1 Rhodesian An AP news analysis nearly all sj LONDON (AP) - After four weeks of though white slow but visible progress in the Zim- tains his oppo Pbabwe Rhodesia peace talks the "MR. SMIT 'prospect of a crisis looms not very far in a new era ahead. day of the for There is a real possibility the talks a minister-v will collapse this week if, the Patriotic bishop's gov Front guerrilla alliance turns down member. "M Britain's virtual ultimatum on a new along with ou .constitution. Muzorewa 4 THE TALKS have made more expect Smith progress than any previous British at- British draft. " ,tempt to end Africa's most publicized The prime war and rid itself of the rebel colony, with the Br But in the history of that troubled land, draft. He m progess to peace and political accom- early, agreeir t,'modation is strictly relative. population, o It is the guerrillas now who are in the strong power hot seat, not Abel Muzorewa, the current, unre eMethodist bishop who became the coun- :try's first black prime minister in June THE BRITI after nearly nine decades of rule by the two per cent y: three per cent white minority. tary seats fo " Muzorewa said on Friday his but with no delegation accepts the British stitutional ch proposals - which strip the whites of and citizenshi SWorld smokin WASHINGTON (AP) - Smoking stnoking in pa took a sudden jump in the world last way: year, the Agriculture Department says, "Throughou qwith increases recorded largely in the must break of poorer areas of the world. tes one by one World tobacco consumption reached "In isolate h, a record 4.96 million tons in 1978. The example, one increase, more than 3.5 per cent, was nual incomes ,,the largest since 1973. hundred doll MOST OF THAT tobacco went into hedges cigar k cigarettes - 4.2 trillion of them, 100 BETWEEN .,billion more than the previous year. to the Agricu Smokers paid between $85 billion and made about °$100 billion for their cigarettes. year and imp But while smoking is on the increase, it made seve. it is occurring in different places. million. .,.Americans and those living in some of The story is a: the advanced industrial nations smoke America. B ,ess than they used to because of high world's poor ,taxes and warnings that cigarettes con- tribute to death and illness. At the same time, the world's BO emerging countries are smoking more often American cigarettes exported under the government's "Food for #,Peace" program. Other industrial 'countries also are sending the poorer ' countries the cigarettes they. discourage their own citizens from smoking. THE- WORLDWATCH Institute, a non-profit research organization sup- ported by the Environmental Progam of the United Nations, described The Michigan Daily-Sunday, October 7, 1979-Page 9. talks pecial political power minister Ian Smith main- sition. 'H does not realize we are ," Muzorewa said yester- rmer prime minister, now without-portfolio in the ernment and a delegation Most whites at home go r understanding.''" told reporters he did not effectively to oppose the minister has little quarrel itish-style constitutional lade his big concession rng to take from the white n whom he depends, the rs given them under the cognized constitution. ISH document envisages a. allocation of parliamen- r whites for seven years veto rights over con- ange and strict property ip rights for a decade. might c The guerrillas' immediate problem is accepting a draft that runs contrary to some of their fundamental beliefs and insists that enmities of a seven-year-old war be forgotten. The guerrillas began their war against Smith's white gover- nment and continue it against Muzorewa, saying he perpetuates white rule behind a black facade. British Foreign Secretary Lord Carrington, chairman of the con'- stitutional conference that convened Sept. 1, handed the two sides the 34- page draft on Wednesday and asked for responses by Monday. SATURDAY HE called Muzorewa's acceptance "a major step forward" and said he hoped to get a positive response on Monday from the Patriotic Front. "We have spent many hours discussing the constitution," he said in a statement released to reporters. "But what is at stake is not the language of lawyers but the life of a people." Robert Mugabe, the Patriotic Front's co-leader, gave notice Friday that the ollapse guerrillas will not give a final answer