Page 10-Friday, March 3, 1978-The Michigan Daily Smith, black leaders say white minority rule will end this year SALISBURY, Rhodesia (AP) - Prime Minister Ian Smith and three moderate black leaders announced agreement yesterday to end white minority rule in Rhodesia by the end of this year. In a brief statement after two-and-a- half hours of talks, Smith, Bishop Abel Muzorewa, the Rev. Ndabaningi Sithole and Chief Jeremiah Chirau announced they will sign a constitutional set- tlepnent Friday. THE ANNOUNCEMENT came after a breakthrough compromise on the composition of an interim government, which is to be set up immediately. Under the agreement, the four leaders who sign the agreement will form an "executive council" to take over the powers of the prime minister. The council chairmanship will rotate among them. The next level will be a council of ministers with a white and a black sharing each portfolio. FROM THE start, the interim gover- nment will be faced with the two mammoth tasks of winning Western recognition for the internal settlement and finding a way to end the in- creasingly costly war against exter- nally based guerrillas who have vowed Is it crazy to love marker pens that give you the smoothest, thinnest line in town...and feel so right in your hand? Is it mad to worship pens with clever little metal'collars to ke.ep their plastic points fromgetting squishy? Not if the pen is a Pilot marker pen. OurdRazor Point, at only 690, gives the kind of extra-fine delicate line you'll flip over. And for those times you want a little less line, have a fling with our fine point 590 Fineliner. It has the will and fortitude to actually write through carbons. So, don't settle for a casual relationship> Get yourself a lasting one, or two, to have and to hold...at your college book store.k Pilot Corp. of America, 30 Midland Ave, ; Port Chester, New York 10573. Pfineline marker pens Available at UNIVERSITY CELLAR FOLLETT'S ULRICH'S to crush the internal agreement. The constitutional agreement is the result of three months of talks initiated by Smith after a British-American peace plan - with provisions to include the guerrillas in a settlement - failed to make headway. Joshua Nkomo and Robert Mugabe, leaders of the guerrilla Patriotic Front, which has battled the white gover- nment for the last five years from neighboring Mozambique and Zambia, have rejected the Smith proposals and said they would step up fighting. THE GUERRILLA leaders said their pressure is the only thing to move Smith into turning over ruling power from the 268,000 whites to the country's 6.4 million blacks. There was no immediate forecast of the role and lifespan of the interim government. Support from the West - and especially Britain, Rhodesia's former colonial ruler - is considered essential to the four negotiators to counterbalan- ce the overwhelming support of black African and Communist governments for the guerrilla front. IN RELATED developments, the British president of the U.N. Security 'Council consulted other members Thursday on an African request to con- sider the "deteriorating situation" in Rhodesia. In Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, a group of American citizens working in that country presented U.S. Ambassador James Spain with a petition expressing concern over "the vacillation of U.S. Policy toward Rhodesia." The petition, bearing 40 signatures, called on the U.S. government to denounce the settlement by Smith and the moderate black leaders. S n ow scape Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG Spring may officially be close at hand, but winter reigns serene at Huron Park. Wife of ja.led Soviet dissident seeks U.S. support for husband (Continued from Page1i) .through an interpreter, said she hasr stern correspondents, was arrested his arrest, Shcharansky has been held received any information regarding h t March, charged by the KGB incommunicado in Lefertovo Prison. husband since his arrest. The last nev ussian Secret Police), for being a He has been officially charged with she heard was when officials told S A spy. President Carter and treason, an offense which carries a charansky's mother that they h retary of State Cyrus Vance have possible sentence of execution. collected enough evidence to begin t tinually denied those charges. Since Avital Shcharansky, speaking trial.She added-however.thntri We las (Ri CI Sec con :n't er WS Sh- ad he ial d I - -00 00 "M 0 !_n.1: 't PREPARE FOR:. ,e MCAT * OAT LSAT GRE GMAT - OCAT *VAT -SAT NMB I,11,11 ECFMG -FLEX-VQE NAT'L DENTAL BOARDS NURSING BOARDS Flexible Programs & Hours There IS a differenceM! KA P N EDUCATIONAL CENTER Test Preparation Specialists Since 1938 For Information Please Call: (313) 662-3149 For Locations in Other Cities, Call: TOLL FREE: 800.223.1782 Centers in Major US Cities loronto Puerto Rico and Lugano. Swtzerland ) I LSA denies Chesler full professorship Ll1L. ,71 0U , V +Ga , L L1VL 0 date has been set. "The Soviets don't announce anything. This shows how unsure they are of themselves," she said. SHCHARANSKY suggested several ways to assist her husband and others in their struggle for human rights. "To write letters is not enough. You must show all Soviet citizens in this country what your attitude is. The more you protest, the better the situation will be," she insisted. (Continued from Page 1) was unhappy with the decision. "I'm very, very disappointed, and I think the Executive Committee