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Show Page Two THE SALT LAKE TIMES .FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 1971 International Cooperation Urged For Space Resource Utilization For Flowering Hedges Use Rose Bushes Schedules Language Study In Three Nations Noted Pediatrician Cautions Against Childbirth Drugs U of U A noted pediatrician recently The Department of Languages use A report of an international nicating by Satellite and the criticized doctors' routine at the University of Utah has conference of 15 authorities on Future of Satellite Communica- of drugs during childbirth, say- announced summer study prosatellite communications jointly tions: Resource Management and ing that he does not like what grams in Spain, Germany and sponsored by the Twentieth Cen- the Needs of Nations, presented drugs administered to a woman France in three separate 10 week tury Fund and the Carnegie En- the policy recommendations of in labor do to her baby. programs, scheduled June 17 to dowment for International Peace an independent Fund task force. was issued this week. Entitled, A third, Communicating by SatPlanning for a Planet, it recom- ellite: An International Discusmended international coopera- sion, was issued after a similar tion and planning of the space international conference jointly resources utilized in satellite sponsored by the Carnegie Encommunications. dowment and the Fund in 1969. At the latest meeting, chaired The conference which brought Jean dArcy, director of the by together lawyers, engineers, diplomats and scholars from twelve Radio and Visual Services for countries on four continents, met the UN Office of Public Inforin France recently. All of the mation, the participants engaged participants spoke in an indi- in a far ranging discussion of the vidual capacity and their discus- problems and prospects for intersion was completely independent. national satellite communication. There was general agreement Among the issues discussed at the primary problem is lack that the conference were the space of control and planning for the resources available for satellite communications and internation- long range global satellite comal broadcasting; the role of the munications. As the report noted: It was International Telecommunication to the conferees that in one clear Union (ITU) which regulates international telecommunications; country after another officials and the coordination of the vari- are making decisions about the ous communications satellite sys- communications policy without tems, including Intelstate, Inter- full information about either the state of the technology or the sputnik and Symphonie, which interests may soon be sharing the orbital their ownof other departments in governments. space. to remedy this situaIn order A major conclusion of the conference was that each user of tion, the group recommended the strengthening of the ITU as a space and satellites) should de- sort of policeman for satellite sign is system so that it preserve communications traffic. the rights of others. The report said that the ITU The report of the meeting is should provide more assistance the fourth in a series of publicato developing nations, make its tions on satellite communication more efficient administration issued by the Fund, a nonprofit, and streamlined, and provide a research oriented foundation. continuous planning for the use Two of these reports, Commuof space, as an alternative to the first come, first served practice now governs the expoli-tatio- n of satellite resources. Some participants at the conference were critical of United States domination of the Intersat system of international satellite communications. There was also discussion of the Intersputnik satellite system, being advanced by the Soviet Unoin; the Franco German system called Symphonie; an experimental program to bring education to thousands of remote villages in India through direct satellite broadcasting, and communications satellite project being planned for Brazil and Canada. The conference urged international regulation of satellite communications and development of the content of satellite broadcast at the regional level and where possible, between broadcasting organizations rather than government agencies in order to improve the quality of programming and dispel the fear of satellite broadcasting as a propaganda vehicle. Pregnancy, labor and delivery are thought of as essentially a disease in the United States, Dr. T. Berry Brazelton of Harvard Medical School asserted in Redbook Magazine. As a result the anxiety and fear and pain are medically treated as if they were evil and destructive symptoms of the condition rather than positive forces that mobilize a woman for an awesome, prodigious and usually enormously rewarding experience, he said. Declaring that he is probaby, Dr. Brazelton praised the groups as International Childbirth Education Association, who teach Frances Lamaze method and Englands Grantly D. Read system of childbirth. These organizations, which have mushroomed in the country, have forced the hospitals and physicians to accept unmedicated and deliveries, he said. Drugs administered during childbirth not only rob the mother of the birth experience, but can rob mother and child alike of important experiences in the first weeks of their life together, Dr. Brazelton said. He reported that studies he has conducted on the breastfeeding responses of newborn infants indicate that babies delivered with barbituarate suffer delayed weight gain and dulled responses. Recognizing that there are, of course, many instances where childbirth drugs are necessary or at least useful, Dr. Brazelton said he was not urging complete abandonment of them but a moer considered approach to routine medication and anesthetics. He said the drugs must be used when necessary but they should be the exception, not the rule. The mother who must be medicated should be told of the problems the drugs may cause, and the obstetrician should help her and her infant adjust afterwards, Dr. Brazelton said. non-anesthetiz- ed . pre-medica- August 28. Dr. Robert E. Helbling, chairman of the Departmenta of Languages, said each program will include language training on the elementary, intermediate, and advanced levels. Students will also study the history, literature, art, economics and other cultural aspects of the country they select. Three weeks of travel to nearby countries is also scheduled. In Spain, students will study at the University of Salamanca, and will live with local families or in dormitories. At the University of Kiel in Germany, students will share dormitory rooms with German students. Those selecting the French program will study at two of Frances oldest and most noted universities, Toulouse and Bordeaux, and will stay in dormitories. Cost for the summer programs vary but include a round trip transportation, room and board, Formal hedges, clipped to artificial perfection, just dont fit into the modern trend toward casual landscaping. There are places where a hedge is useful, but todays informal outdoor living areas call for beauty with service, and the hedge plant best adapted to these requirements is the tall growing grandiflora rose, or the short, mounding floribunda, depending upon the hedge height desired. Grandifloras, the newest classification of roses, produce vigorous, tall growing bushes with clusters of medium to large tea roses on long stems. These plans are excellent for high hedges and screens. Some of the newest and best grandifloras are Comanche (brilliant orange scarlet) Scarlet Knight (scarlet red), Garden Party (softest pink), and Buchaneer (clear yellow). If the location calls for a low hedge, use the compacts mass flowered floribundas to create a color picture you and your neighbors will never forget. books, insurance and excursion trips. Dr. Helbling said students who wish may participate only in the travel portion of the a CfflflB CsOoD ffldflcugs (M WflD nts . WDlllllWDIIOtt gerntDOM DpqosM? . Airman Donald B. McClellan, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh D. McClellan of 4594 Creekview Dr., has completed basic training at Lackland AFB, Texas. He has been assigned to Sheppard AFB, Texas, for training in aircraft maintenance. Airman McClellan is a 1968 graduate of Granite High School. Yes! You'll find a couple of good on 5 suggestions page of the Federal source book, "Answers to the most frequently asked questions about drug abuse." For your free copy send in the coupon below. 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