4 Page 2 -The Michigan Daily-Monday, October 5, 1987 Reagan hails U.S., Canadian trade pact WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan hailed a tentative U.S.-Canadian free trade agreement yesterday that would eliminate all tariffs between the two countries as a historic pact beneficial to both nation's economies. "Now, in addition to sharing the- world's largest undefended border, we will share membership in the world's largest free trade area," Reagan said in a statement released atthe White House. 'Treasury Secretary James Baker IiI and Canadian Finance Minister ichael Wilson said at a joint news cdnference they were confident the agreement would be approved by the U:S. Congress and Canada's parliament. Both described it as a win-win situation," good for both countries. U.S. Trade Representative Clayton Yeutter said some tariffs would be dropped upon implementation of the treaty and others would be phased out over five td ten years. Baker said the tentative agreement also eliminates other trade barriers and will improve trade in agriculture. Baker described the negotiations, which he said culminate a 100-year effort to reach a trade agreement between the two countries, as "taxing and at times overwhelming." Wilson called the proposed pact "a dramatic step toward implementing ap new trade relationship" and it said it "is a powerful signal a g a i n s t protectionism and for trade liberation." U.S. and Canadian negotiators had settled on the general framework for the pact linking the world's two largest trading partners just before the midnight Saturday deadline that had been set for submission of the agreement to Congress. Neither side gave many details of the agreement at the news conference. The president said the pact will remove all Canadian tariffs: secure improved access to Canada's markets for U.S. manufacturing, agriculture, high technology and financial sectors; improve U.S. security by opening access to Canadian energy supplies, and offer new investment opportunities. The president telephoned Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney yesterday afternoon after returning from his weekend at Camp David, Md., according to White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater. rTEANITIoI A one-day seminar designed to help you make the transition from student to professional. Saturday, November 7, 1987 The cost of the seminar is $10, and hotel accommodations are available at a reduced rate. Sessions offered this year include: , Adolescent Chemical Dependence " Coping Measures for the Oncology Nurse " Creating a Successful Future " Dermatology Nursing * Intensive Care of the Transplant Patient " InVitro Fertilization " Job Seeking Skills CALL COLLE " Nephrology Srey507-286-70: " Nursing and Outpatient Sur - - 9 Transition: Survival Techniques For Registrat Daily Photo by ROBIN LOZNAK Better safe . .. Ann Arbor resident Angi Faiks locks her bicycle to the new bike rack between the LSA building and the Michigan Union last week. Covert campaign aided Contrais, report alleges (Continued from Page 1) the House Foreign Affairs communications, offering Committee. Fascellrequested the "illustrative examples of the Reich GAO investigation along with "White Propaganda operation." House Government Operations In the memo, the office claimed Committee Chairman Jack Brooks credit for the Guilmartin article in (D-Texas). the Journal, noting that its author Two days after the Wall Street "has been consultant to our office Journal opinion article appeared and collaborated with our staff int eh Johnathan Miller of the public writing of this piece. It is diplomacy office sent a devastating in its analysis of the "c o n f i d e n t i al-eyes o n l y " Nicaraguan arms buildup. Officially, memorandum to Patrick Buchanan, this office had no role in its then Reagan's director of preparation." TUESDAY LUNCH FORUM at the INTERNATIONAL CENTER - 603 E. MADISON October6at 12noon: "China: The Role of. Women Today" Speaker: Professor Qin Xiaomeng, Honorary Dean, English Department, Shang Hai International Studies for additional information -please call 662-5529 IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press reports Aftershock kills one in L.A. LOS ANGELES - A sharp aftershock from last week's severe earthquake jolted Southern California before dawn yesterday, causing at least one death and dozens of injuries, damaging buildings, knocking out power and sending jittery residents into the streets. The quake, centered in suburban Rosemead about eight miles northeast of downtown Los Angeles, registered 5.3 on the Richter scale of ground motion, said Don Kelly of the U.S. Geological Survey in Golden, Colo. The 3:59 a.m. quake was the 22nd aftershock registering more than 3.0 since Thursday's quake, which measured 6.1 on the Richter scale and caused six deaths and more than $75 million in damages. Yesterday's shock was felt 40 miles west of Los Angeles in Ventura County and 100 miles south in San Diego. It was followed by three tremors measuring 3.0 or more within 4 hours. Foes rip schools' sex ed. plan KALAMAZOO - Foes of a proposed sex education program in Kalamazoo