44 - THE CITIZEN, Prince George Wednesday, September 22, 1976 LONDON Opposition Leader Joe Clark sketched his "Global View" here Tuesday, just as Prime Minister Trudeau did a year and a half ago. But the Conservative global ethic is based on accelerating growth among rich nations, not on redistributing wealth and natural resources in the Liberal mode. The emerging super-economy of the advanced countries has been and will continue to be the engine of world progress," Clark told an audience of British and Canadian businessmen. "They must pull the rest of thw world in their wake." There was acknowledgement in the Tory leader's tribute to industrial progress and "modernization of the planet" of the contrary view held by the World Bank and OECD experts that this traditional theory of development has been discredited by experience since the 50s. Instead, Clark voiced unencumbered economic optimism, moderated by a warning against confrontation politics and nuclear terrorism. The speech marked the high point of the Conservative leader's 17-day European tour, which ends Wednesday when he and Ms. Maureen McTeer, his wife, fly to Ottawa. After the speech Tuesday, Clark was to call on Prime Minister James Callaghan, just back from Canada, and Chancellor of the Exchequer Denis Healey. OTTAWA (CP) - Organ donor cards have been enclosed with some airline tickets mailed out by Air Canada headquarters in Montreal. But protests about the Kidney Foundation of Canada brochures evidently surprised airline public relations officials. One official said the person who sent out the brochures would be asked to stop. The brochure said: "The Kidney Foundation of Canada is seeking your pledge of not only kidneys, but, if you desire, any or all organs that may be transplanted upon death to others who desperately need them to survive." Like Ontario driver's licences, the back cover of the folder is an official donor card On Monday, the Conservative leader met the upper reaches of British life at a private lunch and dinner, easily survived a BBC television interview and took in a West-End sex frolic which concerns the adventures of a well-endowed Miss Gotobed who has done just that with more than half the male MPs of the U.K. Parliament. For the Canadian-U.K. Chamber of Commerce Tuesday, however, it was a serious Joe Clark who attacked (as Trudeau had also done) "the mood of unjustified despair that seems to have found such fertile ground in recent years." Nations whose economies fare badly in the future "through mismanagement, bad luck or unforeseen trade reversals" will be the exceptions rather than the rule, the Conservative leader prophesied. Alluding to the disputed New International Economic Order, Clark said the lines of potential conflict between rich and poor were becoming more blurred than ever before through the emergence of a global middle class. "So the forecasts of a cataclysmic global conflict between rich and poor are being confounded by the same process that confounded the Marxist forecasts of class struggle in the 19th century." For the global middle class to continue expanding, economic progress was essential and pessimism could be a Donor card issue angers customers allowing the traveller to give away what he chooses for medical transplants or research. An Air Canada official said in a telephone interview from Montreal that someone from the airline apparently picked up an armload of Kidney Foundation brochures to support the foundation's campaign to increase awareness of the severe shortage of organs for transplant. June was organ donor month in Quebec. The Air Canada official said there had been protests about sending the brochures to people who were about to board Air Canada flights. The brochures were sent out by the airline's ticket-by-mail branch. Help Take the Car out of Ofinage Please Drive with Caution self-fulfilling prophecy, Clark said. But the Conservative leader was himself gloomy about current global political problems, particularly the dangers of nuclear proliferation in a fragmented world power system. A long-term danger of clandestine nuclear powers was a backlash demanding totalitarian powers to guard against random violence. What will it have done to have come so far towards material progress, if in the process we have lost our I Pnrbtiinnri nnri Pint I Shooting fhe works EUROPEAN TOUR Eric Kitner, left and Chad Kitner of Granada Hills, California enjoy an overcast day in the Los Angeles area on a tube slide at a local park. Clark paints a rosey world vision liberty, the original purpose of central issue of individual it all?" Clark concluded. liberty which Trudeau choose The Conservative leader's for his now-famous "Mansion address, released in advance, House" speech in March last thus comes back to the same year. Howard J. Lloyd, MLA Fort George Constituency Office 205-41 1 Quebec Street Phone: 562-5525 Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday thru Friday I Centre Mall Sept. 24, 25 I HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHN ygBBPj GRASS FED BEEF y(f. ... Grade "A", 1 50-1 75 lbs. 65c H ly Grade "A", 100-120 lbs, 93c f Grade "A", 225-260 lbs lb. FREEZER WW meat packers W W SPECIALS MM 8fJ9e M Mf COMING TO THE PRINCE GEORGE KIN CENTRE 6th Annual Prince George Hockey Clinic September 25th to Oct. 3rd. Coaching will be done by Trent Beatty, Bill Bell, Mike Jenkins, Gordon Crutkshank, Don Wilkie. Registration fee $30,00. Register at the Colisem Box Office 8:30 a.m. -4:30 p.m., Monday-Friday. For all boys 8 to 15 years. A limited number of registrations on hand, so registrations will be on a first come, first serve basis. Sanctioned by the B.C. Amateur Hockey Association and sponsored by the City of Prince George. SPECIAL BEGINNERS SKATING CLASS FOR BOYS & GIRLS AGES 5-10 YEARS. Limited number of registrations on hand, so registration will be on a first come, first serve basis. Registration fee $30.00. Register at the Coliseum Box Office 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Mon. to Fri. PRINCE GEORGE HOCKEY & SKATING CLASS CLINIC REGISTRATION NO, NAME ADDRESS . AGE DATE OF BIRTH . .HEIGHT WEIGHT. POSITION The City of Prince George and Instructors of the Clinic will not be held responsible for any injuries or loss of property while the player is attending the Clinic. The Chief Instructor also reserves the right to cancel any sessions due to any circumstances that are not to the benefit of the players or Clinic. Cost estimates too low TORONTO (CP I - The Mackenzie Valley pipeline may cost more than $15 billion, not $8 billion as estimated by the federal government, says Robert Page, former chairman of the Committee for an Independent Canada. Mr. Page, a history teacher at Trent University in Peterborough, Ont., said in a telephone interview Monday he does not believe the pipeline will meet its scheduled completion date of 1981 and it may cost Canadian taxpayers billions more than originally estimated. He told the annual commit (St tee meeting in Lunenburg, N.S., on Sunday the' pipeline project may be "the final nail in the Trudeau government's coffin." In the interview Monday, Mr. Page said there may be an escalation of costs if the project gets the go-ahead. "Thechances wouldbegreat that the government would have to step in and provide several billion dollars in guarantees," he said. The government would be unable to provide large amounts of capital during the next few years for many projects and there would be none left over if it was forced to put large sums into the pipeline, he said. Mr. Page said he hopes the project is delayed at least 10 years, adding that the pipeline is useless to Canadians because it will service mainly areas in the United States. "It's ridiculous for the federal government to think the 2,600mile Mackenzie Valley pipeline could be built for original estimates," he said. An 800-mile pipeline nearing completion in Alaska has cost $8 billion, said Mr. Page. Original estimates were about $900 million. RICE CHEV. OLDS. LTD. "It's Demonstrator Sale time" Harold Mann Cleaning. Use less cleaning products. Home gleams when lime spots, soap film disappear. Cooking. Foods taste better. Vegetables stay tender, retain appearance. Dishwashing. Save over 50 on dishwashing products. No more spots, streaks, film. Coffee, tea, soup. 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