on Monday, but will seek continued negotiations. "I AM SURE Lord Carrington is not going to insist that we take it or leave t unless he wants a deadlock," Mugabe told reporters. Britain has said the draft is as far as it can go in accommodating both sides. But Carrington probably will permit more constitutional talk while he gets past this week's annual convention of the governing Conservative Party, where right-wing lawmakers will press for quick recognition of Muzorewa and an end to 14-year-old trade embargoes. It remains clear that within a week the conference appears to be set for a make-or-break crisis. If the Patriotic Front rejects the con- stitution, the embattled Muzorewa will come out looking good. The bishop's pleas that his government deserves recognition and an end to sanctions, if not outright military aid, would carry new force. Second Chance' s Hospitality and Student Night for info coll 994-5350 FRI VIA NIGHT Tonight SAM SPIEGEL .) g arts of t ut mos pen pac e.- ed Su sees y equiv Lars b ettes at v 1969 ulture 639 m ported n milli s simil angla rest c habit increases the Third World this 10.1 billion cigarettes in 1974 and 11.65 billion in 1977. t of Africa, vendors In countries where wealth is growing cks and sell cigaret- more rapidly, the use of cigarettes is making huge jumps. Venezuela danese towns, for manufactured 16.22 billion in 1974 and young men with an- 20.3 billion in 1977. alent to only a few uying Benson and IN JAPAN, an estimated 35 million one cent apiece." smokers went through a pack a day and 1973, according each in 1977. The Office of Smoking and Department, Sudan Health - part of the U.S. Public Health pillion cigarettes a Service - says the Japanese are in- 666 million. 1f1 1977, creasing their daily consumption, on and imported 900 despite an anti-smoking drive that in- cludes education programs, health ar in Asia and Latin warnings on packages and limits on ad- desh, one of the vertising. -Plus- SPECIAL on Burritos and e"The Earl, only99 r'I 611 CHURCH IE L CINE POLITICO ountries, produced WLING PINBALL & FOOSBALL at UNION LANES Bowling-60C per game to 6pm, Monday through Saturday OPEN til 12:30 am Sunday through Thursday, 1 am Friday and Saturday Friday, Oct. 5 Nicaragua: Patria Libre 0 Morir 4:00 pm Film beings with scenes of Fall 1978 uprising by FSLNexplores history of Aud A andintervention in Nicaragua and, role as Sandino-Eden Pastora (Commandante Cero) discusses organization and armed struggle--interviews women and men SU of FSLN-Ernesto Cordenal celebrates Mass in camp and speaks of the oppressed ,and liberation. 8:00 P.M.t AUD ' Six Days In Soweto SUN.,. OCT. 14 "Six Days In Soweto' is a cinematically stunning and emotionally powerful 0 Mfilm--not merely a record of rebellion against the violence of apartheid, but " " "an insight into the daily lives and consciousness of the people of Soweto. AUD' B" SUN., Oct 21 VENEZUELA 8:00 P.M . Venezuela as it is today-on extreme contrast between the wealthy, and the poor, Luxury apartment houses are seen against makeshift shocks called AUD ' '" ranchitos. LISTEN CAR A CAS tshe first documentary % in a series that examines the soci-economic realityof 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 far cotton on a developing nation. The cotton workers, Quiche Indians, imported by the thousands from the distant highlands, are the ones most ti immediately affected. For information: Ethics and Religion 764-7442 oil li ,ASCI An I yI 111 11 IM 11.11 l 441 - I rt " ..rlI. I ,I ~1~~~"~ -I--,r II. 11I IN I l I a 1 m tam I i lfl 1, 1 J lLilu i'r iiv ploll I III( I 1 -'-N---' K, I 'vi I I A s/ /AMli il 111110001111 n "%k '4746 /.i 11 11 010111 U I I I Em L I I firt i-- ..... ... ... . ... ... ... . - - - - - -i -m Wtow :] J Am,II - --Ls- ~7. - -S - - - -tsle 75. -t---- KU :- 7 1 1- - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - I- 971 - .-. WE onl -the - cal _ chc sar -unt TAKE CARE OF YOU......We arethe y people in Ann Arbor to cover Syear warranty period on our culators by handling all shipping irges for any repair work neces- y & loaning you a calculator 'il yours returns...... Full - exci disc unit I I I 30 day over-the-counter iange on any Hewlett-Packard overed defective (for another ,same model. ) I I | I I 'I I I I 'tt I I I _ _ I I I I I I i I i i i i i i i 1 1 14 1 i i .9