Friday, October 31,1986/The Battalion/Page 9 World and Nation .$. trade deficit shows improvement Wy'sHea!:;. ’ ECTamiji icycareani^ >le for d;v. Valiev " -PRCoffimis, r nwnbnd nmitteeon, essof i! & Texii ■; rxas Atr«« operative I nemed wIk am over: nraterials i: teadiai? WASHINGTON (AP) — The na- jon’s merchandise trade deficit reg- jtered a slight improvement in Sep tember, shrinking to $12.6 billion rom $13.3 billion in the previous honth, the government reported ihursday. Commerce Secretary Malcolm Jaldrige said the report was evi dence “that we have turned the cor ner on the trade deficit.” I Private analysts agreed that the [nprovement — due largely to lower imports of manufactured goods, in- duding automobiles from Japan -— was welcome news. But some cau tioned that it was not necessarily a sign of the long-awaited turnaround iji trade accounts. I The Commerce Department said imports fell by 2.7 percent to $30.1 billion in September, while exports dipped by 0.5 percent to $17.5 bil lion. It was the second month in a row the trade deficit has decreased. B In a separate but related report, the Labor Department said prices of goods imported into the United Hates rose 0.7 percent from June to September, following declines in the previous two quarters. ■ In all, the report said, prices of non-petroleum imports have ad vanced 10.2 percent since Septem ber 1985, a period during which the value of the U.S. dollar against other major currencies has declined by more than 30 percent. ■-Economists claim a weaker dollar eventually will help ease this nation’s ffede balance by making imported Industry group: U.S. could save $5 billion by easing gas controls WASHINGTON (AP) — At least $5 billion could be shaved from the U.S. trade deficit annually if the government relaxed natural gas price controls and opened access to interstate pipelines, an industry group said Thursday. “The inability of natural gas pro ducers to get their gas to markets has been an important contribution to the U.S. balance of payments deficit since 1982,” said Nicholas J. Bush, president of the Natural Gas Supply Association. Bush cited a NGSA study that says government price controls on natural gas cannot keep up with the rapidly fluctuating prices of the global oil market. The Commerce Department re leased figures Thursday showing the trade deficit for September was $12.6 billion, with oil imports ac counting for $3.1 billion. Price controls on domestic natu ral gas apply only to fuel produced before 1978, called “old gas,” according to Robert Isaac, a spokes man for the Federal Energy Regu latory Commission. The Department of Energy has asked FERC to look into rule changes that would ease those con trols to give domestic gas producers more freedom on the open market, Isaac said. Bush’s study also blames re stricted access to interstate pipe lines for choking off the sale of nat ural gas equal to 1 million barrels of imported oil per day. “In 1985 alone, U.S. imports of petroleum products cost the coun try $52.4 billion, while over 2 tril lion cubic feet of domestic gas, which could have replaced im ported oil was ‘shut in’ for lack of access to markets,” Bush said. Isaac said current federal law asks that pipeline companies volun tarily provide access to transport natural gas, but doesn’t require them to do so. But Ray Courage, spokesman for the Interstate Natural Gas Associa tion, said pipelines are in the busi ness of carrying gas and have been carrying as much as they can han dle. Isaac said before deregulation of the natural gas industry in 1978, the pipeline companies tradition ally served as both the purchaser and transporter of gas, but that has changed in recent years. “Since deregulation in 1978 there has been a shift in the market. Users have started going to the pro ducers and buying, then going to the pipelines for transportation,” Isaac said. goods more expensive at home and U.S. goods less costly abroad. In yet another economic report, the Commerce Department said sales of new homes rose 10.6 percent in September to a seasonally ad justed annual rate of 690,000 units. The increase was the first im provement in sales since March, when they had soared 24.7 percent on the strength of big declines in mortgage interest rates. For the first nine months of 1986, the United States amassed a trade deficit of $127.8 billion, compared with a $106.6 billion shortfall for the same period in 1985. Americans have been importing more than they have been exporting since 1981, with last year’s record deficit of $148.5 billion expected to be easily outstripped this year. Bal- drige said he is projecting a 1986 deficit of around $172 billion, but he said that figure should drop by $30 billion to $40 billion in 1987. Senate Democratic Leader Robert C- Byrd, D-W.Va., said he was unim pressed with the new trade figures or, “the Reagan administration’s pol icy of inaction.” President Reagan, on a campaign tour through Nevada Thursday, said, “Just this morning we learned the trade deficit in September de clined from its peak for the second month in a row and is now down 30 percent. This is particularly good news for our manufacturing indus tries. We also learned new home sales