schools have handed out leaflets protesting what they say is its failure to teach young people the value of restraint. The Rev. Nate White says the Life Issues Network he heads sees the sex education course as anti-family and anti-life. About 12,000 copies of a tabloid, titled "The Link," distributed to area homes on Saturday, were published by Life Issues Network, a group organized to protest the sex education curriculum as deficient. The school's proposal is being considered for use in the fifth through eighth grades. School trustees have not taken final action on the plan. Before the course material is used in classrooms, revisions will be made by administrators, teachers and the schools' district-wide parent group. Lhasa protest leaves six dead LHASA, Tibet - Chinese authorities imposed a curfew yesterday and tried to stop at least one busload of foreign tourists from leaving this Tibetancapital after pro-independence demonstrations that killed at least six people. Dissidents proclaimed the six as martyrs. They put up signs saying those who died in Thursday's demonstration "died for all the Tibetan people, not for themselves." Nineteen policemen were seriously wounded in that demonstration, held to protest the arrests of participants in an earlier, Sept. 27 demonstration. Buddhist monks at the Sera Monastery outside Lhasa said they hoped to stage another protest on Wednesday, the 37th anniversary of the day that Chinese communist troops moved into Tibet to annex it in 1950.. The sera monks said no protester fired a weapon. Bush praised by Polish leader WASHINGTON - Polish Solidarity leader Lech Walesa had just lavishly praised Vice President bush in Warsaw as a man who "deserves to lead a great nation," when Bush was asked how it felt to have the equivalent of a campaign endorsement from one of the world's best known figures. "The question is, how many relatives does he have in Iowa?" the vice president replied with barely a pause. "That's the only thing I want to know." Bush's jocular reference to the state that will pick early delegates to next year's Republican National Convention demonstrated the extent to which his official nine-day visit to Europe occurred against a backdrop of domestic politics. EXTRAS Couple takes world bicycle tour instead of honeymoon BELOIT, Wis. (AP) - Roger and Betsy Kalter have been married more than five years, but they're still pedaling home from their honeymoon. The couple, near the end of a world bicycle tour, have sailed the Nile River, hiked the Himalayan Mountains in Nepal, lived on a Malaysian tropical island and Kayaked in Glacier Bay, Alaska. Roger, 37 and Betsy, 32, of Marietta, Ohio, met during a bike ride and ice cream social sponsored by the Marietta Bicycle club in 1981. Roger, a journalist who cycled across the United States in 1978, had been planning his worldwide ride for several years. Since May, 1982, the Kalters have logged 26,348 miles in 30 countries, traveling inland by bicycle and crossing bodies of water by airplane. The Kalters expect to complete the trip Oct. 17 with a final 50-mile leg into Marietta and a celebration with friends and relatives. If you see news happen, call 76-DAILY. 01 e Airbigan 'vatIV Vol. XCVIII - No. 18 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April-$25 in Ann Arbor; $35 outside the city. One term: $13 in Ann Arbor; $20 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and sub - scribes to the Los Angeles Times Syndicate and the National Student News Service. ECT 33 ion' Information and Brochure Transition is sponsored by Rochester Methodist Hospial A MAYO FOUNDAliON t OSPITAL Learning Resources Department Deadline for registration 201 West Center Street is Oct. 23. 1987 Rochester, MN 55902 Sponsored by: The Ecumenical Campus Center and the International Center Lunch Available: $1.00 (students) $1.50 (others) . If you've ever dreamed of being behind the controls of an airplane, this is your chance to find out what it's really like. A Marine Corps pilot is coming to campus who If you're cut out for it, we'll give you free civilian flight training, maybe even $100 a month cash while you're in school. And someday you could be flying a Harrier, Cobra or F/A-18. can take you up for trial flights. Get a taste of what life is like We're looking for a few 7- - at the top. The flight's on us. Editor in Chief...............................ROB EARLE Managing Editor..........................AMY MINDELL News Editor . ...............PHILIP I. LEVY City Editor ...............MELISSA BIRKS Features Editor.................MARTIN FRANK University Editor ..............KERY MURAKAMI NEWS STAFF: Elizabeth Atkins, Francie Arenson, VickiSBauer, Eve Becker, Steve Blonder, Jim Bray. Dov Cohen, Hampton Dellinger, Kenneth Dintzer, Nancy Driscoll, Sheala Durant, Stephen Gregory. Edward Kleine, Steve Knopper, Carrie Loranger, Michael Lustig, Alyssa Lustigmn,n Andrew Mils, Peter Orner, Eugene Pak, Lisa Pollak, Melissa Ramsdell, Martha Sevetson, Steve Tuch, David Webster, Rose Mal y Wurnnsl. Opinion Page Editors...................PETER MOONEY HENRY PARK Assoc. 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