Page 10-Tuesday, August 7, 1979-The Michigan Daily U.S. hails new peace plan for Rhodesia LUSAKA, Zambia (AP)-A new as a sell-out of the Muzorewa gover- that thwarted a series of British gover- part. peace plan for Zimbabwe Rhodesia nment under pressure from black nments and, at one point, then- * Recognition that it took both black guerrillas and the African states. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger's technically still the ruling government of that embattled country But Thatcher, a Conservative, retor- all-out negotiating efforts. It includes: Zimbabwe Rhodesia, that by surprise yesterday, but the United ted, "The African states have come a * A cease-fire in the war, which has the decision to grant indep States hailed it as a significant step long way further than I have" in com- killed 15,000 on both sides since 1972. legitimate majority rule is toward ending the seven-year-old war promising on the issue. . An end to international economic THE GUERRILLAS an there. g aThe new plan, devised durig a break sanctions imposed when the colony line" African countries th Both the guerrillas and Zimbabwe in a week-long summit of the Common- unilaterally declared independence in clie tAeresentrblscl Rhodesian Prime Minister Abel wealth-the association of Britain and 1965 n claim the present blac Mizorewa expressed suspicions- about her former colonies, involved intense p An all-parties conference on Zim- regime in Zimbabwe Rho Mizorewatiescexpressedn im- posed of "stooges" acting; the proposals, but neither side rejected negotiations between Britain and black babwe Rhodesian leaders and d Wite-minr it outright. African Commonwelath countries that guerrillas.-behind the scenes. RIGHT-WING Conservatives in have supported the guerrillas in their " A new constitution that reduces, Britain denounced the plan, drawn up war against the Zimbabwe Rhodesia but does not eliminate, protection for Representatives hereof in weekend meetings here between government. the 4 per cent white minority. Front guerrillas group we British Prime Minister Margaret That- THE PLAN IS the latest one for peace * British supervised democratic putting together a stater cher and other Commonwealth leaders, in the southern African nation, a quest elections in which all parties can take plan, and one guerrillass is Britain, authority in should make endence once sachieved. d the "front- at back them k-dominated desia is com- as a front for .rule from the Patriotic ere hurriedly ment on the source freely SPURRED BY INTENSIFIED RESCUE OPERATIONS: More fleeing Vietnam, refugees say ABOARD THE SEASWEEP (AP)- Boat people picked up on the high seas by this U.S. vessel say they are "100 per cent certain" intensified rescue operations are encouraging more people to flee Vietnam, despite in- creased vigilance against escapes by the communist government. "Mr. Carter has given us new hope," sais Vo Huu Minh, a 43-year-old refugee from Ho Chi Minh City, formerly Saigon, speaking of President Carter's, decision to send a five-ship Navy task forace to aid the boat people. Minh and 45 others who fled on a small fishing craft said officials warned that all fleeing boats would be shot at, and ordered jail sentences for would-be refugees and executions for escape organizers. THE VIETNAM news agency repor- ted yesterday that a court had senten- ced one man to death and 26 others to prison for killing a guard, stealing a boat, and trying to flee the country illegally. STU DENT ACCOUNTS: Your attention is called to the following rules passed by the Regents at their meeting on Feb- ruary 28, 1936: "Students shall pay all accounts due the University not later than the last day of classes of each semester or summer session. Student loans which are not paid or renewed are subject to this regulation; h- vever, st-dents loans not yet due ore exempt. Any, unpaid accounts at the close of business on the last day of classes will be reported to the Cashier of the Uni- versity and "(a) All academic credits will be withheld, the grades for the semester or summer session just completed will not be released, and no transcript of credits will be issued "(b) All students owing such accounts will not be allowed to register in any subsequent semester or summer session until pay- ment has been made.' Vietnam last week demanded the U.S. 7th Fleet halt rescue operations in the South China Sea, claiming they "encouraged more refugees and created tension in Southeast Asia." Earlier the United States and other Western nations called on Vietnam to stem the exodus by sea. Minh's group said the tough measures were announced last month before, the July 20-21 conference in Geneva on Vietnamese refugees. At the conference, Vietnam said it would cur- tail the flow of refugees until a more or- derly, legal plan could be set up. "I THINK THEY are stopping us because they are afraid of foreign coun- tries cutting off aid to Vietnam," Minh said. "Vietnam has lost the trust of the world." Indonesia yesterday criticized the rescue missions and said it hoped they would not influence the pledges Viet- nam made at Geneva. Western refugee officials say °there was a sharp reduction in the number of Vietnamese refugees arriving in Southeast Asia last month. The daily average of arrivals in Hong Kong the last two weeks of July was 284, com- pared to 655 the previous month. MINH'S GROUP, rescued 135 miles east of Malaysia by the Seasweep, which is operated by the American