'c~fl I.. The Michigan Daily-Sunday, October 21, 1979-Page 9 NEW PHASE OF RHODESIA TALKS Rebels, whites debate election I i sir I ;e4 J ii '' ~ ~ + Why get caught up in the pack, when we.at the PAPER CHASE CAN meet your copying of graphic needs all under one roof? Centrally located on the basement floor of the Michigan Union makes it easy for obtaining the quickest service possible. With services like these why go anywhere else? LONDON (AP) - Now that both sides in the Zimbabwe Rhodesia peace conference have accepted a British- proposed constitution for the war-torn territory, the real question - who will be in charge during new elections - must be answered. Britain, which is sponsoring the seven-week-old conference, calls the phase that begins Monday "seeking agreement on transition arrangements before independence." TO TIlE delegates now in London from the southern African land of seven million blacks and 230,000 whites, it is a debate about power and whether they End their supporters will live or die. In the first six weeks, tempers flared and distrust was obvious between the delegation of the current Zimbabwe Rhodesian government, led by Prime Minister Abel Muzorewa, and the Patriotic Front guerrilla alliance, led by Joshua Nkomo and Robert Mugabe. Muzorewa accepted the draft con- stitution first, but the guerrillas balked until Britain announced it was going to hold unilateral talks with the Muzorewa delegation. The guerrillas changed their position last week. BRITAIN IS unveiling a plan that, sources say, calls for a cease-fire and the naming of a British governor who, backed by forces of the current gover- nment, would take over from Muzorewa and hold an election within a few months of a London agreement. The governor would then depart, and independence would be granted to the breakaway British colony, which for 14 years has struggled under international economic sanctions and non- recognition. It is what happens just before and af- ter this electoral transition that worries the delegates in London and makes the talks' chances of success appear slim. The Front, which claims popular sup- port and the power to win with bullets, says elections will be rigged for Muzorewa unless it has a prime say in the transition administration and, more importantly, its fighters are the core of a new army. MSU study identifies White Lake contaminant as pesticide NEITHER SIDE minds integrating some "acceptable" men from the other into its army. But each insists it will not have its forces broken up by being in- tegrated into the other side. The Front has avoided bringing up its past statements that it would put for- mer Prime Minister Ian Smith and other white-minority leaders on trial before a "People's Court" for "war crimes." And the Salisbury ad- ministration has not renewed its pledges to order its white-led, but mainly black, troops to fight until they kill or capture every last guerrilla and wipe out Nkomo's war bases in Zambia and Mugabe's in Mozambique.. But privately, some delegates make little secret of their desire to settle old scores once independence is achieved. Smith unilaterally split from Britain in 1965 to head off black rule. But his move brought a world trade embargo against the mutinous white-minority regime, and despite his claim of in- dependence, the nation was never in- ternationally recognized. Nkomo and Mugabe stepped up their guerrilla war in 1978, when a beleaguered Smith yielded power after voters chose Muzorewa to lead Zim- babwe Rhodesia. free Exibiton Pocket Riliards Thurs., Oct. 25 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. Belinda Campos AT THE UNION GRAPHIC ARTS DIVISION Filers Logos Business Cards * Posters Camera Work * Heat Transfers Custom printed T-shirts DUPLICATING DIVISION Student and Faculty Discounts Quality eproduction- Both Offset and Photocopying Dissertations * Course Packs Free Collating 0 Resumes °', ,' . , . ,. PAPER CiASE 530 S.State-Ann Arbor,jMi.°48109 313-665-8065 'EAST LANSING (UPI)-Michigan State University (MSU) researchers say they have identified an unknown chemical found in fish taken from Muskegon County's troubled White Lake as the pesticide Mirex. - Dr. Fumio Matsumura, head .of MSU's pesticide research laboratory, said-Friday he believes the chemical seeped into the lake from a Hooker Chemical Co. waste dump near Mon- tague. A HOOKER spokesperson declined immediate corhment on the findings by the MSU scientist, saying only "no such data has been brought to our atten- tion." The Hooker plant and adjoining dump have been the focus of environmen- talists' concerns for some time, with reports of a variety of chemical discharges into the lake from the facility. The state currently is involved in a major contaminant lawsuit against the chemical firm, seeking to force a clean- up of the Hooker plant site. MATSUMURA SAID it would be several more days before researchers determined just how much Mirex was present in lake fish, although he said he believed the levels would be in "parts