were up in September over 10 percent. I believe the economy is on a roll and I think it is a sure bet we’re about to hit another jackpot. We pulled the handle and it came up jobs,jobs, jobs.” As usual, the largest single deficit was with Japan, $4.1 billion in Sep tember, but that was down from the $4.7 billion imbalance in August. Helping to narrow the gap with Japan was a reduction in automobile imports from that country — $1.5 billion in September against $ 1.8 bil lion in August. Oil imports increased in Septem ber to $3.1 billion from $2.6 billion the previous month. An average of 8 million barrels of oil a day were im ported in September, 1.7 million more a day than in August. ang members charged in terrorist conspiracy landing >y a forts: | 1 for At: tn pubixa a pOHMi 5 with i:: ndidate: • •epartmr ■CHICAGO (AP) — Four members of the El Rbkn street gang were indicted Thursday on federal weapons charges for allegedly offering toi carry out terrorist attacks in the United States in exchange for money from Libya. ■Charged in the conspiracy are El Rukn leader Jeff Fort, imprisoned in a federal peni- teptiary in Texas on a drug conviction; Melvin Maves; Alan Knox; and Trammel Davis, all of Chicago. Ijlfi'ox and Davis were arrested Aug. 5 follow ing a raid on the gang’s South Side headquar ters that yielded more than 30 weapons, includ ing an inoperative M-72 series light anti-tank rocket that had been sold to the gang by an un dercover FBI agent. Knox, 35, and Davis, 34, are being held with out bail on federal weapons charges stemming from that raid. Mayes, 29, is being sought by authorities. Charles Lee Knox, 42, was arrested outside his Chicago home later Thursday on a federal warrant issued earlier in the day in San Antonio said FBI spokesman Bob Long. Knox was sought for making false statements to the gov ernment in the case, said U.S. Attorney Anton Valukas. Long stressed that gang members sought out representatives of the Libyan government, and not vice versa. “It appears the El Rukns were interested in building a war chest,” he said. “They offered to do whatever the bidding of Libya might be, though nothing actually came of the plot,” he said. Valukas said El Rukn members made contact with Libyan officials during travels to several U.S. locations, apparently New York, Chicago and Texas, to propose their plans. According to the indictments, the contacts began in March. Valukas declined comment on whether the Libyan officials agreed to the El Rukn proposal. A receptionist at Libya’s mission at the United Nations who declined to identify herself said Ambassador Ali Treiki was out of the mis sion and would not be available Thursday for comment. The El Rukns offered to use the weapons and explosives they had been gathering since March — including several purchased from un dercover FBI agents — to damage federal properties and vehicles, Valukas said. He declined to be more specific. Authorities estimate the gang’s membership at several hundred. Gorbachev plans to visit Latin America WASHINGTON (AP) — So viet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev is planning to visit Latin America, apparently in an attempt to pen etrate peacefully an area where the United States has long been the dominant influence, adminis tration officials say. The Soviet Communist Party General Secretary plans to visit Cuba, Moscow’s closest ally in the hemisphere, and also is expected to become the first Soviet leader ever to travel to Mexico, Argen tina and Brazil, the officials said. The trip, tentatively set for next spring, may include other South American countries as well. Soviet Foreign Minister Edu ard Shevardnadze visited Mexico City three weeks ago and laid the groundwork for the Soviet-Mexi- can summit, according to the offi cials, who insisted on anonymity. Some officials described the prospective visit to Mexico as a normal development in relations between the two countries. They said Mexico has long been inter ested in expanding its diplomatic horizons and that three previous Mexican presidents have visited Moscow. The officials added that Shev- rardnadze and his Mexican hosts seemed intent on not saying any thing that could be construed as hostile to the United States. Other officials, however, said they were concerned that the Shevardnadze talks and the pro spective visit by Gorbachev raises the possibility of an expanded “Soviet foothold” in this hemi sphere. A long-term Soviet goal in Mexico is the opening of consular offices in northern Mexico, which would enable the Soviets to widen their intelligence-gathering capa bilities in the southern United States, the officials said. Shortly after Shevardnadze’s visit to Mexico, Argentine Presi dent Raul Alfonsin became the first leader of that country to visit the Soviet Union. You Are Invited To Hear I Vice President George Bush Governor Bill Clements U.S. Senator Phil Gramm U.S. Congressman Joe Barton Texas A&M Rudder Auditorium Monday, November 3rd at 2:00 pm (Day before Election) he Also attending: U.S. Senator John Tower, Congressman Tom Loeffler, Congressman Kent Hance YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE! Political ad paid for by Bill Clements for Governor