showed poor judgement," he said. Font, who has also worked with Chesler as a teaching assistant, reacted to the judgement negatively also. "I THINK IT'S very unfortunate. Mark (Chesler) represents one of the few faculty in the department who takes seriously the main issues of our time like racism and sexism. The University really suffers when people like Mark don't get rewarded," Font said. According to students and faculty in the Sociology Department, Chesler has caused controversy in the department due toihis unorthodox research. He does applied research, as opposed to the traditional pure research. Applied research attempts to solve a problem or improve a condition. In vestment committee suggestions debated (Continued from Page 1) Apartheid, said he does not favor the recommendations. "SHAREHOLDERS' resolutions have been ineffective in the past," said Powell, citing the case of the B-1 bom- ber. "Voting shareholders' resolutions may get at a few people, but it will not stop the corporations." Powell added that voting would not "enhance the liberation aspect in South Africa." Randy Schwartz, a member of the South African Liberation Committee t%0' AS~\~a e etn ora e s Friday Nights at W~est Bank M Is OM 0o (SALC), said that SALC has been saying all along that "no step short of total divestment would be acceptable." "To say we can effect change through them (the ruling class in South Africa) is to turn the whole thing upside-down," said Schwartz. "It's an absurdity." SCHWARTZ ALSO acknowledged "The point of divestitute is not so much that it will hurt or cripple the regime, but it will be a political victory." a political victory." Len Suransky, a white South African' university graduate student, criticized the committee's recommendations. "Clearly that committee does not seem to respect or take note of the strong consensus that exists in the University community, which emerged after lengthy discussion and heated debate during the recent forum," he said. The consensus was that the University should divest." Suransky added he feels the Advisory Committee does not have "the vaguest notion of the world that black South African workers live in, and that they (the workers) are who supposedly they (the committee) are trying to help." "The Sullivan principles (the Sullivan statement calls for equal rights for blacks in factories) are a red herring which serves to distract us from the issue at hand," said Suransky. He said that he does not believe "they (the Sullivan guidelines) are asking the right questions or addressing the real problems or that they are going to make any substantial difference to the everyday black workers." n t 1 p e 0 g" " Sp~e, Sol S COMBO NIGHT "Mombo Combo".., and cha! cha! cha! You can pick your own combina- tion platter from this wonderful array of entrees: BBQ Ribs N' Chicken, Steak N' Shrimp, Prime Rib N' Crab Legs, Steak N' Crab or BBQ Ribs N' Shrimp - Mix or match, whatever your pleasure you choose! All this for only $7.95. Remember, our fabulous Pointer Gourmet Table goes with every dinner. Come on out! You 'l love it! 1 r 4 / - - ,' i Your Host: Dick Simzak Holiday Inn Award Dinner For Top Food and Beverage Director, 1974 2900 Jackson Rd., Ann Arbor, Mich. 1-94 Exit 172, For Reservations Dial 665-4444 I ' I r'~ "WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Psalms 2:1, and Acts 4:25 to I a'n '. 9" E 1 ~1 'hO t \C aP vte a excee xtS M "THERE IS NO PEACE, SAITH MY GOD, TO THE WICKED, CRY ALOUD, SPARE NOT, LIFT UP THY VOICE LIKE A TRUMPET, AND SHEW MY PEOPLE THEIR TRANSGRESSION, AND THE HOUSE OF JACOB THEIR SINS." Isaiah 57:21, etc. No peace to the wickedl There are two places in The Bible that tell of peace among the nations when they shall beat their swords into plow-shares, and their spears into pruning hooks - Isaiah 2nd chapter, and Micah 4th. Both messages are practically the same. The following quote is from Isaiah: "AND IT SHALL COME TO PASS IN THE LAST DAYS, THAT THE MOUNTAIN OF THE LORD'S HOUSE SHALL BE ESTABLISHED IN THE TOP OF THE MOUNTAINS, AND SHALL BE EXALTED ABOVE THE HILLS: AND ALL NATIONS SHALL FLOW UNTO IT, AND MANY PEOPLE SHALL GO AND SAY, COME YE, AND LET US GO UP UNTO THE HOUSE OF THE LORD, TO THE HOUSE OF THE GOD OF JACOB: AND HE WILL TEACH US OF HIS WAYS, AND WE WILL WALK IN HIS PATHS: FOR OUT OF ZION SHALL GO FORTH THE LAW. AND THE WORD OF of a mountain in the top of the mountains. All nations shall flow unto that High Place to be taught God's ways in order to walk in His paths. It is then that The Lord will judge among the nations and bring peace. Are you and I who claim to be Christian and heavenbound flowing up to that High Place, or, are we flowing downward seeking another level? It is our duty and business to seek and proclaim peace for ourselves and as many others as we can. Jesus Christ took a whip of cords and lashed out at the hypocrits and profane wretches in The Temple, and later His disciples remembered that it was written of Him: "The zeal of Thine House hath eaten me up." What is "eating on us? The story is told of a goat being shipped by express: the agent sent his porter to find out where it was to go, who returned and reported: "Dat goat don 'et up' where it gwine." It is to be feared that many of us so- called Christians have "eaten up" our heaven-bound tag, if we ever had onel Our zeal for the world, the flesh, and the devil has consumed us, and our love for money, pleasure, T f r . i w I