per million." The Food and Drug Administration has recommended fish containing more than 0.1 part per million of Mirex not be .eaten. Earlier this month, the state Depar- tment of Public Health issued a statement saying tests on fish from White Lake showed no contamination, and the fish were safe to eat. THE ChAIRMAN of the state Toxic Substance Control Commission objec- ted to the department statement, saying test on the fish showed they con- tained substances that had not yet been identified. Health officials later issued another statement recommending White Lake fish not be eaten. Matsumuras said it would take ad- ditional research to determine where in the fish the Mirex was concentrated and whether the fish are safe to eat. Invite: Join F 504 Off Mn-a (ou A(f r ipat Mo".-Sot 1AM.-2 tau]]* 'ti s You To Hrm For: Sandwi* Special Sun., Oct. 6 P.M.-12A.A 1140 S. Univ 668-841 A.M. Sun. 3 P.M.- chi I ,21 A. ersity 1 12 A.M. Young leukemia victim buried F, E L CINE POLITICO FromAP and t'PI HASTINGS, Neb. - The tearful parents of Chad Green buried the three- year-old leukemia victim yesterday in a private cemetery in the town of his birth. But they still faced a legal battle over their efforts to cure their sbn with Laetrile. Chad's father, Gerald, 29, collapsed shortly after the funeral and was taken by ambulance to a hospital. Green, who had complained of stomach pains, was treated and released. Physicians or- dered complete bedrest for him and suggested the same for his wife. GREEN HAD left the gravesite with his wife, Diana, 26, who was clutching a Soviets visit Krazy Jim S like the soup (Continued from Page 1) The Soviets also visited Krazy Jim's Blimpy Burgers. "They found the breaded mushrooms and the soup very enjoyable," said Latta. He added the visiting: scientists took a trip to several cooperatives, and were amazed at the beauty and vastness of Inglis House. Latta said the Soviet scientists were reluctant to speak critically of their government. "They denied having domestic problems," explained Latta, who added the scientists were . very defensive about America's perception of the "inferior" Soviet lifestyle. Abraham Ortelius, the 16-century Flemish geographer, was named geographer to Philip 11 of Spain in'1575. fuzzy white teddy bear, and with a small group of friends, fami4, and( reporters. Chad Green died in his mother's arms eight days earlier in Tiajuana, Mexico, where his parents took him for Laetrile therapy in defiance of a Massachusetts court order. The Greens had said they would make a statement to reporters about what action they intended to take regarding a contempt-of-court citation issued by a Massachusetts judge after they fled the country last January to seek treatment for Chad at a Mexican Laetrile clinic. THEIR ATTORNEY, William Gin- sburg, told reporters the Greens had decided to accept an offer of asylum made by California Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. He said the couple planned to move to San Diego after a brief stay in Nebraska, where Gov. Charles Thone has agreed to take no legal action for at least a few days. The Rev. Nathan Wood, a Baptist minister from Scituate, Mass., where the Greens had lived for 18 months, of- ficiated at the burial. He said, "Chad was not a symbol, Chad was not a cause, he was a unique creation of God." SERVICES WERE conducted under a sunny autumn sky. A brisk fall breeze rustled through the trees, sprinkling leaves over the site where the small white casket was lowered into its grave. SUN., Oct 21 8:00 P.M. AUD "B" t VENEZUELA Venezuela. as it is today--an extreme contrast between the wealthy, a1d the poor. Luxury portment houses are seen against makeshift shocks called ronchitos. LISTEN CARACAS is the first documentary in a series that examines the socioeconomic reality of the indigenous groups that inhabit the federal territory of the Amazon (Venezuela). GUATEMALA The COST OF COTTON is a documentary on the effects of the international demand for cotton on a developing nation. The cotton workers. Quiche Indians, impored by the thousands from the distant highlands, are the ones most immediately affected. For information: Ethics and Religion 764-7442 I . . ,. HARVEY COX Author: Turning East: the Promise and Peril of the New Orientalism; The Seduc- tion of the Spirit; Feast of Fools; The Secular City; Professor at Harvard Divin- ity School. 8:00 pm Mon. Oct. 22 at New School Public Health Auditorium "The Spiritul-aum--Plitca Crisis Of America" (in cooperation with the Pilot Program) 10:00 Mon. morning at First Baptist Church, 502 E. Huron "What Would A Liberation Theology For The First WorldLook Like" A conversation with Prof. Cox who ,has visited Cuba and Brazil, taught in Mexico, attended the Puebla Conf. -d is currently teaching a seminar in liberation theology. On SATURDAY MORNING at 10:30 Harvey Cox will be speaking on "The Mission of the Church in the Decade of the 80s." Baptist Church, 502 E. Huron. 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