Page 4-Friday, May 21, 1982-The Michigan Daily Common Market relations with Britain suffer LONDON (AP) - Britain's relations with its nine Common Market partners have plunged to an all-time low, with Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher ac- cusing her allies of a "breach of faith" in a crisis that may jeopardize British membership in the community. London is buring with resentment over three major rebuffs this week, while its age-old antagonist, France, has raised the fundamental question of whether Britain really wants to stay in Europe. "WHAT IS at stake at the moment is not any rule about unanimity, but the very existence of the European Com- mon Market," French President Fran- cois Mitterand said yesterday. "The problem is over the role that Britain plays in the Common Market. The answer to this question will deter- mine the current and future role of Great Britain in the community," Mit- terrand said. For Britain, the clash with Europe - coming in its hour of need as war looms with Argentina - climaxes years of quarrels centered on Britain's con- tributions to the trading bloc's budget. AT THE same time, the ministers of NATO, the Western defense alliance, have offered their support to Britain in its dispute with Argentina over the Falkland Islands. But the strains in the economic alliance reflect deep national divergen- ces, from Ireland's insistence that as a neutralscountry it cannot back Britain's military conflict with Argentina, to French suspicion that London will never feel an integral part of Europe. To some observers, members of the 25-year-old Common Market signaled this week that they have lost patience with years of complaints and demands from Britain, which joined in 1973. rT Thatcher g to attack A (Continued fromPage 1) BRITAIN HAS been flying bombing raids against airstrips on the Falklands for weeks. It launched its first com- mando raid last Friday night on Pebble Island, to the north of West Falkland, and claimed it destroyed up to 11 Argentine planes and a big ammunition dump. The British Broadcasting Corp. said that under the latest orders to launch raids on the Falklands, the British would likely seize a bridgehead from which to operate Harrier vertical- takeoff jets, and quoted a government source as saying: "This is now a war of attrition. To be blunt, that means Argentine forces go on taking losses until they surrender their grip on the islands." MILITARY sources in Buenos Aires said Argentine troops were "on total alert" on the Falklands. Argentina's official Telam news agency, the .only,news-gathering Mitterrand ... questions Britain's role IN THREE days, starting last Mon- day, Britain received the roughest treatment yet from its partners: Fran- ce, Italy, West Germany, Ireland, Denmark, The Netherlands, Belgium, Greece and Luxembourg. Because of Irish and Italian objec- tions, the community refused to renew trade sanctions against Argentina for another full month as Britain had requested, approving only a one-week extension. It laid down tough terms for Britain's budget contributions, and pushed through, against strenuous British ob- jections and with Greece and Denmark abstaining, a 10.5 percent hike in farm prices. THE LAST move trampled a 16-year tradition, established by France, that allows a country to veto measures con- sidered vital to its national interests. ,ives OK rgentina organization allowed access to the Falklands, said that "all measures necessary to confront any enemy action have been taken." An estimated 9,000 Argentine troops were believed to be dug in on the islan- ds, where some 1,500 civilians of British descent were reported sheltering on sheep ranches in the interior. "THE IMMINENCE of a landing at- tempt can not be discarded," Telam said. "But from the viewpoint of military strategy an attempt at landing would be suicide." In London, Thatcher said it was "in- conceivable" that Argentina would ac- cept U.N. Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar's ideas because it already rejected similar suggestions. "We really cannot go on and on," she told the House of Commons. THATCHER SAID Argentina's aim was "procrastination and continuing occupation" of te Falkland. In Brief Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports U.S./Soviet arms talks resume GENEVA, Switzerland- The United Ststes and Soviet Union resumed talks on limiting medium-range nuclear weapons in Europe yesterday, still holding to the positions that deadlocked the talks when they recessed two months ago. Maintaining the secrecy agreement imposed when the talks began last fall, chief U.S. negotiator Paul Nitze and his Soviet counterpart Yuli Kvitsin- sky made no comment on their two-hour, 40 minute session at the Soviet diplomatic compound. The negotiators said only that they would meet again next Tuesday. Nitze said Tuesday that there still has been "no progress on the central issue" of what weapons to include in any limitationagreement. He said the United States was maintaining its proposal that all Soviet and U.S. medium-range missiles-those that can only be used in Europe-be eliminated from the continent. Storms ravage plains states Another round of thunderstorms pounded the Plains yesterday, triggering street flooding in parts of Oklahoma and Nebraska and ripening conditions for still more tornadoes. Steady rains across much of Oklahoma threatened to end a brief respite from three days of flooding that drove hundreds of people from their homes earlier in the week and caused $12 million damages n ingfisher. Nearly 4 inches of rain flooded low-lying streets in Oklahoma City, but buildings and homes were spared. "We lost some cars in it; that's how deep it was," said Patrolman Glenn White. "We found one lady simply sitting on top of her car. It got pretty rough." Rain was forecast across much of Oklahoma through today but a dry respite was expected to arrive for the weekend. Monsoon-like rains have threatened to wash out Oklahoma's multimillion dollar wheat crop. Milliken plugs tax reform LANSING- Gov. William Milliken plugged a new property tax reform petition drive yesterday, denying suggestions he was merely paying off a debt from the recent income tax battle. Milliken made the endorsement at a news conference attended by its chief backer, Rep. Roy Smith, members of the Michigan Townships Association, which is helping to spearhead the efforts and other lawmakers. Under the plan, homes and owner-occupied farms would be exempt from 75 percent of the operating millage levied by the local schools-a 43 percent property tax cut for the average homeowner according to one analysis. The state would be required to reimburse the schools for their losses and the sales tax would be raised from 4 percent to 5 percent for this purpose. Hinckley called illogical and confused WASHINGTON- John Hinckley was pictured yesterday as so sick and illogical that in the most critical hour of his life he said to himself: "I'll shoot the president and die, but it depends on whether it rains." Dr. David Michael Bear, a Harvard psychiatrist, insisted that the gover- nment's evidence demonstrates Hinckley's confused and bizarre thinking at a time when "he was going to throw his life into history." The government contends Hinckley's actions on the day of the shooting- showering, going for breakfast at McDonald's, browsing in a bookstore, writing a letter to actress Jodie Foster that he was going to "get" Reagan to prove his love, and taking a taxi to the Hilton Hotel show a competent mind at work. Bear disagreed vehemently, saying Hinckley was "in a paradoxical rage." "The rage I'm talking about would not be observable," he said. "When I speak of internal frenzy, I mean a state in which the man is trying to sift through his delusions." Bear left the witness stand after 2 days without testifying about X-rays called CAT scans-for "computer-assisted-tomography-that the defense claims are physical evidence of Hinckley's mental illness. Republicans reject budget proposal WASHINGTON- Senate Republicans protected their 1983 budget proposal yesterday by rejecting Democratic attempts to cut foreign aid and to provide more money for toxic waste dumping enforcement. The last major hurdle before approval of the $783.5 billion budget resolution written by GOP leaders was expected to be a Democratic proposal to repeal next year's 10 percent income tax cut-a key part of President Reagan's economic program. -The Senate budget plan for fiscal 1983 would freeze non-military spending for the next three years at 1982 levels; eliminate cost-of-living increases for one year in retirement benefit programs other than Social Security; reduce defense growth by about $22 billion from Reagan's request; freeze federal civilian pay raises in 1983 and limit them to 4 percent the next two years ; and seek $95 billion in new tax revenue. 1 4 I