The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, November 12, 1974, Image 15

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    Wilson
asks
British
unity
CONDO` I UPI 4 Prime
Minister Harold Wilson yes
terday appealed to Britons to
unite "as one nation in a spirit
of total commitment" to over
come what he termed the
nation's gravest economic
crisis since World War 11.
believe that our people
know that the crisis can be
conquered only by the nation.
all the nation - . as one nation.
taking up the challenge in a
spirit of total commitment, -
Wilson said.
He spoke at ihe Lord Mayor
of London's annual blanquet
for the government at he 15th
century Guildhall.
Earlier, the cabinet gave
the green light to an
emergency year-end budget
Britain's third in a
ear —which economists
predicted will hit better off
Britons with I/igher taxes but
JISO will pump more cash into
ailing industry.
Chancellor of the Exche
quer Denis Healey will pre
sent the budget to parliament
today.
Wilson said his Labor
government's policy for
beating the crisis is based on
'Cold-blooded' policy favored
Kissinger raps o
WASHINGTON ( UPI ) Secretary of State
Henn• A Kissinger, criticizing his own department,
yesterday said the United States should forget
about trying to reform the world and adopt a
"hardheaded. cold-blooded" American foreign
policy
'We face the tension between the requirements
of security and; the imperatives of our values,"
Kissinger said in a speech to the Foreign Service
Associationt
"The idea that we could reform all the
governments of the world has been disproved" by a
number of developments, "including our domestic
experience.'•
Facing an audience that included many critics
of his virtuoso style of diplomacy; Kissinger re
jected any idea that he disdains the ability of
foreign service officers. But he said they have not
kept-up with the times.
Flesh magazines covered up
Flesh magaiines sold at the the written requests of stu
residence halt post offices dents from North Halls and a
have been moved to lower student's parent in moving
shelves where 'they cannot such magazines as Playboy,
easily he seen., Ovi and Penthouse.
Robert Ford, superyisor of Ford said this would not ef
conference and - student ser- feet the number of such
I.tees, said he compliedwith magazines available for sale.
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LOWEST PRICES IN THE AREA!
Apple cider , $1.39/gallon
Tokay grapes " :4 3 lbs/$l.OO 1
Iceberg lettuce . 3 lg. heads/$l.OO
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3
BOB'S FARMM Q ARKET
- E. College Ave.
)
(across from the duck pond)
. - A
the so-called "social
contract", under which the
trade unions have promised
voluntary limits on pay de
mands.
He insisted big business too
must cooperate.
- It is a single coherent
policy," he said. "Fragment
it and it would become
another scramble. And the
weakest in our community
would get knocked over in
the rush "
Reflecting nationwide
tears of still another
clobbering by taxes, stores
reported a last minute "beat
the budget" buying spree;
with Britons rushing to,stock
up on liquor, cigarettes and
every kind of luxury item that
may cost more after today.
Although British budgets
are secret until unveiled in
parliament, economists
predicted today's budget will
contain a modest injection of
cash into industry in a bid to
give it new confidence:
They predicted Healey will
do so by relaxing price
controls and easing the tax
burden on business.
They said he also may an
nounce plans to lend up to $2.4
billion to industry to ease the
current cash famine.
Economists also predicted
big cuts in national and local
government spending and new
tax increases on gasoline and
luxury items.;
The gravity of the economic
crisis was pointed up in a sur
vey by the Confederation of
British Industry, which es
timated a record number of
production cats forced by
lack of cash and credit and
high costs.
He said that "in earlie
were more settled," it rnigh
for foreign service officers I I
was going' on abroad.
But in the present comp
situation, he said, "it is imp,
only what people say, but wha
do so on a basis of hard
evaluation of what the situ•l
that respect, he said, "we a
well as we can."
"We cannot base forei:
formers," he said, in..an ob
own diplomatic efforts. "
someone will come along
manipulate events . .
"Forshat we need is a hig
performance which is carri
rider's club
Bik
MeDERMOTT
Staff Writer
lo Club recently was
bike racing and corn
ents.
The Nittany V
started to prgmo ,
petitive cycling
'• ident Robert Poage
1 s a chapter of the
`• League of America.
are about 10,000
1 • , a national organza
t by dues and by the
•il on Physical Fitness.
lived in international
•y send riders to the
the Pan-American
:id.
Velo Club Pr:l
said the club
American Bicycl:
He added them
members in ABL,
tion funded in pa
,President's Coun
"ABLA is inve
competition. Th
Olympics and
games,'''Poage s
i s _Club, Poage said,
Is ting rights and also
1 ter from ABLA. He
Under the Vey
members have I
receive a newsl•
rights
Civil
WASHINGTON
Five of the" fede
ment's most
regulatory agenci
working effectivel
ment civil right
the industries the
the U.S. Civil. Ri.
mission reported y
al govern
important
are not
to imple
laws in
regulate,
hts Corn
sterday.
