4 Page 2-Sunday, January 9, 1983-The Michigan Daily STUDENT FAMILY HOUSING AVAILABLE WINTER TERM STOP IN ROOM 1011 S.A.B., TELEPHONE 763-3164 8 A.M. to Noon; 12:30 to 4:30 Weekdays Calif. earth tremors may signal volcano r i fl MAMMOTH LAKES, Calif. (AP) - A continuing string of small earthquakes may signal volcanic activity in the rugged mountains around this high- country ski resort, a geologist who studies volcanoes said yesterday. But Dan Miller and other scientists stressed at a news conference that no one is yet predicting an eruption in this community along the eastern slopes of the Sierra Nevada, across the moun- tains from Yosemite National Park. Small quakes continued to jolt the region 200 miles east of San Francisco and 250 miles north of Los Angeles for the third straight day yesterday. Tom Burdette, a seismologist with the U.S. Geological Survey, said the earth would probably give a warning before the situation becomes : dangerous, but added "this may be that warning period." "At Mount St. Helen we got so we could tell what's going to happen and we think we can monitor this thing, too," Burdette said., An old volcanic crater, the remains of a stupendous eruption 700,000 years ago, lies five miles below the earth's surface. It rose 10 inches between 1975 and 1980 most significantly after four earthquakes hit the area in May 1980. Interest in the volcano grew Thur- sday when a series of tremors, the most significant measuring 5.5 and 5.6 on the Richter scale, rocked the area, a popular high Sierra ski resort 180 miles east of San Francisco. No injuries were reported, but the quakes collapsed a snow-covered air- plane hangar - crushing the twin-engine plane inside - shook groceries on shelves, and triggered power outages. Since then, the magnitude of the tremors dropped dramatically. fA And save with these special prices on Luxo Lamps. Draft registration draws fire from Gray Panthers (Continued from Page 1) The Gray Panthers expressed concern at the meeting upon hearing about recent actions by the Ann Arbor Pubic Library. The library has refused to in- clude information about CARD on a list of resource guides for young adults because the organization used 'anti' in its title. Roth and other CARD members say they consider this action to be as ridiculous as refusing to list an anti- slavery group. ONE STUDENT at the meeting, a Residential College senior, and non- registrators who requested anonymity, expressed his opposition to registration. "I am not a pacifist but I can't register knowing the gover- nment as it is now. I don't trust it. Although I do apreciate being a mem- Crownlight Sug. List $ 26.95 Our Price $ 18.75 Lumaglo Sug. List $ 28.95 Our Price $ 19.98 ber of this society, I think I can make the country better by refusing to register," he said. He added that he had received a let- ter in November after failing to register in July of 1980. The letter was sent to his home and specifically stated that failing to register could result in a five- year prison sentence and $10,000 fine if convicted. A twenty-one-year-old LSA senior at the meeting who also had not registered said non-registration is "a way to expr- ess your disagreement with the overall military attitude of government. He objected to registration on several levels and said 'As an American citizen I have a responsibility to resist unjust laws - that resistance is a patriotic act." Right now, "government is not giving access to all of the facts" about military service and the registration process is part of this unclear picture of military policy, he claimed. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports Opposition leaders call for Gandhi's resignation NEW DELHI, India- Opponents of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi asked for her resignation yesterday, saying her party's election losses in two key states showed she no longer had the trust of the nation. "A nationwide pattern has emerged, amounting to a total rejection of her personal style," said former Foreign Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee, leader of the Bharatiya Janata Party which helped oust Gandhi from power in 1977. "In all fairness, the situation demands that Mrs. Gandhi must im- mediately resign from her prime ministership or seek a fresh mandate." In legislative assembly elections held Wednesday, Gandhi's Congress Par- ty lost both Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka states for the first time since In- dia achieved independence from Britain in 1947. Vajpayee pointed out that with the two latest losses the Congress Party had failed to win a majority in all eight states where elections were held sin- ce Gandhi returned to power in 1980. Reagan may consider tax hike WASHINGTON- President Reagan, who objects to raising taxes in the current economic slump, is considering post-1984 tax boosts to reduce huge, growing deficits projected through 1988, administration officials said. The officials said Reagan also is pondering a spending freeze on some domestic programs and modest cuts in military spending to keep the deficit for fiscal 1984 below $200 billion. But the president appears to be holding firm against seeking significant new taxes for the budget year that starts next Oct. 1. The officials, who discussed the status of the administration's budget planning on the condition that they not be identified, emphasized that Reagan has made no final decisions and is unlikely to do so until late in the coming week. The president has until Jan. 31 to submit his fiscal 1984 budget proposals to Congress. Tax-raising proposals being considered for the years following 1984 in- clude a narrowing of tax deductions, such as for credit card interest charges and mortgage interest on second homes, and taxes on energy consumption. Grenade hurts 12 in Israel TEL AVIV, Israel- A hand grenade was thrown at a passenger bus in the center of Tel Aviv yesterday evening, wounding 12 people, police said. No group claimed responsibility, but Israel's state television said Palestinian guerrillas launched the attack. Though police reported only one grenade, television reports said two grenades were hurled. It said one exploded harmlessly on the street, while the second landed inside the bus, blowing up near the driver. The report said the grenades were thrown from the second floor of an abandoned building. The bus driver, Amnon Damti, said he thought he saw two youths throwing stones at the bus. Israel Radio said the grenades were the same kind as those used by Palestinian guerrillas. Ambulances and police rushed to the scene with wailing sirens: The first casualties were evacuated to hospitals in cars that happened to pass by, Soviet economy unlikely to collapse, CIA says WASHINGTON- The Central Intelligence Agency does not consider an economic collapse of the Soviet Union "even a remote possibility," a senior CIA official said in declassified testimony released yesterday. The judgment by Henry Rowen, chairman of the spy agency's National In- telligence Council, was less harsh than those about the Soviet economy by President Reagan and other administration officials, but Rowen also defen- ded the administration view that the Soviet economy is "deteriorating." He said in testimony Dec. 1 before a subcommitteeof Congress' Joint Economic Committee that Soviet economic growth has "slowed markedly" in recent years, forcing harder choices by the Kremlin leadership on how to allocate money for military and civilian uses. He concluded, however, that signs of Soviet economic weakness do not mean the country's economy is losing its "dynamism." In releasing a declassified version of Rowen's testimony, Sen. William Proxmire (D-Wis.), vice chairman of the subcommittee on international trade, finance and security economics, stressed aspects of the CIA assessment pointing to basic strengths of the Soviet economy. "One of the worst things we can do is to underestimate the economic strength of our principal adversary," Proxmire said. He contended that "the Soviet Union is perhaps the most self-reliant industrialized nation." Volcano erupts in Hawaii HONOLULU- Kilauea volcano erupted with a brilliant aerial lava show yesterday and then sputtered out, allowing evacuated residents to return to their mountainside homes. Two active vents about 600 feet long sent curtains of lava shooting 75 feet high and started flows of molten rock creeping down the mountain toward the Kalapana area. The river of lava began cooling when the eruption ended. Hawaii Civil Defense spokesman Bruce Butts said all roadblocks into the area had been lifted and residents of the mountainside subdivision threatened by the lava flows were being allowed to go home. Police said earlier 85 to 90 people had left. Butts said a Red Cross shelter would remain open in the nearby area of Pahoa. "They can go back home, but we are still maintaining a Red Cross shelter should people want to stay out of the area," Butts said. Vol. XCIII, No.81 Sunday, January 9, 1983 14 4 4 4 S 12:00-5:00 Sunday 8:30-8:00 Monday MORE THAN A BOOKSTORE L549 E. 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