The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, July 01, 1981, Page Page 3, Image 3
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The Emerq
Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser will visit
j VSC July 8 and 9 to receive an honorary degree of
doctor of laws and to discuss international affairs. The
visit is part of a 10-day visit to the United States,
primarily to meet with President Reagan about world
problems and bilateral issues June 30. Fraser will also
meet with business leaders in Chicago July 1 and 2 find
in New York July 6 and 7.
The following is a special report on Fraser by
Gamecock Editor-in-Chief Mark Platte with an
analysis on Fraser's history, political philosophy,
Australia's view of its prime minister and other
aspects of the Australian society.
Australian citizens have a love-hate relationship
with the leader of the iand, Prime Minister Malcolm
i> Fraser, head of the Liberal-National Country Party
Coalition and winner of three general elections since
1975.
Their love is their respect for Fraser's programs of
limiting taxation and government intervention while
expanding Australia's role as a foreign trade export
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country and as a leader in the Commonwealth Heads of
Government Regional Meeting, which unifies 12 Asian
countries.
Their hate is their profound disillusionment of
Fraser's problems dealing with the economy, industrial
relations and the government in general. But
despite Australia's annoyance with the broken
promises Fraser seems to have made during the past
seven years, the relentless image of the prime minister
as a tough, capable leader still flourishes with the
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position Labor Party fail to defeat him.
BUT NO MATTER what public opinion is inclined to
dictate, the fact remains that Fraser is not going about
achieving the goals he set in a half-hearted way.
He keeps close contact with trie ANTUS councii, a
triumvirate comprised of his country, New Zealand
and the United States, which maintains that all three
countries vow to upgrade their military defense with
each other's aid.
See Fraser, Page5
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