1
The commission
page report on civi
tivities of the F
miinications Corn
Federal Power C•
the Civil Aeronaut
the Interstate
Commission •
in a 250-
rights ac
• ral Corn
ssion, the
mission,
cs Board,
•mmerce
nd the
xchange
Securities and
Commission, said:
" ... with th 6 e
the FCC, none of th l
have acknowledge
eption of
• agencies
d dealing
periods, when things decade. That cannot be "done by any president or
have been sufficient any secretary of state."
simply report what "We are going through one of the greatest
dangers that has ever occurred in our history,"
Kissinger said.
He said that in the 1.0 years immediately
following World War 11, U.S. foreign policy was
conducted in a "very imaginative and strongly
creative" manner.
icated international
rative to report not
they mean ... and to
eaded, cold-blooded
tion requires." In
e not doing nearly as
policy on star per
lions reference to his
e cannot rely that
every few years to
average standard of
ed over through the
m cru--,:MET= 7 I,.L'V
I IFIENT'N_EW
26% off everything.
Jeans ---- for the first time
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342 E. College Ave.
added there are presently . 15 voting
members in the local club, ranging in
age from 16 to 26.
Poage said the name was chosen to
emphasize - locale, Nittany, and the type
of club it is, Velo. Velo, Poage said, is
taken from the French word velocipede,
loosely translated as bicycle.
AcCording Poage, the club is
concerned with a number of things,
including time trialing. "In time trial
big, one races against the clock down a
set course," he said. "As the season
progresses, so does the course."
He added that in time trialing the best
rider does not always win, but rather the
one most mentally capable. He said time
trialing has not caught on in the United
States as in Europe.
group hits
with one of the most impor
tant of their responsibilities,
eliminating employment dis
crimination in the industries
they regulate."
Commission Chairman
Arthur S. Flemming said the
commission believes "there
is a wide gip between what
these regulatory agencies are
capable of doing to make civil
rights a reality in the in
dustries they regulate and
what they are actually
doing."
The report said that only
the FCC had adopted rules
prohibiting employment dis
crimination while the other
four "appear to assume that
their independent regulatory
status allows them to stand
department
"We implemented internationally the concepts
of the New Deal at home, he said. "We believed
that international stability would almost automati
cally come from closing the gap between expec
tations and reality..."
In the 70s, however, the United States is obliged
to pursue foreign policy in a "much more compli
cated" situation because of the changes in the
international picture.
,• _ _
started
Poage said the club also will have club
races once a month. He, said these will
consist of.races between'club members,
and they don't have to be sanctioned by
the ABLA.
Open invitational races need ABLA
sanctioning, though, Poage said. He said
one such race the Club will sponsor next
year will be an Olympic developmental
race which will consist of over 100 miles
of racing over mountainous terrain.
Poage said the club isn't as organiied
as he would like it yet, but a goodwill
donation from two area bike shops have
helped.
He said the other elected officers of
the club were Gary Weeks, vice
president; Jeff Spearly, treasurer, and
Paul Kostenbader, secretary.
agencies
above the national commit
ment to equal employment
opportunity." ,
Industries regulated. by the
other four agencies, the com
mission said, show "a severe
under-utilization of minorities
and women in all but the'
lowest job classification."
The Commission's recom
mendations are:
—The FCC should step up
enforcement of its rules ban
ning employment discrimina
tion by broadcasters and treat
petitions to deny license
renewals on civil rights
grounds the same as other
petitions based on other
grounds.
—The ICC, CAB, FPC and
SEC should prohibit emplo?-
ment discrimination and re
quire the industries they
regklate to take affirmative
action to increase both
minority and female
-employment.
—Regulatory agencies
should provide free legal
counsel to persons who wish
to challenge regulatory ac
tions, but who are unable to do
so and whose positions raise
important issues.
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221 0- • kesQver A-ve
4c*lc. 24,g* * 41
The Daily Collegian Tuesday, Novenber 12, 1974-
Student lawyer
study dissolved
The Undergraduate Student Government Senate dis
solved the Student Lawyer Committee on the committee
chairman's recommendation Monday.
Pam Michaels said she could not see the purpose of
duplicating efforts of other groups trying to hire a stu
dent lawyer after a meeting with representatives from
the Organization of Town Independent Students (OTIS),
Interfraternity Council (IFC), Association for Resi
dence Hall Students (ARHS) and Raymond Cr. Murphy.
vice president of student affairs.
Murphy said a student lawyer' could not be financed
from restricted funds, tuition or the Associated Student
Activities. To use taxpayer%',money for litigation against
another taxpayer (a landlftd, or example) is illegal.
Murphy said.
The group established a board comprised of USG, OTIS.
IFC, ARHS and Panhellenic Council representatives.
The board will collect money from the organizations
unrestricted funds to take representative cases to court
Because the board's funds are not expected to be
enough to retain a lawyer, the board will hire a lawyer
for each separate case, Michaels sa}d.
She said the board will be ready by January.
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