Page 6-Wednesday; October 10, 1979-The Michigan Daily ..:... :.*:, :. . .......*....*.*...* *..*..*.*.**.......... Patriotic. Front guerrillas object to British constitution proposal By AP and Reuter LONDON-Britain yesterday gave the guerrillas at the Zimbabwe Rhodesia peace talks 48 hours to change their minds and accept a compromise constitution for independen- ce. The future of the five-week-old conference hung in the balance as the Patriotic Front guerrilla alliance responded that the British demand was "absurd," reiterated its objec- tions to key areas of the constitution and said it could give no final verdict until all sides agreed on who will control the government and the guns during a transition to British- granted independence. FOREIGN SECRETARY Lord Carrington made the demand yesterday morning as the Patriotic Front and the opposing delegation led by Zimbabwe Rhodesia Prime Minister Abel Muzorewa faced each other again at the Lan- caster House conference center after four weeks of con- stitutional argument. Muzorewa has already accepted the British draft. Carrington set tomorrow as a deadline for the guerrillas to accept British constitutional proposals radically different from their own. He was speaking at. a full-scale plenary session of the negotiations grouping the Patriotic Front and the Salisbury bi-racial government of Muzorewa. The foreign secretary did not say what he would do if the guerrillas did not respond in the allotted time. CARRINGTON RULED OUT any more negotiation on the British draft and said the conference could not move on to discuss transition arrangements unless the Patriotic Front gave a definitive answer on the constitution when the talks resume tomorrow morning. Patriotic Front co-leader Joshua Nkomo urged that the "spirit of discussion" should continue and Carrington replied "there comes a time when the spirit of decision must take over," officials reported after the 30-minute closed-door session. Britain has insisted from the start a constitution must be finalized first if this latest bid to end the seven-year-old war and bring an internationally acceptable black government to the nation of 7 million blacks and 230,000 whites is to have any hope of success. CARRINGTON HAS RULED that constitutional agreement will fall away if the two sides cannot also agree on the second agenda item-setting up a transition admin- sitration and arrangements for British supervised elections. Unless either Carrington or the Patriotic Front backs off its stand tomorrow, deadlock seems inevitable. Today, Carrington will address the annual convention of the governing Conservative Party, where right-wing legislators are pressing for quick recognition of Muzorewa and an end to sanctions imposed against the previous white- minority government. The Patriotic Front's objections to the British draft center on strict property, pension and citizenship rights entrenched for years in a bill of rights, which they maintain preserves white-minority privilege. THE GUERRILLA ALLIANCE rejects provisions com- pelling a new black administration to pay compensation for nationalized land, grant citizenship automatically to people who settled after the white iovernment's 1965 unilateral break from Britain, and guarantee pensions to officials and army commanders of the present administration. PATRIOTIC FRONT guerrilla leaders Joshua Nkomo and Robert Mugabe explain their group's rejection of key areas of Britain's draft independence constitution yesterday at a press conference in London. They are attending the Zim- babwe-Rhodesia cgnstitutional conference there which is nearing a deadlock. Their action threatens the month-long negotiations on ways to achieve majority rule in that nation. .... ....'. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... . . . . ... G E".p.ry :mom, . .. ,...M . THIS WEEKEND at CANTERBURY LOFT October 12, 1979 October 13, 1979 Friday at 8 p.m. Saturday at 8 p.m. "PARDON ME "SATURDAY NIGHT YOUR HONOR" DEATH WISH" poetry of NEW WAVE poetry of Robert E. Clifford Valerie Warden CANTERBURY LOFT-s. State St., second floor $2 general admission at the door - CALLS FOR WEALTHY NATIONS TO HELP: Baez tours refugee camps HONG KONG (AP) - American folk singer Joan Baez embarked yesterday on a tour through Indochinese refugee camps to study firsthand what she called the "massive form of holocaust going on" in Southeast Asia. She said she doesn't care what actress Jane Fonda-thinks about her. "At home in the United States, people don't really want to pay much atten- tion"to the refugee situation, Baez said at a news conference after arriving MICHIGANT-NIOT SEVE NTY Fl FTH ANNIVERSARY here from San Francisco. "I THINK we have to really call on the wealthy nations to shell out. It's A huge disaster and people don't want to face up to it and think about it." The plight of the refugees, she added, was "a massive form of holocaust" on par with the Nazi extermination of Jews. Baez said she expected to talk to Vietnamese refugees and ask them why, "after living through Japanese invasions and famine and war ... they are leaving now." THE AMERICAN folk singer, who has recently denounced Hanoi for ex- pelling ethnic Chinese, has been criticized for those statements by Fon- da and others identified with