p l independence t talks as 'helpful," but ministers said resulting 50-member constituent they would release no details until assembly would act in a consultative South Africa decides what it will do. manner, with South Africa continuing The ministers are Vance, David to administer the territory, also called Owen of Britain, Hans-Dietrich Gen- Namibia, as it has since 1920. scher of West Germany, Donald The source said face would be saved Jamieson of Canada and Olivier Stirn of and South Africa could move on to a France. U.N.-supervised election next spring. THEIR COUNTRIES drew up the OTHER SOURCES said the question U.N. plan providing for a gradual tran- of U.N. troops-South Africa had sition to independence with U.N.- protested the size of the contingent- supervised elections in May or June had been largely resolved. and a U.N. peace-keeping force. The 7,500 troops Secretary-General South Africa's plan calls for pre- Kurt Waldheim proposed in his report independence elections Dec. 4-8. on South-West Africa last month would Sources close to the talks said the key now be a maximum, with actual proposal left on the table was for South deployment much lower. Africa to hold the December election, South Africa summoned leaders of but to call it a referendum instead. The six South-West African political parties to Pretoria Wednesday as the talks with the ministers drew to a close. The leaders left the territory on a special government flight. h I eNO REPRESENTATIVE was invited from the black nationalist South-West Africa People's Organization, whose 7 rayguerrillas have been carrying on a hit- bb II and-run war against South African troops in the territory for 12 year. r works tonight, The Western source said thatto ease 19-7:30 PM South African concern that black U.N. troops would appera to identify with alks end SWAPO, the contingent would be largely Canadian with British support. South Africa wants elections as soon as possible, fearing the delay incor- porated in the U.N. plan would give SWAPO more time to campaign. THE UNITED NATIONS recognizes SWAPO as the representative of South- West Africa's one million residents, most of whom are black. There is pressure from African and other Third World and communist nations to impose economic sanctions against South Africa if it doesn't accept the U.N. plan. The senior U.S. official said he was hopeful for a breakthrough before the Oct. 23 deadline set by the U.N.. Security Council for Waldheim to report back on progress. South Africa took the territory from Germany in 1915,during World War I, In 1920, when the old League of Nations was dividing German territory as war spoils, it assigned South Africa to ad- minister the territory. In 1966 the United Nations rescinded the mandate but South Africa refused to give it up. Western diplomats fear that if an in- ternationally recognized independence settlement cannot be reached, the guerrilla war will widen. Esmail paroled, to, be, deported' TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) - Sami Esmail, an American student convicted of belonging to a Palestinian guerrilla organization, has been granted an early parole and will be deported from Israel in a few days, his attorney said yester- day. Esmail, a Michigan State University graduate student, was ordered expelled from Israel with five months left of his 15-month prison sentence, attorney Felicia Langer said. SHE SAID the Israeli parole board acted on a recommendation from the justice minister. Israeli authorities could not be reached for comment, but U.S. Embassy officials confirmed the action. Ms. Langer credited "tremendous pressure'gfrom individuals and organizations in the United States for Esmail's release. She said he would be freed in a few days and then would leave for the United States. The attorney said she did not inter- pret the parole as a gesture by Israel following the Camp David peace accor- ds. She said the effort to free Esmail began 10 months ago. ESMAIL, 23, was arrested Dec. 21, 1977, when he arrived in Israel to visit his dying father, who lived in Ramallah in the occupied West Bank of the Jordan River. He was convicted in June of membership in the Popular. Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a radical Arab group. Prosecutors said Esmail received training at a liberation front camp in Libya. During interrogation by Israeli authorities, Esmail confessed. He later said he had been mistreated and coer- ced and pleaded innocent in court. The court accepted the confession as evidence. HIS ARREST stirred controversy in the United States, where Esmail's sup- porters said he had committed no crime in Israel and his activities outside Israel were legal where they occurred. Under Israeli law, persons may be tried for anti-Israel offenses committed anywhere in the world. Sen. James Abourezk, (D-S.D.), claimed the FBI supplied Israeli authorities with information about Esmail, and he called for an in- vestigation into alleged violations of Esmail's civil rights. ESMAIL WAS eligible for parole af- ter serving two-thirds of his sentence, which included time served before his conviction. Ms. Langer said Abourezk and Esmail's congressman, Rep. Bob Carr, (D-Mich.), were among 60 prominent Americans who signed a letter to Israeli officials requesting Esmail's release. Ms. Langer said the expulsion order bars Esmail from visiting his relatives in the West Bank. ESMAIL IS in good health, the attor- ney said, but has lost about 15 pounds during imprisonment. After the parole board session at Damon Prison in Haifa, Esmail;was allowed to meet his sister, brother, un- cle and cousin, who came from their home in Ramallah. They could not be reached for comment. Ms. Langer said Esmail will be tran- sferred Thursday from Haifa to Ramla Prison, which is near Tel Aviv's Ben- Gurion Airport. He will