students ask their landlor- ds for an "assignment," which transfers all' obligations to the subletter, rather than a sublease. Some landlords have assignments as a matter of course, Lipson said, while others prefer subleases so they don't have to conduct another credit check on the subletter. PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (AP) - Crowds of restless students continued to roam this chic desert resort yesterday, but many young people prepared to return to school after a weekend of sometimes violent spring revelry. Police said the atmosphere was subdued com- pared with Friday's rampage by beer-guzzling youths who threw rocks and bottles and tore clothing off women. "It appears today that everyone is recuperating, laying around the parks a and hotel pools," said police Sgt. David Goodwin. Palm Springs, 110 miles east of Los Angeles, has long been a popular spot for high school and college students during spring break and this year an estimated 10,000 converged on the city. DeVarti fills up potholes (Continued from Page 1) DeVarti and Tom Marx, a University student in the School of Education, manned the shovels and brooms and filled the potholes. Rackham student Ellen Rabinowitz drove the light blue Ford pickup truck that contained the equipment, while LSA junior Sabra Brierea and Social Work graduate student Janny Huisman con- trolled traffic with bright orange flags. Meanwhile, Ann Arbor Resident Tim Kunin went from house to house passing out DeVarti campaign literature. USING HALF a ton of gravel that they purchased for $20-25 dollars, construction equipment rented from. local manufac- turers, and brooms provided by Dominick's, the patrollers were able to keep their cost below $100 for their day on the streets. Despite their efforts, however, DeVarti does not feel that Saturday's endeavor will provide a long-term solution to Ann Arbor's pothole problem. "We need complete recon- struction from the base up and an ongoing maintenance program," DeVarti said. He also cited elimination of the city's drainage problem, as well as the use of a new type of asphalt known as seal coating, a thin layer of asphalt with gravel that constantly renews road surface. DeVarti said he intends to "go a long way into making potholes not as severe a problem." VOLUNTEER Tim Kunin sees the pothole patrol as "an attempt to dramatize the pothole problem. It's not a solution because it just isn't cost effective to patch up potholes once every year." Ann Arbor Director of Tran- sportation John Robbins con- firmed that potholes pose a major problem to city main- tenance crewstparticularly in the spring months. The potholes result from a combination of rain and melting snow that causes the clay base of city roads to expand,' creating cracks that eventually develop into fissures in the: streets. ROBBINS attributes the road problems to outdated construc- tion material and a shortage of city funding. The city currently spends about $650,000 annually on road maintenance, Robbins said, a figure he considers insufficient. He urged city officials to con- sider allocating more funds, but would not estimate how much more money is needed. Because of this low funding, Robbins said the numbers of city workers fixing the roads has been cut from 44 to 16 since 1969. Crews today work 10-hour shifts. Although DeVarti's crew only worked four hours on Saturday, group volunteers appeared tired yet pleased with their ac- complishments. Said volunteer Sabra Briere: "It was really quite an ex- perience. I've got blisters, but I was happy to help Dave." Goodwin said police made 95 arrests from 7 a.m. Saturday to 7 a.m. Sunday, mostly for public drunkenness. Since March 21, officers had made 528 arrests, including 203 for public drunkenness, 18 for battery and 14 for resisting arrest. Last year, Goodwin said, police reported a total of 347 arrests during the weeklong Easter break, and almost half of those were curfew violations. There were no major outbreaks of chaos after Friday's near-riot. Officers called for reinfor- cements from nearby jurisdictions and used high- visibility foot and car patrols to put a damper on student exuberance. An estimated 200 officers were kept in town Saturday, Goodwin said. Tenants look for subletters for spring-summer leases Students call Prof. unfair SUBLT AVAIIABLE MAY thru AUG. -Large efficiency -E. Ann- CLOSE TO CAMPUS -Rent Negotiable -offstreet Parking -Furnished -pets welcome -Laundry facilities CALL KRISTIN 996-1685 In the evenings SPRING /SUMMER SUBLET LARGE BI-LEVEL APT. (2 males needed) (Continued from Page1) the audience, reprimanding him for reading a newspaper in class, and ending the discussion by dismissing the class. One Residential College junior in the class said, "He made a big, big scene out of it. He singled the guy out. Nobody needs to go to class to get patronized." The letter was signed by just under half the class of 180 last Thursday, when Tanter was out of town. It was drafted by LSA junior Jeffrey Per- sson, LSA sophomore Richard Meints, and senior Hassan Basha, with input from other students. The letter also mentioned an incident that oc- curred on March 20, when Tanter allegedly told students who had not purchased a supplementary coursepack that they should leave the lecture. "Because of his inflexibility, the lecture hour was wasted for all but a handful of the class when he refused to work around the problem." Although the majority of the students who were at lecture last Thursday signed the letter, some called the complaints unfounded. "There is a lot of balance throughout the course," said Patrick Palis, an LSA junior. "Tanter has been very fair." Denis Sullivan, the admnistrative assistant in charge of the teaching assistants in the course, said he thinks the matter should be handled inter- nally. "Every class has problems," he said. "Maybe this has more than usual." Shultz decries public diplomacy WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of State George Schultz said yesterday the U.S.-Soviet stalemate on arms control will continue unless the two sides resume the kind of private diplomacy that led to last year's summit in Geneva. "Until that happens, we're not going to get anywhere," Shultz told reporters on a flight from Rome to Washington. Shultz arrived at Andrews Air Force Base out- side Washington yesterday evening after a 10-day trip to France, Turkey, Greece and Italy, where he sought allied support for the United States' an- ti-terrorism efforts. Shultz's remarks were sparked by Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev's announcement Saturday that he was prepared to meet Reagan in western Europe to discuss a ban on nuclear weapons tests. Reagan has repeatedly rejected a test-ban proposal on grounds the U.S. lags behind the Soviet Union on testing and needs to catch up. Shultz repeated the U.S. rejection of the latest- offer and said Reagan is still seeking a summit in the United States, not just on testing but on the broad range of superpower issues. He complained that both sides' proposals on weapons reduction have been aired publicly rather than in a secret atmosphere conducive to making progress. Shultz said he wanted "to get somewhere in our relationship with the Soviets where we're able to have some discussions that are relatively quiet and direct. E