The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, December 06, 1974, Image 8

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    Dail) Collegian Friday, December 6, 19;4
Trudeau
sees loss
for Canada
in possible
trade IL?var
Prime Minister Pierre Elliott
Trudeau said yesterday
Canada would lose a trade war
with the United States "hands
don but that he does not ex
pect such a war to develop.
Trudeau said recent
suggestions by some senators
that the United States should
retaliate against Canadian oil
policy by restricting or taxing
the transit of Canadian oil in
S pipelines would amount
to - hijacking."
"Quite honestly, I did not
take - this too seriously...l don't
think this is a serious threat. I
think this may have been said
as hyperbole," the Prime
Minister said.
Trudeau told a news con
+ erence the major differences
8••••••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • (i•
: The Artists Series presents
The Theatrical
Event of the Year!
sta rri ng
Ricardo
MONTALBAN
;r „4„ 4 .,„,.. c
~,)Edward
' 4 I NIULHARE
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XASZNAR
Kurt
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::: ,6 Myrna
. -,„• :,:,:ii
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by
i( ! :: k jib AS DONA ANA
3 p.m.* Saturday, Dec. 7
University Auditorium
•
•
6. I Tickets on sale now at Univ. Aud. and the HUB,
• 1 9 to 4 weekdays, 10 to 12 Sat. or at the door
• • I from 2 p.m: if still available. $1.50-$2.50-$3.50
student/child, $2.75-$3.75-$4.75 general sale.
•
• Box office 865-2242. Information 865-1871.
• * A second perfOrmance, at 8:30 p.m., is sold out by season
• subscription.
between the two countries in
volve beef and oil, and said:
"I don't think either of -us
wants a trade war; certainly
not us as I think we would lose
a trade war hands down."
The visiting Prime Minister
said that in two long meetings
with President Ford Wed
nesday, the following subjects
had been discussed:
Diversification of
Canadian trade away from the
United States toward Japan
and Europe "to eietance and
preserve the Canadian iden
tity." He said the President
understood this desire.
Canada's intention of in
creasing its defense budget by
11.2 per cent in the next fiscal
year to maintain its ability to
uphold commitments to the
North Atlantic Treaty
Organization.
Canada was in general
agreement ,with U.S. policies
to cope with international oil
problems, and "the difference
is maybe a tactical one."
He urged a return to the
principals, of the General
Agreement 'on Tariffs and
"Pure gold!"
"The words sing; the ideas •
go off like fireworks." •
"Polished, fluid, and spell- •
binding." •
Phoenix Gazette •
•
"Shaw at his cynical best, , e
debunking God, marriage,
the church, and most other 1.
conventional ideas that Shaw •
had little use for." •
Arizona Republic •
•
"Hell is a very Interesting •
place. Do drop in." •
Phoenix Gazette •
•
•
0
•
•
IMontalban plays Don Juan. You know
Ihim from "Sayonara," "Star Trek," ‘P
"The Felony Squad," "Let No Man •
[Write My Epitaph," many other film
Ind TV shows. •
•
•
•
•
• •
Mulhare Is the Devil. Played Higgins In
the Broadway production of "My Fair •
Lady." Sho w & films include "Our •
Man Flint," "Run ifor Your Life, "
•
dozens more.
•
•
•
Kasznar, the Commander, played.
Uncle Max in the stage and screen,
versions of "The Sound of Music."'•
40 films and countlels TV shows. •
me
•
Miss Loy, one of Hollywood's all-time •
„
6
greats, starred in the famous 'Thin l i p
Man" series, "The Best Years of Our•
Lives," "From the Terrace," many A ,
others. Co-starred with Clark Gable,.
Cary Grant, Spencer Tiacy and others. •
•
•
John Houseman co-produced the.
famous "Men From Mars" radio broad
cast that rocked the nation in 1938.0
Winner of many national and inter-.
national awards:
•
Trade GATT to pursue "the
course toward freer and freer
international trade."
On oil, Trudeau said he ex
plained to Ford the reasons for
Canada's policy of imposing
an' oil export charge and
phasing out such !exports, to
the United States by the early
1980's.
