Page Ten THE MICH4,GAN DAILY Wednesday, August 18, ;1976 Villagers flee from volcano POINTFIs A - PITHI-, (;uade- loupe (. Several thousand more vilagers streamed from their homes on this Caribbean island yesterday, fearing death from faming la Soufriere vol cano. There was an explosion deep in the rumbling volcano Mon- day night that sent shockwaves Felt 20 miles away More than 72,000 persons have been evacu- ated from the danger zone around Lza Soufriere on Basse Terre Island, but the new burst of activity sent thoasands of others fleeing for safety. DEADLY SULFUR fumes and volcanic ashes flowed down La Galion river, enveloping the abandoned town of St. ('lade. Fifteen scientists who had re- mained near the volcano to monitor seismic activities es- caped aboard a French navy boat Monday night after the ex- plosion rocked old Fort St. Charles where they were work- ing, Three of the scientists made a helicopter flight near the peak yesterday morning to assess the situation and were nearly trap- ped by an expanding cloud of steam, ftimes and ash. "THE VOLCANO is gradual ly worsening - this is a day- to-day situation," said Prof. Robert Brousse of the Univer- sity of Paris, the ranking vol- cano expert at the scene and one of the men aboard the heli- copter. Brousse and other scien- tists have predicted La Sou- friere will have a "catastro- phic" eruption, with Monday's explosion just a preview. Another passenger on the helicopter, French government administrator Jean-Claude Au- rousseau, said that to escape, 'The pilot burned the red," meaning he pushed the craft far over its safe speed of 200 miles an hour. 1f the cloud had engulfed the helicopter, the plane would have been without oxygen and fallen into the sea, one official said. The helicopter at the time was well below the cone of the 4,813-foot mountain, he added. ALL RESIDENTS have been evacuated from cities and vil- lages near the volcano, and yes- terday's rush to get away could bring the number of refugees to 87,000. The total population of this French territory is 330,000. Aurousseau said 1,500 resi- dents of Vieux-Fort, seven miles from the volcano, were invited to leave their homes even though the town is guarded by the Caraibes Mountains and out of danger. "We are asking them to leave for psychological reasons . . . they were alone and afraid," he said. THEY WERE moving by car, bus and boat to the town of St. Francois, a small community more than 20 miles away on the eastern side of Guadeloupe. Br o u s s e, Aurousseau and Christian Gerondeau, director of civil security in Paris, made their helicopter flight to try and determine if La Soufriere is near a major eruption. Brousse said 891 earth shocks were felt in Guadeloupe between 6 p.m., EDT Monday and 11 a.m. yesterday. BROUSSE SAID, "We over- flew the villages, they're all in- tact, but there is a very dense cloud of ash that stopped us from flying over the town of Bailliff." "There were numerous and very violent tremors," he add- ed, "Because the visibility was zero we couldn't determine what happened at the summit. It was obviously something big." Very few persons remained in the danger zone and even po- lice were withdrawn. Authori- ties said a handful of elderly persons refused to leave their homes and there were some thieves in the zone who hoped to plunder abandoned homes. Police checkpoints were set up on roads leading into the zone to bar entry. There also were cattle, dogs and other animals left to fend for themselves. A truck driver told of packs of dogs running in the streets of a deserted town. TU tells renters of vacating rights GEO, 'U' concur on fees provision Ann Arbor tenants moving out ants. The Ann Arbor Housing c',inue, urom Cai' i> At their houses and apartments Code stating "No owner shallrqet whichdetconcerned withsin Itse tetw weeks niay permit a dsvelling tinit to be oc- request which dealt concerned be faced wvith afew obstacles, pied by new tenants unless it situations where sections in a according to an Ann Arbor Ten- is clean, sanitary, and fit for particular course had vastly ants Union (AATU) spokesper- human occupancy," was cited disparate numbers of students. son. in support of this claim. GEO asked that in these situa- ln a press release the spokes- The AATU recommended that tions, students be distributed person said the AATU has re- if a tenant is being threatened more evenly among sections. ceived calls from several ten- by a landlord, they should "in- THE UNIVERSITY agreed ants claiming their landlords form (the) landlord that it is to consider the problem if GEO have threatened to "deduct not (the tenants') responsibility presented a proposal to that ef- cleaning fees from their secur- to shampoo the rugs, wax the feet. ity deposits" for failure to wax floors, etc." They also suggested As the school year approach- floors, clean drapes, and sham- that the tenants leave the dwell- es, the negotiations have be- poo rugs in their residences, ing in the same condition it was come increasingly slugsh, as in when 'you moved into it. come sinesingly ltthe, as BUT, ACCORDING to the The AATU claimed the only both sides anticipatet te re spokesperson, these demands reason the security deposit can turn of the vast majority of "are not in accordance with be withheld is for "back rent, summering GSAs. Though the what can legally be deducted unpaid utility bills, or for dam- sessions will continue every from a tenants security de- ages beyond reasonable wear Tuesday and Thursday morning posit." and tear." But if the rent was at 10:30 at the Michigan Union, The spokesperson said it is withheld because repairs were it is fairly certain that no major the responsibility of the land- not carried out by the landlord, agreements will be reached. lords to clean apartments for there can be no deduction from GEO will almost surely try to incoming tenants, not the re- the security deposit on the basis gauge the disposition of the un- sponsibility of the previous ten- of back rent. ion membership before it under- -E. takes any serious bargaining. Meanwhile, the University will probably sound out faculty and other staff members while readying strike contingency plans. Both sides have less than op- timistic views on reaching an agreement in the near future. With the August 31 contract expiration date looming ahead, the two bargaining teams have taken steps to allow for exten- sins of the contract, BOTH SIDES have agreed to hold a conference a week prior to the expiration of the present contract in order to decide if a seven-day extension is in or- der. After the initial meeting, weekly conferences will be held to the same effect At the moment, with 30 bar- gaining issues, approximately 11 have been agreed or tenatively agreed to, University rights; bulletin boards; sick leave; jury duty and witness service; spe- cial conferences; changes Re- sulting in a conference; com- plaint, arbitration and grievance procedures; initial employment and re-employment; bereave- ment leave; law savings clause and union dues and representa- tion service fees. Of the 19 issues still separat- ing the two sides, non-discrimi- nation, affirmative action, class size, health insurance and the information clause promise to create the biggest waves in fu- tare sessions. Interesting facts The first store carrying a va- riety of goods under one roof opened in 1862 and by 1970- there were 6,000 of them with sales of nearly $30 billion, The displaced persons act of 1948 was an emergency meas- ure which permitted immigra- tion into the United States of more than 400,000 refugees. Colfax in Placer County, Ca- lif., was named for President Grant's vice-president Echuyler Colfax. Juliette Low founded the Girl Scout movement in America, March 12, 1912. -TONIGHT- *o HAPPY HOUR uW HALF-PRICE on BEER and DRINKS U 8-10:30 missIMovies every Mon. & Tues. Nites HALF PRICE ON ALL DRINKS on Tues. from 8-midnight 15c HOT DOGS every Friday from 2-5 p.m., while they last. NO COVER 310 MAYNARD was won was ,..ate s rr GRADUATES: Have your diploma reproduced as an etching in copper mounted on a wood style plaque. Sample on display at diploma office 1518 LSA Building 8" x 10" etching on a 9" x 11" plaque-$25.00 outside Ann Arbor $1.00 for postage MAIL OR BRING YOUR DIPLOMA TO: CENTURY ETCHING CORP. 424 W. Washington St. Ann Arbor, MI 3103 Enclose check or money order with order. Your etching and diploma will be mailed to you- ALLOW 3 WEEKS FOR DELIVERY