relief agency World Vision Inter- national, said the crackdown applied to both Vietnamese and ethnic Chinese who previously had been able to arrange "escapes" by bribing officials. Refugees picked up last week by the 7th Fleet said Chinese who could afford to pay could get out of Vietnam and that only the ethnic Vietnamese were being stopped. Elsewhere, a U.S.Navy ship took a group of rescued boat people to Subic Naval Base. The 49 men, women, and children, who arrived at Subic aboard the 7th Fleet oiler USS Wabash, brought to 143 the number of boat people picked up by the U.S. task force. admitted that they had been caught un- prepared. Front co-leader Joshua Nkomo was in Ethiopia when the plan was announced Sunday night. Willie Musarurwa, Nkomo's press spokesman, sounded a skeptical note in Addie Ababa, saying, "Britain looks af- ter her own interests in Rhodesia. I do not think Britain is acceptable as a supervisor of elections." But he refrained from issuing an official rejec- tion. IN HIS CAPITAL of Salisbury, Bishop Muzorewa issued a statement describing the accord as an "insult." But he, too, stopped short of rejection, saying instead that he would study the proposals. In Washington, White House press secretary Jody Powell said President Carter, in an exchange of diplomatic messages with Thatcher, "has ex- pressed his satisfaction that the agreement is a significant step for- ward." Powell said Carter also expressed hope that the plan can "serve as a basis for a just and lasting settlement in Zimbabwe Rhodesia." 4 Afghanian troops crush brief rebellion NEW DELHI, India (AP) - Afghan Pakistan has denied any involvement. Intercepted by an army vehicle near government troops crushed a brief The uprising would be the third army the Jashan parade grounds, the tanks rebellion in Kabul that left about 400 mutiny since early March, indicating were destroyed by rocket-firing Mi-24 army loyalists and mutineers dead, an growing dissension in the 90,000-man helicopters, he said. The aircraft then informed source said after his arrival Afghan armed forces, which have bat- attack d Bala Hissar, an historic from Afghanistan yesterday. tied a stubborn insurgency for much of militar stronghold housingan army The source, a Kabul resident who was pro-Soviet President Nur Mohammed regiment, he told The Associated Press. in the capital city during the four-hour Taraki's 15 months in power. THE HELICOPTERS made several battle Sunday, said the revolt was Taraki's government has been trying sorties each and blasted Bala Hissar for crushed by three Soviet-built Mi-24 to put down a rebellion in the provinces, two and one-half hours, said the Kabul helicopter gunships and 18 tanks. Jet but rebels claim to control much of the resident. Of the 18 tanks that surroun- fighters circled the city but did not fire. countryside, where most of the fighting ded the citadel, six entered firing, he At least two of the pilots com- has taken place. The insurgents are said. When the base was retaken, municated in Russian by radio with mainly Moslem fundamentalists op- 'Kabul's military command ordered Kabul airport where the helicopters are posed to the government's Marxism. that all Bala Hissar troops, whether based, said the source. He asked not to IT WAS THE heaviest fighting in the "friend or foe," be disarmed, the sour- be identified, as did other travelers in- mile-high Afghan capital since the ce said. terviewed. April 27, 1978, coup that installed Some pro-regime officers, members THERE WAS no independent confir- Taraki's regime. of the ruling Khalq People's Party, mation that the rebellion was an army The revolt began when three tanks were believed killed by mutineers, he mutiny. The government-run Radio rolled down from the Bala Hissar said. Afghanistan made no mention of citadel at about 12:30 p.m. Sunday From the roof of the U.S. Embassy, mutinying soldiers, reporting only that toward the former royal palace where American officials watched helicopters Afghan troops had 'wiped out" Taraki was believed to have convened a and jets flying over Bala Hissar until a Pakistani and Iranian "infiltrators." Cabinet meeting, the source said. police officer demanded they get down, __ said an embassy staff member who flew into New Delhi from Kabul. Shuttledecker service ends next week "IF THOSE people don't get down continued from Page3) could not get state grants, adding that from the roof, we are going to shoot," run by Ann Arbor Tomorrow, Liberty although the corporation asked the Ann the official quoted the police as saying. Unlimited took over the buses' Arbor Transportation Authority (AAT- "Obviously, they thought we were operation nine months ago. A) for financial help, AATA was unable directing it," he said. VAN HULL stressed that lack of ad- to advance a loan quickly. The travelers interviewed said calm vertising revenue rather than ridership The fate of the buses is unknown as quickly returned to Kabul following the was the problem with the buses. "Fif- yet, Van Hull said. She added that they afternoonfighting, but some roads near teen financial institutions and will remain available for charter use government ministries were blocked by businesses supported it for one year "for however long they will be here. troops and that really isn't fair," she said. They'll be available for the football Asian and Wester. diplomatic sour- Van Hull said ,Liberty Unlimited. season," she said. ces believe army morale is very low.