I need to find the animated GIF with Samuel L. Jackson and the caption "He's right, you know".
Zener diodes are a famous breakdown risk. When they fail, it's usually as a short circuit. R113 is the current-limit resistor feeding current to D25, a 7.5-Volt 1-Watt zener diode. If it shorts, R113 smokes.
Bearing in mind this radio is 45 years old, electrolytic capacitors begin breaking down for no reason but age alone around 25 or 30 years. C101 is in parallel with D25. If C101 shorts, same result. You need a new R113. And a new cap. C101 is shown as a cap rated for 10 Volts. They are famous for going bad first, before the other electrolytic caps marked with higher voltage ratings. Got in the habit of calling this the "Ten-Volt Blues" a coupla decades ago.
And when you hear people refer to "re-capping" a radio this old, this is how you prevent what I like to call "Electronic Whack-A-Mole", replacing each electrolytic cap in the radio one by three as they all eventually fail.
Naturally changing every, single electrolytic capacitor in the radio creates a risk factor. You have to put the right one in place of the old cap, and turn them ALL around the right way. Polarity matters. And don't leave any solder drips that short between foil traces.
Ain't nothin' risk free.
73