inter/national Congress - Continued from Page 4 work as usual on Thursday. Then officials would assess what progress Congress is mak ing toward approving a spen ding bill acceptable to Reagan. "The call will be made tomor row (Thursday) morning,” said budget office spokesman Edwin L. Dale Jr. An administration memoran dum circulated among govern ment offices Wednesday reiterated that the House ver sion of the omnibus spending bill was unacceptable, and that Reagan might make the same judgment about the com promise measure that finally passes Congress. The memorandum told federal officials to be prepared to carry out “agency shutdown plans” if it appears that Con gress will not act quickly to pro vide money for the government. Action on the long-term money bill, and the expiring stopgap measure, became necessary because only four of 13 regular appropriations bills for fiscal 1985 have been signed into law. Employees involved in na tional security, health, emergency and other essential services would not be sent home in any case. Appropriations already have been voted for the departments of Justice, Commerce, State and Housing and Urban Develop ment, plus the Veterans Ad ministration, the National Aeronautics and Space Ad ministration and the En vironmental Protection Agency. Deport guru, senator urges (AP) — A state senator has called on Gov. Vic Atiyeh to de mand the deportation of Indian guru Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh to India. Sen. Dell Isham, D-Lincoln City, said Wednesday he has sent a letter to Atiyeh asking him to pressure federal im migration authorities to deport the guru. Isham was also critical of the governor’s recent call for parties on both sides of the Rajneesh controversy to “cool it.” “We have been cooling it for some time and I don’t see the situation getting any better,” he said. "The situation has actual ly changed a great deal in the last year and a half or two and I don’t think we can continue to cool it.” The senator said Oregon residents should be tolerant of other religions but the Raj neeshees have violated state land use and election laws and made Oregon a subject of ridicule. “What I’m asking the gover nor to do is to demand from the federal government that we deport the Bhagwan immediate ly,” Isham said. “If the Bhagwan was a Mexican farm worker he’d be put on the bus today and sent back to Mexico." Isham said he thinks the ap proximately 1,700 Rajneeshees in central Oregon would leave the state if Rajneesh was deported. Denny Miles. Gov. Atiyeh's press aide, said the governor has nothing to do with immigra tion matters and defended his call to reduce tensions. “The deportation issue is a federal issue that we have nothing to do with, neither Sen. Isham nor the governor’s of fice,” Miles said. “The governor was calling for a reduction of the physical ten sions in central Oregon in terms of an armed camp and various threats,” he said, “he wanted it made very clear that we are go ing to prevent harm to any Oregon resident whether they are Rajneeshees or somebody else.” Miles added that Atiyeh is also anxious to protect the elec tion process in Wasco County from abuse by either side. Meanwhile, a U.S. Justice Department official planned to visit the City of Rajneesh Wednesday to look into the possibility of establishing a rumor control center there. John Mathis of the depart ment’s Community Relations Service in Seattle said Tuesday he would serve “as a represen tative in establishing a rumor control network” during his trip to the town. State and federal officials have said such a center could help ease some of the tensions created in Wasco County by the influx of homeless people into Rajneeshpuram. Ma Prem Isabel, a Ra jneeshpuram spokeswoman, said a meeting regarding a rumor control center was scheduled for Wednesday in the City of Rajneesh. Local, county, state and federal officials were expected to attend, she said. The City of Rajneesh is situated about 18 miles from the city-commune of Raj neeshpuram. It was known as Antelope until the guru’s followers voted last month to change the town’s name. Speakers urged about 1,400 people who gathered in The Dalles Tuesday night to avoid violence and abide by the law. The meeting was called to con sider resistance to any attempt by the Rajneeshees to take over the county. "Those who joke about violence, those who joke about killing the Bhagwan and anybody else like that, there is no room (for them) here,” said Garry McMurry, a Portland lawyer who has argued two re cent court cases against the Rajneeshees. “Violence is not an answer,” he said. “Breaking the law is not an answer. 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