Augu S | The Battalion ces & NATION 13 Monday, August 28, 1989 „ er anks say Third World countries ill owe $5 billion in interest in ’89 jjTj UNIVERSITY MITSUBISHI Service All Makes & Models (Foreign & Domestic) 10% Student Discount 693-3311 1912 Texas AveS. (at Holleman) With I.D. Mon.-Fri. 7-6 Shuttle services available Applies to Faculty/Staff with proper I.D. Does not apply with any special. °de on it, t‘d that J Camero-taVASHINGTON (AP) - Major Third World in non Raj countries are expected to fall nearly another $5 s pendij billion behind in interest payments to U.S. and fames at other banks this year, but, unlike individual debt- e ville,at( ors, there’s no car to repossess and no home to 'thillsof|| foreclose on. ^■sovereign governments do not allow foreign ather, R, bankers to seize the property of their citizens, al- dishes ii]H>ugh sometimes lenders are allowed to buy up ideo ga® pieces of it in debt-equity swaps. weni fflFifteen countries singled out by the United But Cant States for special help will fall behind by another m not to $4,868 billion in their interest payments this they k f year raising their arrears to a record $15,079 bil- ily went h° a > according to the banks which are owed the i testified, money._ hooting,:llBrazil, Argentina and Mexico owe the most, playin; according to figures on the 15 major debtors s gave compiled by the Institute of International Fi ned ne\t nance > a group of the leading lending banks, and 'rate stepiM ■is dectti n adult: >' from ur.j bedroo: n cabinet, in lever* er had ed it. made available to the Associated Press last week. Bankers know them as “the Baker 15” after Secretary of State James A. Baker III, who made up the list in 1985 when he was secretary of the Treasury. Most are in Latin America, but the list also includes Nigeria, the Philippines and Yugo slavia. By the end of 1990, the 15 countries will owe about $524 billion to lending banks and govern ments, with nearly another $50 billion in interest payments falling due. Most have not paid any thing on the principal of their debt since the cri sis began in 1982. Christian Barrett, an economist at the insti tute, said falling behind on servicing the debt is a conscious policy of Third World government leaders. “Their governments need capital, and that’s the way they decide to get it,” Barrett said. “But it’s a policy that discourages new lending from abroad and discourages their own citizens from bringing home the money they’ve sent abroad.” More money has been leaving Third World countries than has arrived in them this decade. Leaders of the debtor countries complain that the net outflow — about $30 billion last year — is unnatural and a major cause of their declining standards of living through the 1980s. “Poverty has increased because of debt,” said Finance Minister Bernard Chidzero of Zim babwe, whose country owes a modest $2.5 billion. “Malnutrition has increased as a result of more money going into debt service,” Chidzero said. “There is a decline in social services, because they cannot be maintained because people want to service debt. And I think that is an untenable sit uation.” bedroom Cameron t it aside, it then® rang on rds aw irs uw 1 hait lishment le very I ivercome in front las-i :hes se'® f-confidt factor dtit they sm older pffi emorizf' wdiat it it myth th* ier studf Ice volcanoes seen on moon pf Neptune ■ PASADENA, Calif. (AP) — ■oyager 2’s close-up photos of Ileptune’s moon Triton reveal ■hat appear to be active ice volca- loes that erupt explosively, spew- lig nitrogen ice particles and gas Biore than a mile high, a scientist aid Sunday. “I believe they are active,” or Jrupted at least within the past |00 years, said U.S. Geological 1 J_, ■iirvey geologist Larry Soderb- 1(1 V R)m, a member of the Voyager J Bhotographic imaging team at ASA’s Jet Propulsion Labo- jjatory. “There’s 10 or 20 or 30 — lots.” “This is a crazy idea, but it’s irobably the best we have at the time” to explain the pockmarked found# rr ain, he added. Soderblom compared the new ype of ice volcanoes with sulfur- pewing volcanoes on Jupiter’s loon lo, but said the volcanoes n Triton are produced when un- lerground liquid nitrogen rises to he surface, where “it’s got to ex plode and will shower ice parti- les and gas. 7, ■ ' •vt.HKI • : Based on dark-colored, plume- haped deposits that stretch up to 0 miles from the volcanoes, So- lerblom estimated the eruptions ject debris at scores of mile per