The Michigan Daily-Thursday, Octoberl , 1981-Page 7 Quake .rocks California Sierras YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK, Calif. (UPI) - A strong earthquake and numerous aftershocks rumbled *through the Sierra foothills of central California yesterday, rattling buildings, scaring campers, loosening boulders and causing slight structure damage. In Yosemite, campers and a large number of foreign tourists staying in hotels and cabins, were awakened by the quake. "I'M SAYING to myself it could be bears," said Thomas Lyons, 61, of Liverpool, England. "I thought it was bears in the corner of our room. I never would have guessed it was an ear- thquake. ' The quake, registering a magnitude of about 5.8 on the Richter Scale, hit at 4:53 a.m. PDT and was followed by a series of aftershocks. The largest after- shock, 5.5, came 13 minutes after the initial quake, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. The quake was centered four miles west of the Mammoth Lakes area, just southwest of Yosemite. The University of. California gave the quake a preliminary magnitude of 5.75 and CalTech in Pasadena placed it at 5.8. CLYDE CAMPBELL, a spokesman for the state Office of Emergency Ser- vices, said the quake caused minor damage to a shopping center in the Mammoth Lakes area and state Depar- tment of Water Resources officials said it knocked some boulders onto roads.' A National Park spokesman said there were no immediate reports of damage in the park but it would take most of the day to check the trails and roads in the remote areas. "It was more of a gentle rolling rather than a sharp, jarring snap," ranger Herbie Sansum said. "So far we haven't found any damage. We're still checking some of the trails and roads in the more remote areas but so far everything seems to be okay." He said there were no reports of in- juries among the park visitors. f e 375 N MAPLE ILLAGE SHOPPIN~G CENTER 769-1300 [OIMON FRI S2 lPM SAT SUN $2t,3PM R oll n g sto pDaily Photo by KIM HILL A motorist roars through a stop on Liberty St. near Maynard St. yesterday. The stop sign is one of several new stops in- stalled in the area by police, but largely ignored by drivers. Casual observance of the intersections at Liberty and Maynard, and William and Maynard-where new stop signs have been erected-indicate that few motorists have npticed and obeyed the new signals. Four top Iranian -military American University leaders( BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Four of Iran's top military men and an un- specified number of war wounded died in a transport plane crash, Tehran Radio announced yesterday. Authorities also said a plot was un- covered to kill the nation's chief justice and police chief. There was also a new round of street clashes in Tehran and hit-and-run assassinations were reported in the provinces. THE CRASH Tuesday night of a U.S.- made C-130 Hercules transport killed Defense Minister Musa Namju and three other mi'itary commanders returning from southwestern Iran's battlefront with Iraq, according to of- ficial communiques. The huge transport went down as it neared Tehran on a flight carrying an unspecified number of wounded troops and bodies of soldiers killed in the war with Iraq, the communiques said. Also killed were Maj. Gen. Valeollah Fallahi, acting commander in chief of 1w it'n plane Iran's armed forceds; former air force hated office commander Javad Fakuri and the after he an Islamic Revolutionary Guards No. 2 Bani-Sadre man, Mohsen-Rahim Kolahdoz. Iranian airf CAUSE OF the crash was under in- accused F vestigation. relieved hii Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, in a sibilities int speech of condolences, called on the Fakuri w country's 36 million Iranians to defend Bani Sadr Iran with "iron will and pride ... so described that the blind-hearted people and the neutral in hypocrites and those who are in the Khomeinie West's embrace will know that the him of the Iranian people and armed forces still made him a live." of staff, a de While his reference was to the leftist Tehran P Mujahdeen Khalq, he did not actually would be h blame them for engineering the crash, military ac The Tehran newspaper Kayhan said the victims. accident was due to "technical THE G( failure." yesterday t IN PARIS, Mujahadeen leader-in- Mujahade( exile Massoud Rajavi suggested Islamic ten Khomeini ordered the plane sabotaged, Marxist Fe saying, "It is natural that Khomeini and docu himself is a suspect in this because he assassinati cras~h ers like Fakuri." Rajavi said d ex-President Abolhassan escaped to Paris aboard an force plane, that "Khomeini akuri of complicity and m of his leadership respon- the air force." - as defense minister during r's presidency but was by Iranian observers as Iran's power struggles. earlier this month relieved air force command and an adviser to the joint chiefs emotion. Radio said a mass funeral held today in front of the ademy in thencapital for the )VERNMENT announced hat guerrilla hideouts of the en Khalq, which mixes ets with Marxism, and the edayeen Khalq were raided ments showing a new on plot seized Washingtn Washington, D.C / )Spring 1982 Separate programs in Programs Include *Arrr-P-ir- ~eD c *Criminal justice *Urban Affairs *Economic Policy *Arts and Humanities * Foreign Policy *Journalism The American University is an equal opp~ortunity/ affirmative action university, *S~eminars withI decision makers *Internships on Capitol Hill, in government agencies and with public interest groups *Research with guidance by University professors * Specialized courses in & wide variety of disciplines *Campus housing if desired For further information, contact: Dr. David C. Brown, Executive Director Washington Semester Programs The American University Washington, D.C. 20016 .. . . .. . . . .. .. .. .. . .. .. .. . *Deceased receiving Social Security WA§HINGTON (AP)- Government investigators have uncovered at least 8,500 cases in which Social Security benefits are still being paid to people who are listed as dead on Medicare records, officials said yesterday. Social Security .Commissioner John Svahn said the in- vestigation, which is still under way, may uncover as many as 10,000 dead people still drawing monthly Social Security checks involving up to $60 million in overpayments. UNTIL A FEW months ago, no one had bothered to check the MediUare death records against the Social Security disability and retirement rolls, Svahn said. Of the first 2,858 cases reviewed, investigators found at least 1,100 were actually dead and 190 were still alive. The rest of those cases are still being reviewed. Among the 1,100 deceased beneficiaries, payments averaging $292 per month have continued for an average of 44112 months since the person died. RICHARD KUSSEROW, inspector general of the Depar- tment of Health and Human Services, said that amounts of improper payments of about $13,000 per case. He said the government expects to recover most of the known over- payments. "In some instances it's our fault because people have notified us that someone has passed away and we have not terminated their benefits," Svahn said in an interview. But he said investigators have found some cases where relatives or others who had joint bank accounts with the deceased "are in fact using the money, and, of course, that is illegal." Those cases would be referred to the Justice Department for prosecution, Svahn said. Mihga nscemble Theatre %UrU.EE~ -i Tnere are s till1 a fewZ da ysleft \igmernonl s ey e rnd..oliUOTJ (Continued from Page , d lot to do with procrastination, said University Counseling Services psychologist Rebecca Mullen. "A per- son may procrastinate because he's afraid he won't live up to that image," she said. For some procrastinators, however, fear of failure or success has nothing to do with why people procrastinate. "PEOPLE HURRY too much today," said LSA senior Ken Hall, who earlier this week had not yet registered for classes this term. "Something that's always bugged me about the University is that people are always in too much of a hurry to get things done." Mullen said part of the procrastination problem lies with the system, not the student. Because the University places so much importance on achievement, students are often afraid to take the risks associated with turning in an assignment and getting a poor grade. "Everyone is a product of his environment," she said. Hall, who also works for the Office of Major Events and the Campus Infor- mation Center, stressed that what he does outside of class 4s just as impor- tant for him as his classes. "THERE'S A LOT more to learn at the 'U' than going for grades," said j Al nq C.ario voidom Hall, adding that he has handed in papers as late as one week after the end of the semester. For engineering junior Jeff Schrier, time just seems to slip by. "Somehow two or three nights just pass by and you realize you're behind," said Schrier. Watching football games on television is his major method for procrastination. Both Hall and Schrier admitted they don't procrastinate as much when it comes to extracurricular activities. "I CAN'T hold things off for too long at the yearbook, or I get in trouble," said Schrier, who is the publication' s sports editor. "If you're interested in something, you take it seriously and get it done," said Hall. Currently, he's working on a plan for computerizing the Campus In- formation Center. All of the students admitted that procrastinating has led them into dif- ficulties at one time or another. "In the last week of last fall term, I had four 10- page papers due," said LSA junior Holly Hegarty. "But in the end, I somehow managed to pull it together." THE FIRST STEP in curing the procrastination habit is understanding why the problem exists, said Mullen. "Very often people who are doing it aren't aware of why they're doing it," she said. Brunner recommended several techniques for curing procrastination. "Take things in small steps," she said. "Many people are perfectionists. They try to take on more than they can ' do and are overwhelmed before they' start. If you didn't study yesterday, tell yourself, 'I'll study for an hour today' - don't say six hours. "Rather than punishing yourself when you procrastinate, reward your- self when you finally face the task you've been avoiding. Tell other people about what you've done, or give your- self a treat," Brunner continued. She also suggested students come in for counseling, either to talk to an in- dividual counselor or to -attend one of the workshops on anxiety the coun- seling service offers. Sept. 24-27 Oct. 1-4 8:00 p.m. Sunday Mat. 2:00 p.m. Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Tickets at PTP-Mich. League 764-0450 FINAL WEEK i 7 Solutions To Your Problem Use these numbers to call The Michigan Daily WE'RE ROUTING FOR YOU. BILLING ...... CIRCULATION CLASSIFIED.. . DISPLAY ...... nrr ' T . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 764-0550 764-0558 764-0557 764-0554 ANN ARDOR - LANSING (M.S.U.) -MT Dr"A tAIT 1