be flown out of the country in a few days, she said. I PBB-tal nted grain buried in Ann Arbor, (Continued from Page 1) PBB. It came in contact with the groundwater there and contaminated it with four parts of PBB per billion. Milk is considered safely drinkable at five parts per billion," he said. "We -are discussing such a small amount of PBB that it's not really worth' talking about." -William Turnery, Environmental Department chief State Department of Natural Sources " Despite assurances that there is no danger to Ann Arbor area residents, local politicians are insisting that the MUSIC from Broadway Shows at f KING'S ~~Jl x.i eA 115 E. Liberty-663.3381 Open Monday and Friday Evenings area be completely tested for PBB leakage. "We won't take any chances," said Republican Mayor Louis Belcher. "They can tell me all they want to, but I will insist on having the water tested." ASSISTANT CITY Administrator Kenney confirmed that the City would "formally request that the county and state perform formal tests on the area very soon." Councilman Ken Latta (D-First Ward) said he felt that the disclosure "indicates the depth of the toxic sub- stance problem of this state." He questioned the assumption that since no other leakage had been found, no PBB has leaked out. "They are assuming that the solubility of PBB is the same as other chemicals," he said. Latta also said that it was his understanding that the landfill was not lined with clay all over, but lined on the bottom with irregular thicknesses of clay. "It is not a total protection," he said. The possibility of water con- tamination is considered to be much more likely in Lenawee County by state officials. In June of 1974 an estimated 2.8 pounds of PBB was buried with 30.4 tons of grain near Adrian. Officials have ordered an immediate water testing program there. New direct Mideast negotiations scheduled SOUP-n-SANDWICHES-$.50 NOON LUNCHEON: Friday, Oct. 20 CHRIS THOMAS * KEITH HEFNER * MACEO POWELL present a slide show and discussion on the eleventh world festival of students and youth in Havana, Cuba GUILD HOUSE-8o2 Monroe WASHINGTON (AP)-Egypt and Israel scheduled new direct negotiations yesterday, amid American. assurances that all was going well in the peace talks between them. The direct talks, scheduled for late in the afternoon, followed almost two days during which the United States talked separately with each side, including meetings between President Carter and each delegation. "THE MEETINGS were productive, and we're hopeful the progress will con- tinue," said George Sherman, the of- ficial spokesman for the conference. He refused to discuss in detail what the negotiators were talking about. Sherman continued an American ef- fort to minimize the impact of commen- ts made Tuesday by Israeli Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan after the Israelis met separately with Carter. Dayan said the negotiations had en- countered difficulties and had turned to Carter for help. "WE'VE NEVER disagreed with the fact that there were difficulties," Sherman said. But he said the meeting with Carter was not extraordinary and did not come about because of a crisis. "There are no unresolved problmes that are insurmountable." Sherman refused to speculate on when the talks might end. Yesterday morning, there were separate talks between the American delegation and the Egyptians, followed by talks between U.S. officials and the Israelis. Sherman said the head of the State Department's legal bureau, Herbert Hansell, was involved in both meetings. His involvement has been an indication in the past of an effort to draft language for the proposed treaty after some agreement in principle has been reached. THE ISRAELI delegation spent the early afternoon at Georgetown Univer- sity where Simcha Dinitz, the outgoing Israeli ambassador to the United States, was awarded an honorary degree. In a speech, Dinitz gave no details of the negotiations, but indicated that Israel has not changed its position on the emotional issue of the future of Jerusalem. The Camp David accords do not address the Jerusalem question. "Jerusalem has never experienced a greater freedom of worship and access to all religions than today. For 29 cen- turies it was one city and for 19 years it was artificially divided. Now it is one, never to be divided again, and while being the capital of Israel it will con- tinue to provide inspiration to all people of all religions," Dinitz said. Din itz ISRAELI POLICY has been to reject suggestions that Jerusalem be par- titioned or that it be made an inter- national city and no longer the seat of Israeli government. Dinitz also defended the Camp David decision to pursue a separate Egyp- tian-Israeli peace. "Surely the goal was and remains a comprehensive peace in the Middle East," he said. "But to convert this goal into tactics and assume that unless a comprehensive peace is achieved in one move, no movement should take place at all, is to stifle any progress and to block any advance on the road to peace." UAC Mediatrics presents A VERY NATURAL THING (Christopher Larkin, 1974) is a simple but insightful storyof a young Manhat- tan school teacher who falls for a handsome advertising executive. The first feature film on homosexuality to achieve commercial distribution. "A VERY NATURAL THING reveals Larkin to be an incisive filmmaker with a sense of style and grace."-L.A. Times. Thurs., Oct. 19 Mich. Union 7 & 9:00 THE STING (George Roy Hill) The scene is the Chicago underworld of the thirties. Redford is an apprentice con-man who is ready to tackle the big league. Newman is an aging con-man, but no less clever. Together, they set about to pull the BIG con. "Hill reached for nostalgia and touched it in the hands of the artist."-Judith Crist. Winner of seven Academy Awards. Fri., Oct. 20 Nat. Sci. Aud. 7 & 9:15