Canada announced last
month it was reducing export
allocations to the United
States Jan. 1 from 900,000
barrels a day to 800,000
barrels. In addition, there will
be further reductions each
year until exports cease in
'1982-83.
Trudeau described Ford's
attitude as realistic, and ex
plained: "He realized the
United States itself • has a
project independence and
wants to be self-sufficient
someday, and is not surprised
Canada wants to be self
sufficient itself.
`,We would not want to run
dry in a few yars and have to
say to the Americans, "what
will you do for us now?" he
said.
e
•
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•
Wash. Post • •
•
Time •
•
U.S.
both
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Whether Agriculture
Secretary Earl Butz knows it
or not, the United States has
been promoting birth control
quietly but forcefully for the
past decade as an essential
part of its foreign policy.
At home and abroad, the
White House, the State De
partment and the Department
of Health, Education and
Welfare have supported birth
control programs that are
carefully portrayed as volurr
tary and non-coercive.
Domestically, the federal
government actively operates
family planning services and
smiles benignly on state and
local efforts to remove legal
restrictions on contraceptives
and abortion.
Overseas, the government is
obligated by Congress, under
the foreign aid act, to spend no
less than $125 million a year to
dissemin - ate medical and
technical information and
provide 'a variety of male and
female contraceptive devices
to developing countries.
The mission is fraught with
political and religious land
mines, one of which exploded
in Butz's face recently when
he joked in a mock Italian ac
cent about Pope Paul VI and
his aversion to birth control as
a way to solve the world
hunger problem.
"He no playa da game he
no setta da rules," Butz told
Centre for Travel
has taken you to all the former BOWL Games and now
offers you the best packages to DALLAS and the
COTTON BOWL
January 1, 1975
All flights are on AMERICAN or BRANIFF AIRLINES. All
rooms are at the HILTON INN, a Multi-story, Superior,
First Class Hotel.
Flights from PITTSBURGH and PHILADELPHIA are limited.
Sign up early!
PITTSBURGH Dec. 30 - Jan. 03 from $235.00
PITTSBURGH Dec. 31 - Jan. 03 from 225.00
PHILADELPHIA Dec. 30 - Jan. 03 from 250.00
PHILADELPHIA Dec. 31 - Jan. 02 from 220.00
HARRISBURG Dec. 30 - Jan. 02 from 235.00
PACKAGE INCLUDES:
Round trip air fare
Round trip transfers from the Airport to the HILTON IIIN
Baggage handling at the Airport and Hotel
Round trip transportation to the COTTON BOWL PARADE
Round trip transportation to the COTTON BOWL GAME
Game tickets in the SIDELINES AREA
All tips, taxes and service charges
$25.00 deposit due NOW. Balance due Dec. 13th.
$25.00 cancellation fee after Dec. 06
Make checks payable to
CENTRE FOR TRAVEL
114 Hiester Street State College, Pa. 16801
(814) 238-4987
ContaCt Centre for Travel for Application.,
condones contraceptives
domestically and abroad
Washington reporters at a
private breakfast. The quote
soon made newspaper
headlines, prompted protests
from high-level Roman
Catholic authorities, and
earned Butz a personal re
buke from President Ford.
Butz, who claimed he was
only quoting an Italian woman
he had met at the World Food
Conference in Rome, was
saying that the Pope cannot
offer solutions to world hunger
if he refuses to recognize the
escalating growth of global
population.
Ironically, it was America's
first Roman Catholic
president, John F. Kennedy,
who set the government on its
present course of encouraging
world-wide birth control.
As a senator, Kennedy had
expressed concern that high
birth rates were robbing
Latin-American nations of
'their gains in economic
development. As President,
Kennedy moved' cautiously
through the United Nations to
lay the groundwork for a
reversal of the conservative
position of his predecessor,
Dwight D. Eisenhower.
In December, 1959,
Eisenhower declared: "This
government will not, as long
as I am here, have a positive
political doctrine in its
program that has to do with
birth control. That's not our
business."
