Page 2 -The Michigan Daily- Friday, March 8, 1985 SOME SA Y 'NO TRUCK NOR TRADE WITH YANKEES' 4 Af- - - - - 1 IN BRIEF uanaaa may i OTTAWA (AP) - The Canadian government is considering negotiating a trade pact with the United States, doing away with almost all barriers to trade across the world's longest undefended border. But free trade with the American can be a highly charged issue in Canda. In two of the most important elections in the country's history, Liberal governments were booted out of of- fice for proposing to eliminate the tariff barriers erected by Tory prime ministers-to protect Candadian industry. "NO TRUCK Nor Trade With the Yankees"-the suc- cessful Conservative election slogan in 1911-is still well- remembered here. So the new Tory government of Prime Minister Brian Mulroney is stepping very cautiously, asking for comment from all sides before deciding-probably in May or June-whether to begin bargaining with the Americans. "We're going to examine this very carefully, before we bet any bundle on it," Mulroney told a recent new conference. "It conjures up all kinds of scarecrows and myths and problems, pipe out its trade barriers . I and what I think we have to do is try to depoliticize some of it." NEVERTHELESS, THE movement toward free trade is to be one of the top items on the agenda of Mulroney's March 17- 18 meeting with President Reagan in Quebec City. Officials say it is too soon to sign an agreement, but the two leaders are likely to lend their endorsement to the basic idea. One way the Canadian government is trying to defuse emotions is by avoiding the very term "free trade," talking instead about "securing and enhancing access to markets" in the United States. James Kelleher, Mulroney's minister of international trade, says Canada's chief concern is not tariffs-most are disappearing anyway as a result of international negotiations under the General Agreement on Trade and Tariffs-but other barriers to Canadian exports. Chief among them are "Buy American" preferences in many states and procedures for levying "countervailing" duties if an American industry can prove it is being harmed by Canadian imports. resume SPECIAL LIMITED OFFER Have your resume typeset and printed by professionals. 50 for $36.50 Mulroney ... steps cautiously Films abound in Ann Arbor Printing by: 100 for INTERNATKJNAL 4 . MNUTE PRESS Phone 665-5120 Typesetting by: G nEsIs GKnr Icms Phone 761-8514 202 E. Huron, Ann Arbor, MI 48104 (Continued from Page 1) John Irving's The World According to Garp. "TWO YEARS ago I got a phone call - it was at least three months before The World According to Garp was released - and they wantedus to have the first campus showing here in Ann Arbor," he said. So many people came to the showing, he was forced to turn hundreds away. Another reason for Hollywood's in- terest in Ann Arbor is that directors like to talk to film students at the Univer- sity. "They find them the most literate and knowledgeable students anywhere," Beaver said. "They're gratified by the kind of knowledge and intelligent exchanges that they are able to have about film." Though Beaver thinks the variety of films showing in Ann Arbor help make the city a mecca for moviegoers, he doesn't think it's the sole reason. "I DON'T think you can gauge why Ann Arbor became, outside the city of New York, the best film community in the United States in terms of ac- cessibility to film" Beaver said. "You can see more films in New York, but not as easily as you can in Ann Arbor. And someone who stays here for four years can see just about every great motion picture made. It's just one of those things that happens." A driving force behind the reputation is the many film groups in Ann Arbor. The student film societies have been SATPSAT NUMBER AC NEVEMENTS RELSAT"AT GRE DIG TOEFL N DATUEAT IN TEST SCATENMB1-2-3 PREPARATION NPB-MSKP-NDB FMCEMSCOFNS CPA-NCLEX-RN, SPEEDREAOING-NCB-1 Est. REnVEw"FREX 1-2.3 1gTROTOLAWSCNOO CLASSESFORMINGNOWAT 662-3149 <- 203 E. Hoover Ann Arbor, M 48104 N Slaney H Kaotan Eucabonai Center Ltd EDUCATiONAL CENTER showing campus films for more than a quarter of a century. Herb Eagle, Film and Video Studies department director, said people from various parts of the country began to see Ann Arbor as a center of film culture long ago. He said Ann Arbor was a place where students could come to know film as a serious art form and commentary on culture. "And that, in turn, spurred the growth of the student film societies," he said. THE STUDENT cinema groups, such as Cinema Guild and the Ann Arbor Film Cooperative, run older, classic films students would not normally get to see in a conventional theatre. In many instances, a double feature of related films, like two starring Hum- phrey Bogart or James Dean, will be scheduled together. "And it's not everywhere in the coun- try that you can show 'old movies' and get the kinds of audiences that the film societies get here," Eagle said. "There's an appreciation for those films in Ann Arbor." Sit-in trial awaits verdict (Continued from Page 1) "The way the case is set up, we are guilty of trespassing," said Braine. '(Their indecision) indicates that the jury is taking our individual moral decisions into account and not just judging the trespassing." IN AN ATTEMPT to show the jury that there are valuable peacetime ap- plications for military research, the prosecution brought in Emmett Leigh, a University professor of electric and computer engineering. Leigh testified that while working on a Department-of-Defense-funded project on radar, he and his colleagues improved holography. This won them a nomination for a Nobel Prize. Defense attorney Donald Koster sum- med up his case in his closing statement. "I would love to bring in a witness that would say not one of the seven was in the laboratory, except that would be a lie," he said. "They were trespassing. But what they did was an act of gocial responsibility, not a criminal act." In Noah's closing statements, he told the jurors that the defendants were "well-intentioned, but criminal acts committed with good intentions do not exonerate you." He called the protesters "misguided and disruptive" and told the jury to "do your duty and find them guilty as charged." Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports Lebanese, Israelis clash at line BEIRUT, Lebanon-The Lebanese and Israeli armies fought a two-hour tank and artillery battle yesterday across Israel's defense line in south Lebanon. One Israeli soldier was reported killed. Reports from the area said four Moslem militiamen and at least one soldier on each side were wounded. Israeli military sources said two militiament died in the exchange, the third confrontation in nine days bet- ween Lebanon's army and the Isreali forces that are withdrawing after about three years of occupation. A Lebanese army communique said the Israelis tried to push north of their defense line yesterday morning behind a screen of tank-cannon fire, and Lebanese soldiers returned the fire "with all available weapons." The Isreali military command in Tel Aviv, however, said its soldiers were chasing suspected guerrillas in a "routine operaion" when they were fired upon by Lebanese army units stationed in Kawthariet Assayad. One Israeli was killed, it said, and "our forces returned the fire." O'Neill says Dems oppose MX WASHINGTON-House Speaker Thomas O'Neill said Thursday that despite an intensive lobbying campaign by President Reagan, at least 200 House Democrats are prepared to vote to kill funding for the MX missile. And while sources said House Armed Services Committee Chairman Les Aspin is prepared to vote for continued MX funding later this month, O'Neill said he met with Aspin and had not yet given up hope that the Democratic chairman could be persuaded to vote no. "He left me clouded to the extent that I am still working on it," O'Neill told reporters. Aspin, from Wisconsin, was persuaded by arguments that killing the powerful, long-range nuclear missile just after U.S.-Soviet arms control talks convene March 12 in Geneva would undermine the American negotiating position, the sources said. The Reagan administration has been lobbying heavily for continued MX funding, with Secretary of Defense Casper Weinberger and Secretary of State George Schultz appearing before congressional committees Thursday to urge support for the weapons system. Amrak may escape budget cuts WASHINGTON-The Senate Budget Committee yesterday agreed to save Amtrak and some community development programs, setting the stage for a budget cutting showdown on education, job training, and Social Security cost-of-living hikes. Despite agreeing to freeze military spending in fiscal 1986 and modifying or freezing other programs, the budget-cutting effort was running nearly $10 billion behind chairman Pete Domenici's (R-N.M.) goal yesterday, and the committee was left with very little "wiggle room" if it intends to hit the deficit-reduction target without adding taxes. The committee still faced the task of considering reductions in student loans, termination of the Job Corps, and a Domenici-sponsored freeze on regular Social Security cost-of-living increases-something Reagan op- poses. "A case can be made for almost every part of this budget," Domenici said as he lost vote after vote. "But I think we have to look at it from a different perspective. I approach it from a standpoint of trying to get $50 billion to $60 billion in deficit reduction." Chernenko misses celebration MOSCOW-President Konstantin Chernenko, who has made only two brief appearances on television this year, failed to attend a Bolshoi Theater celebration with most other top Kremlin leaders yesterday, The 73-year-old Chernenko has been widely reported to be suffering from emphysema. Chernenko has not made any major public appearances this year. He was shown on television at an awards ceremony Dec. 27 for writers and on Feb. 24 appeared briefly voting in national elections. Four days later, television showed him receiving credentials as a deputy to the Russian Federation's nominal parliament. He looked frail and had difficulty breathing on all three occasions. Premier Nikolai Tikhonov and Mikhail Gorbachev, considered the No. 2 man in the Kremlin hierarchy, led Politburo members on to the Bolshoi Theater stage for the celebration of one of the Soviet Union's biggest national holidays. U.S. official confirms identity of narcotics agent slain in Mexico MEXICO CITY-Ambassador John Gavin officially confirmed yesterday that one of two bodies found in plastic bags on a Guadalajara ranch was that of kidnapped U.S. narcotics agent Enrique Salazar. Gavin said the American drug agent found slain had been "brutally beaten" before he was killed, and vowed the United States and Mexico will exact payment in an intensified war on drug traffic. Medical specialists had determined earlier that the other body found on the ranch, where police shot it out last week with alleged drug dealers, was that of Camarena's pilot, Alfredo Zavala Avelar. Both men were abducted a month ago in Guadalajara, which is considered a center of the Mexican drug trade. Mexican police went to the ranch, about 60 miles north of Guadalajara, last Saturday looking for clues about Salazar, 37, and Zavala. They were greeted by gunfire and five people were killed, including a police officer. The bodies were found, in the bags in a field, when police went back to the ranch on a tip Tuesday night. Vol. XVC - No. 123 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Tuesday through Sunday during the Fall and Winter terms and Tuesday through Saturday during the Spring and Summer terms by students at the University of Michigan. Sub- scription rates: through April - $4.00 in Ann Arbor; $7.00 outside the city. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. Postmaster: Send address changes to The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndi- cate, and College Press Service. 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