the Far Left. "They feel betrayed, but I was trying to end the war for everyone who was being killed, not just for one-half," of the Vietnamese population, she said. She said she wasn't making the trip to prove to her critics that she was right in circulating an open letter criticizing the Hanoi regime. "I'M NOT really interested in the Far Left at this point, who really hate what I'm doing, and the Far Right who say, 'nyah, nyah, we told you so, we should have stayed there and bombed the hell out of them'," Baez said. Baez said that during her travels through the area, including stops in Thailand and Malaysia where she will give a concert, she also hoped to educate Americans and others about the "faceless" land refugees from Cambodia and Laos and the famine facing those still in Cambodia. Asked if she had ever thought there would 'be mass expulsions from Viet- nam when she was working to halt the fighting, Baez said: "I think all of us who worked to end the war in Vietnam hoped there would be some kind of relief." SHE SAID she had been invited to make a return trip to Hanoi, which she visited as an anti-war crusader in 1972. "But I think it's the wrong place to go to find out . things the government probably doesn't want me nosing into." Following visits with the refugees, Baez said she will take a swing through Europe to meet with leaders of the "New Left" there, including French author Jean-Paul Sartre. MUSKET (Michigan Union Show, KO-eds too) grew out of the Michigan Union ooera once women were admitted into the production. ,This year, they are performing an original musical,, IN E aL2AP, for the first time since 1956:" See It November 16, 17, 18 Daily Class if eds Get Results I Study shows Pa. residents doubt statements of nuke plant officials I EAST LANSING (UPI)-Persons living near the Three Mile Island nuclear plant give little credence to utility statements about the March 28 accident at the plant, Michigan State University researchers said yesterday. An MSU survey of 300 households near the Pennsylvania plant found 80 per cent confidence in reports issued by the federal government about the in- cident but only 3 per cent confidence in statements and reports by utility of- ficials. THE SURVEY, conducted by an MSU social geographer and two students, found 90 per cent of those questioned believe the utility should cover the cost of cleaning up the accident. Twenty-two per cent said the federal government should pick up some of the tab. The study concluded government regulatory agencies and utilities plan- ning to build nuclear plants should in- form residents of the affected areas about the potential hazards. THE 218-PAGE MSU report-the fir- st detailed analysis of resident attitudes and decisions about evacuation-has been made available to President Car- ter's commission on the accident and to Michigan officials. The study recommends persons near planned nuclear plant sites be surveyed on their feelings about the projects. It also urged channels be established at the state and local levels to dissemiante information about the plants-including evacuation plans. The survey suggested research funds - - OCTOBER 7 - OCTOBER 13, 1979 HAPPY 75th MICHIGAN UNION! EXHIBIT - MAIN LOBBY - ALL WEEK - 75 years of Michigan tradition in photos, drawings, scrapbooks, posters. TABLE CARVING - MAIN LOBBY - ALL WEEK - immortalize yourself, your club, or housing unit. Carve the table tops that will go in the coming student pub and grill. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12 - 4 p.m. - FRONT STEPS - RE DEDICATION CEREMONIES AND RECEPTION 9p.m. BALLROOM - THE UAC GONG SHOW - 75ยข - See the best of Michigan's students make fools of themselves in competition. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13 - AFTER THE GAME: Free cake and cider front steps. Free Billiards / Bowling until 2 a.m. for all students, staff, and lifetime union members. 8 p.m. - 1 a.m. - BIRTHDAY BASH - FREE - music, dancing, partying with the UM jazz Band, the Friars, the aMaizin' Blues, The Wiz Kids (Rock 'n Roll and Country Rock Band) 75th Anniversary Souvenir Books & Paperweights at Lobby Main Stand. Info: UAC 763-1107 or Jeff Lebow 763-4182 be made available to survey residents within 50 miles of current nuclear plan- ts on their perceptions of risk and what, they intend to do in case an evacuation is ordered. PBB intake: too low to, cause alarm, studies say (continued from Page 1) rates of infectious disease rising in Michigan. while rates dropped or remained steady in control samples. "We cannot suggest that PBB is the likely and certainly not the sole cause (of the findings)," cautioned Public Health School Dean Richard lRemington. However, he added, the project can- not be held to eliminate the uncertainty about the health-related effects of the PBB incident in Michigan. Sixty-five per cent of the'Michigan residents questioned said they were either "very concerned" or "somewhat concerned" about the effects of PBB on their health, the University's report found. 1 Remington said research on how food affects elimination of PBBfrom the body produced "very encouragingk' results, but stressed that officials still are not ready to recommend any specific diet. GONG SHOW -7c.L A .! ..Li. A:..:.A~ . - - __ _ .A ___ -w-