Matters changed
dramatically under President
Lyndon B. Johnson, who said
in 1967: "Next to the pursuit of
peace, the really great
challenge to the human family
is the race between food sup
ply and population increase.
"That race tonight is being
lost," Johnson said. "The time
for rhetoric is passed. The
time for concerted action is
here and we must get on with
the job."
Within the next year,
William Gaud, the foreign aid
director, announced the
United States would send male
contraceptives to India and
any other country requesting
them, and the government
began experimenting with
devices designed for easier ac
ceptance among indigent
peoples.
Last month at the Rome
food conference, Secretary of
State Henry A. Kissinger
'Newgrass' concert set
The University Auditorium
stage might be confused with
Nashville's Grand Old Opry
House Sunday night when
Vassar Clements, Norman
Blake and Red, White & Blue
suggested a link between
population control and
creation of an international
food reserve. He said the
world population must not be
allowed to double every
generation.
Kissinger went no further,
and took pains to pay a cour
tesy call on the Pope while the
text of his address was being
circulated, but the meaning of
his remarks was clear.
Population experts at the
United Nations predict that if
present birth rates are not
curbed, the world can expect a
population of 55.3 billion in the
next century, compared to an
estimated 3.6 billion in 1970.
By the most optimistic
estimates, assuming all
existing birth control methods
were used intensively starting
now, world population could
level off at 5.7 billion by the
year 2050. U.N. specialists
believe the total more likely
will reach about 6.4 billion by
theyear 2000.
(Grass) perform there at 8.
The concert, sponsored by
the University Concert
Committee, will not be
country music of'the Tammy
Wynette and Tanya Tucker
style, but rather bluegrass in
its more recent form,
"newgras's."
Vassar Clements, one of
Nashville's leading fiddlers,
has recorded with the Nitty
Gritty Dirt Band, the Grateful
Dead, David Bromberg, the
Byrds, the Dißards, John
Hurt, Doc Watson and many
others.
Norman Blake, primarily a
guitarist, also plays the
mandolin, dobro and fiddle.
Another veteran of the Nash-
*******************************
-sr PENN STATE TWO MAN TEAM
TABLE TENNIS
TOURNAMENT
will be held Sat. and Sun. Dec. 7 and 8,
1974 in the Penn State White Building..
There will be a class for unrated players
aimed mainly , at Penn State students.
Anyone could win! Get entry blanks at
HUB desk or call 865-4114 for
information.
*******************************
The Glenmary Home Missioners are looking for
men and women who believe in people. Share
yourself with the people, of the South and Ap
palachia as a Priest, Brother or Sister.
Send free 17" x 22" poster, shown above -
Please send information about Glenmary Home Missioners
GLENMARY, Room #
Box 46404, Cincinnati, Ohio 45242
• "Agricultural specialists
tell us that if all goes well with
the weather, soil, water, fuel,
fertilizer and if incentives are
provided to farmers, the world
can produce . the food
requirement for the U.N.
medium projection for
populations of 1985 and 2000,"
HEW Secretary Caspar Wein
berger said in August.
But there are many 'ifs,"
he cautioned. "Unfortunately,
even if it works, much of the
food will not be where the
people are."
Philander P. Claxton, a
special Kissinger assistant on
population, predicted in an in
terview there will be abundant
harvests in North America in
the foreseeable future. The
problem, he said, will be
transporting the food to
starving countries elsewhere.
"How are yo'u going to move
100 million tons of grain with
the ships and financing we
have . available now?" Claxton
asked. "It's a job of the
magnitude that has never
been done before."
yule 'recording studios, he
has worked Oith many of the
groups Clements played with„
He has also flat-picked his
guitar for Bob Dylan and
Joan Baez.
The Red, White and Blue
(Grass) band plays with the
traditional bluegrass in
struments but also injects a
modern sound. The group
has released two albums, the
most recent called "Picking
Up."
The band includes Grant
Boatwright, Dale Witcomb,
Dave Sebolt and female
vocalist Ginger Boatwright.
Tickets for the concert are
available at the HUB desk for
$3 and will be sold at the door.