The Michigan Daily Vol. XC, no. 56-S -Friday, August 8, 1980 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Hurricane Ailen heads for Gulf Coast From UPI and AP MERIDA, Mexico - Mighty hurricane Allen, its highest winds in- creased to an awesome 185 mph, swer- ved away from the plush resort towns of the Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula yesterday and headed on a course that could bring it to the mainland by the weekend. Mount St. Helens erupted for the fifth time yesterday, spewing a lightning- streaked steam and ash cloud 44,000 feet skyward in a blast that lasted for more than 1 hours. See story, Page 10. Jittery coastal residents from Mexico to Alabama began preparations. AT LEAST 83 persons have died in the storm, strongest on record in the northwestern Caribbean and the second strongest Atlantic hurricane of modern times. Property damage in the Caribbean was being counted in the millions and parts of the Windward Islands and sec- tions of Haiti were leveled. Cuba escaped with a glancing blow Smiling pyramid A pyramid such as this mount is one of the skills cheerleaders learn at sum- mer camp. This year South Quad hosted hundreds of teenage cheerleaders for four-day sessions at which they learned new cheers, new routines, and how to smile. See story, Page 3. area when the center of the storm passed to the south of it during the day. HAITI RECORDED 50 deaths from Allen, and the toll is expected to go still higher when five isolated villages are heard from; the Windward Islands counted 17 dead; Jamaica 6, Cuba three, and the Dominican Republic three. In addition at least four persons were killed in the crash of a helicopter that had been removing oil workers from of- fshore rigs in the Gulf of Mexico. Nine others are missing. "If the hurricane continues on this track today, it will become a threat to the western Gulf of Mexico on the weekend," the National Hurricane Cen- ter in Miami warned. ALMOST 400 Red Cross workers were placed on alert across the nation and at least 100 were en route to the Texas coast, spokeswoman Jo Anne Jones said in Dallas. "They are preparing to set up shelters and get ready for mass feeding," she said. Galveston City Manager Steve Huf- fman said he is prepared to issue an evacuation advisory as early as today if the hurricane continues to threaten the coast. AT SOUTH PADRE Island on the lower Texas coast, Fire Marshal Fred Jacobs said residents had begun boar- ding windows on beach houses and stocking up on supplies. "We're going into a preliminary stage of planning," Jacobs said. "We don't evacuate until the warning is issued. Right now it doesn't look overly good." Meteorologist and veteran hurricane watcher Walter Henry at Texas A&M University, said coastalsresidents should begin filling the gas tanks of their cars and thinking of an escape route. "I'THINK it's time for these people along the coast not to hit the panic but- ton, but it's sure time to be getting ready," he said. Henry said the storm probably would hit land Saturday, and he said Corpus Christi had the best chance of being the target. "I think we- can eliminate anything east of the Mississippi River," he said. Pro, anti-Iranians clash at D. C. demonstration From UPI and AP WASHINGTON - Iranian demonstrators, crying "Long Live Khomeini," were surrounded by hundreds of jeering, flag-waving Americans who yelled; "go home" and pelted them with eggs and tomatoes in a park near the White House yesterday. At one point, the crowd sang the "Star Spangled Banner" - at another, shouts went: "Nuke Iran." ONE IRANIAN woman passed out in the sweltering heat, and had to be removed by ambulance. At least two Americans were arrested for throwing debris at the demon- strators. The rally and march was staged following the release from jail earlier this week of 192 Iranians who had been arrested during a violent July 27 protest march in Washington and taken to two prisons in New York. About 100 of the Iranians returned to the nation's capital early Wednesday after being held virtually hostage by angry, rock-throwing crowds in New York Tuesday night. YESTERDAY's demonstration, with about 200 Iranians taking part, began at a mid-town park. Police had to drag away two American counter-protesters who sat down in front of the marchers, who moved along a mile-long route through the white-collar business district to Lafayette Square across Pennsylvania Avenue from the White House. In Iran, firing squads put 13 Iranian soldiers to death at dawn for participating in an attempt to overthrow the regime of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, Tehran Radio said. THE IRANIAN parliament, at the same time, met to discuss appointment of a prime minister and it was believed that Cabinet minister Muhammad Ali Rajaie, was the leading choice to fill the post, the radio reported in a broad- cast monitored in Nicosia. See EXECUTIONS, Page 11