hour, perhaps faster, sending it erhaps 1 ’A miles skyward. If Soderblom is right, Triton vould be only the third object in seeing s °l ar system known to have ictive volcanism. lo and Earth are he others. Close-up photos of Triton also how more details of another type if volcano identified last week: road, flat craters called calderas. al problf identsof Walesa: Poland will collapse % if standards do not improve WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Solida rity leader Lech Walesa said Sunday that the nation’s historic political and economic reforms will collapse un less Poles’ living standards improve within six months to a year. “Society’s patience has its limits,” Walesa said in a telephone interview. “It is so bad that if there is no visible effect (of reform) in half-a-year to a year then everything will collapse. “In my opinion they (Poles) will not stand any more of it,” he said. He said another wave of strikes could result, or society could lose confidence in the Solidarity labor movement’s ability to initiate change. Walesa said he issued the same warning during a meeting in Gdansk on Sunday with Norbert Bluem, West Germany’s labor and social af fairs minister. The new Solidarity-led govern ment of Prime Minister Tadeusz Mazowiecki, the first non-Commu- nist leader of a Soviet bloc nation, has been urging Western nations to increase economic investment in Po land. Walesa met Saturday with Senate Minority Leader Robert Dole, R- NRA supporters fear gun lobbyists’ attitudes hurt progress of group WASHINGTON (AP) — Some of the National Rifle Association’s best friends are worried that the gun lobby may be shooting itself in the foot. A conservative editor and activist says NRA absolutism has kept it from cooperating with some of its natural allies, among them conserva tive groups, police organizations and, in some cases, Republicans. Patrick B. McGuigan, writing in Policy Review, a journal published by the conservative Heritage Foun dation, says that has cut into NRA political clout and put the organiza tion on the defensive. “Many of the NRA’? current diffi culties are the result of self-inflicted wounds,” he writes. “During the past few years, the or ganization has refused to play coali tion politics with its natural allies in the conservative movement includ ing, most especially, elements of or ganized law enforcement. “A go-it-alone approach and a re fusal to compromise on less than critical issues is jeopardizing the NRA’s effectiveness in winning po litical support on those issues that it considers most important.” BEIJING (AP) — Security forces will begin stopping people on the streets and checking their identifica tion papers in a new effort to round up alleged dissidents, the official Beijing Daily said Sunday. Starting Friday, residents must carry identification papers whenever they leave home “to be prepared for examination,” the paper said. Driv ers licenses also will be examined. “Counter-revolutionary elements have not been thoroughly cleaned up and motor vehicles often are used as tools of crimes,” the paper said. “Therefore the martial law troops and police must, according to the law, stengthen inspections of motor vehicles and drivers.” The order runs counter to a re cent, although gradual, lessening of the security presence on streets of the capital since the June 3-4 mili tary crackdown on pro-democracy protesters. 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Every Friday: open 8:00-1:00 $5.00 cover _ _ _ Free Draft Beer 8-11 p.m. Free Bar Drinks Every Saturday: Aggies $2.00 with student ID Longnecks $1.00 Margaritas $1.00 Single Shot Drinks $1.00 822-2222 Location on FM 2818 North of Villa Maria, Bryan #1 Live Country Spot In the Brazos Valley !( j UNIVERSITY ’ COMMUNICATIONS SUPER FALL SPECIAL 11.9 cents Per Minute To TEL-SAVE CITIES • No Monthly Service Charge • No Installation Fees • Immediate Hook-up • Written Proof of Savings • Travel Services Table Located at MSC, Rudder Fountain, Commons, Pavilion Aug. 28-Sept. 1 or call 693-5874 to sign-up! THE AGGIES CHOICE FOR LONG DISTANCE! Kansas, and his wife, Labor Secre tary Elizabeth Dole, and gave them a letter for President Bush seeking more U.S. economic aid than the $119 million already promised. Chinese soldiers to check citizens for I.D. papers ARE YOU A GRADUATING SENIOR READY FOR LIFE AFTER A&M? ARE YOU PREPARED FOR YOUR FIRST JOB INTERVIEW? 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