The prediction of standard chemical evolution models of higher abundances of
He3 at the solar and present-day epochs than are observed indicates a possible
problem with the yield of He3 for stars in the range of 1-3 solar masses.
Because He3 is one of the nuclei produced in Big Bang Nucleosynthesis (BBN), it
is noted that galactic and stellar evolution uncertainties necessarily relax
constraints based on He3. We incorporate into chemical evolution models which
include outflow, the new yields for He3 of Boothroyd & Malaney (1995) which
predict that low mass stars are net destroyers of He3. Since these yields do
not account for the high \he3/H ratio observed in some planetary nebulae, we
also consider the possibility that some fraction of stars in the 1 - 3 solar
mass range do not destroy their He3 in theirpost main-sequence phase. We also
consider the possibility that the gas expelled by stars in these mass ranges
does not mix with the ISM instantaneously thus delaying the He3 produced in
these stars, according to standard yields, from reaching the ISM. In general,
we find that the Galactic D and He3 abundances can be fit regardless of whether
the primordial D/H value is high (2 x 10^{-4}) or low (2.5 x 10^{-5}).Comment: 20 pages, latex, 9 ps figure