10 University Daily Kansan / Wednesday, November 20, 1991 YEARBOOK LAST CHANCE! PORTRAITS For those of you that missed the first portrait session, the Jayhawker has brought back the portrait photographer UNTIL Nov.22 ONLY! This will be your last chance to get your photo in KU's official yearbook. Don't miss out! Come to the Strong Hall Rotunda at any time during the following hours. You do not need an appointment Dates: Nov. 11-15 and 18-22 Times: Mon., Wed., Thurs., & Fri.: 9:00 - noon; 1:00-5:00 Tues.: 1:00-5:00; 6:00-9:00 Sitting fee: Seniors: $4 (8 poses) Underclasses: $2 (4 poses) The sitting fee is waived if you purchase or have purchased your copy of the 1992 Jayhawker for $25. DONOTPUTITOFFUNTILTHELAST DAYUNLESSYOUWANTTOWAITIN LINE! 1992 JAYHAWKER IT'S YOUR YEARBOOK DON'TBE LEFTOUT! Why drive downtown for the same specials when you can walk & drink at the Bull? FRIDAYS - $1.25 Cans Saturdays - 75C draws THURSDAYS - 25¢ Draws only $1.00 Cover Pre-Holiday Basketball Classic ENTRY DEADLINE: MONDAY, NOV. 25, 5:00 P.M. 208 ROBINSON ENTRY FEE: £20 PER TEAM (OPENTO ALL UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS STUDENTS, FAC- ULTY & STAFF) Men's, Women's, and Co-Rec divisions will be offered. A single elimination tournament will be held for all divisions Sponsored by KU Recreation Services 208 Robinson 364-35 46 As The Weather Gets Cold Make Your Car Look HOT! Suntint Auto Tinting Can Reduce Interior Cracking and Sun Fade with Insulfilm Tinting Film. - insulfilm is the only film backed by a national lifetime warranty with film and installation - it's scratch resistant, reduces heat up to 60% and 99% reduction of ultraviolet rays - Suitable installers have - Suntint's installers have over 8 years of experience - Customizing WINTER SPECIALS: $50 for 3 window trucks $100 for 2 door cars - Auto Detailing * Sunroof Installation * FREE ESTIMATES SUN TINT 2201-C West 25th St 841-4779 - FREE ESTIMATES OFFER EXPIRES 11-31-91 Panhellenic Association Leadership Award Two $500 awards will be granted to... Any minority woman that has shown exceptional leadership at KU. Any new member of the Panhellenic community that has shown leadership within her chapter and at KU Applications are available at the Organizations and Activities office at the Kansas Union. Applications are due Monday, Dec. 2, at 12 noon. Nations to delay interest on Soviet foreign payments The Associated Press MOSCOW — The richest democracies in the world offered yesterday to defer interest payments on the Soviet Union's foreign debt for one year, giving the country's struggling economy much-needed relief from a crushing financial burden. The Group of Seven industrial countries made the proposal after eight of the 12 Soviet republics accepted responsibility for the debt run up by the former Communist regime. The Soviets estimate the debt at $81 billion, but G-7 officials say it probably is higher. The republics' reaction to the offer was "very positive," said Igor Gavrilov, an aide to Ivan Silayev, chairperson of the Inter-Republic Economic Committee that is coordinating Soviet economic reforms. The plan is intended to give the Soviet Union time to make the difficult transition to a market economy. Shortages of food and other goods have worsened as the Soviets wrestle with the collapse of the inefficient production and distribution systems of the Communists' centrally planned system. The Group of Seven nations, United States, Japan, Germany, Great Britain, France, Italy and Canada. The Group of Seven will defer interest on the Soviet Union's foreign debt for one year. As a condition for the debt relief plan, the Group of Seven insisted that the republics reaffirm their collective commitment to eventual repayment of the entire debt. Four republics balked at making an immediate and unconditional commitment. also offered a $1 billion "bridge loan" to help the Soviet Union meet other short-term debt obligations. That loan likely would have to be repaid next year. The negotiations were "extremely slow," acknowledged David C. Mulford, U.S. Treasury undersecretary for international affairs. "But there has been some progress." Soviet and Group of Seven officials identified the four hold-outs as the Ukraine, Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan and Georgia. U.S. trade deficit continues to grow Bush contends that recession has ended The Associated Press WASHINGTON — The U.S. trade deficit widened to $6.79 billion in September, the poorest showing in eight months, as the U.S. appetite for foreign goods outpaced a rebound in exports, the government said yesterday. The Commerce Department said that the September trade deficit was 4 percent larger than the revised $6.53 billion imbalance in August despite the fact that exports rose to their second highest level ever. The Bush administration hailed the rise in exports as good news for U.S. manufacturers. But private economists were more downbeat, contending that slumping growth in some of the United States' major overseas markets spelled more trouble for a faltering U.S. economy. Financial markets were not bolstered by the trade report, which showed a higher-than-expected deficit. The Dow Jones industrial average of 30 stocks plunged 41.15 points as investors expressed more fears about the durability of the recovery. President Bush tried to bolster confidence by contending that the recession had ended and that sound underlying fundamentals, in the form of lower interest rates, would inflate, should set the stage for a "good recovery" in the months ahead. Still, Bush conceded that the economy was sluggish and, in a speech broadcast to a meeting of the Southern Chamber of Commerce, "I hurt when other people are hurting." The September trade deficit, the highest since a $7.37 billion trade gap in January, marked the third straight year that the deficit had gotten worse. The trade deficit is the difference between imports and exports. Space junk will zip past Earth The Associated Press LOSANGLEES —A small, mysterious object is going to zoom close to Earth丹D.5, but astronomers can't tell yet if it's some previously unseen kind of asteroid or an old spacecraft swinging past its home planet. "We don't know what it is. It is just struck me as very curious," said Brian Marsden, director of the International Astronomical Union's Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams, a reporting agency for astronomy discoveries. James Scotti, a University of Arizona scientist, first spotted the object Nov. 6 through the university's 36-inch Spacewatch telescope on Kitt Peak in southern Arizona. The telescope is used to look for asteroids that might smash into the planet. Many scientists believe large asteroid collisions wiped out the dinosaurs and caused other prehistoric mass extinctions on Earth, and also might threaten the planet in the future. This object, with a diameter estimated at 1 yard to 11 yards, won't hit Earth or the moon on its orbit around the sun, but it will pass within 290,000 miles of Earth at about 4a.m. or 5a.m. CST on Dec. 5, Marsden said Monday by telephone from Cambridge, Mass. The only asteroid observed flying closer to the planet was a 30-foot-wide chunk of rock designated 1991BA, which flew within 106,000 miles of Earth on Jan. 15, Marsden said. TOP 10 REASONS TO GO TO THE 100th ANNIVERSARY KUMUFOOTBALL GAME Thursday Sportstalk KJKH 6:30 p.m. Friday Pre-game Rally 6 p.m.-8 p.m. Bench- warmers 10) You can still get tickets (there's over 50,000 seats) 19) Shopping sales don't start until next week 8) It's not just a game, it's the 2nd oldest rivalry in College Football 7) You can cheer the 'Hawks through a 5-5 decade tie-breaker with MU 6) Who studies on Saturday anyway? 4) You can be a part of history by attending the rallies and the game. 3) Elvis will be there 1) Evis win there. 2) You can cheer the Hawks to their 1st winning 2) You can cheer the Hawks to their 1st winning season in 10 years. ) The 'Hawks will win on the seniors' last game. Saturday 11:00 a.m. Band and Party tent 1:10 p.m. The Centennial Contest Game. Prize Winning Coupon Name Address Phone ---