Page 12-Friday, May 9, 1980-The Michigan Daily I Active againA- Mount St. Helens, the active volcano located 45 miles northeast of Portland in Scientists are now concerned about the possihility of avalanches and flooding in Washington, spews smoke and ash skyward yesterday during an eruption. the area. Nixon moves into 15-room suite 40 NEW YORK (UPI)-Richard Nixon moves into his new 15-room office suite in lower Manhattan next week and while the rent runs $66,000 a year, that is cheap compared to the more fashionable locations the former president apparently had in mind. Warren Gardner, spokesman for the New York regional office of the General Services Administration, said that aside from $66,532 in annual rent for the new offices, the government has paid $56,871 to furnish the Nixon suite so far. NIXON SETTLED on 4,800 square feet of space on the 13th floor at 26 Federal Plaza, which is in an area bet- ween China Town and Wall Street in lower Manhattan. Gardner said Nixon "had several locations in the upper East Side in mind, but it would have been two or three times more" expensive, since the area is considered chic. Nixon recently bought a house with his own money on the upper East Side at a cost of just under $1 million, but the federal government pays for office space for former presidents under a law passed in 1958. "IT WILL BE his private office for his personal affairs," Gardner said. His offices are furnished with plush beige carpeting, costing $4,560 for the F- $395 eiciu catwe're e i Rth ftt fat a jS~e, g Cbr9 e iflv 1' .. _ =::; Ce. NA10 carpet and $1.125 to install. Vinyl wall coverings cost $1,986 and dark brown drapes, $3,300. Nixon also gets a presidential pension of about $66,000 a year, plus pensions for other public offices he has held. Junior high pupil granted interview with Nixon NEW YORK (UPI) - When eighth-grader Michael Morris turned in his social studies assignment, his teacher was first shocked and then unbelieving. Had he really won an in- terview with former president Richard Nixon? "He didn't think it was true," the 13- year-old said. "He though I'd made it up, and then I played the tape for him and he thought it was comedian Rich Little." BUT WHEN Michael handed the teached an autographed picture of the former chief executive, the teacher had to admit the pupil had scooped the city media stars and snagged the first in- terview with Nixon since he moved from California to New York. The assignment didn't start at the presidential level. All teacher Allen Urkowitz told his See JUNIOR, Page 13 0 6 6 c t L f net u Seafood iN sned 5ftt sla fdeliefttel iSreh ' eo12l, Catch Itno feh 9 goO'd things rt roflfd iflĀ° 03f KA2} 6.p