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Nama: Bali Post
Tipe: Koran
Tanggal: 1991-06-29
Halaman: 05

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,29 JUNI 1991 an Tutor ama Islam i Post)- Departemen Aga H.L. Utja pekan penataran tutor am penyetaraan D dikan Agama Is. -Propinsi NTB. ngarahannya di. uk meningkatkan Edidik sangat di- hkualitas dan mu- ena itu menurut mini merupakan u- ahan dan pening- n serta kemampu tutor. "Keberha- an nantinya dapat restasi anak didik pangan atau di se- ya. , agar waktu yang a penataran dapat sebaik-baiknya erta dapat mem- 1 yang maksimal pat mengembang. h masing-masing. aporkan Drs. Lalu ta penataran ber- ang dan berlang. Juli 1991. (*). Bersama Miskin li Post)- Hari Raya Idul an Milad Al Abror iselenggarakan a- ersama fakir mis- yatim Selasa lalu Abror Ampenan, pada acara terse- obar diwakili Ka- Musegep, B.A. Ka- NTB, Kandep So- lainnya. Dilapor- kurban Mesjid A- engumpulkan 27 e- dan telah disalur- 90 fakir miskin di lain itu Bupati Lo- kan bantuan sebe. ibu kepada Panti m Piatu Al Abror uni 50 orang anak esempatan itu di- ga kursus Bahasa remaja Masjid Al 30 orang dibagi npok. Menurut bu- an remaja mesjid il berbahasa In- a akan dapat mem- bangan kepada pe- ga kerja di sektor an angkatan kerja sebagai salah satu cahan masalah so- Aspek ren pondok pesantren gan jumlah santri 00 orang terdiri da- ingkat pendidikan wa, pondok pesan- membentuk (LPM) engembangan Ma g merupakan lem- dalam menjabar- si-konsepsi ajaran tan dengan sosial dilengkapi beber- nologi tepat guna, an lingkungan hi- wastaan serta biro an kewanitaan. bekerja sama de- ai instansi swasta erintah. (Me). uhan juga akan dipakai a air baru untuk an, yakni sumber a Pengadagangan. k konsumsi selama can 80 liter/hari/ uruhan pekerjaan ran akhir Maring- saat ini selesai di n," lanjutnya, yang rampung pada No- datang, untuk di- da Desember. nnya yang juga ter- , di samping Ma- mi Gili Belek dan Gi- k perpipaan bawah ingkik disambung jung Luar, sedang but disambung da- ng-elong. "Kita ha- ndaki proyek per- gar masing-masing syarakat mengang gai milik bersama, lagi terulang per- bungan," harapnya. ang tampaknya per- endapat perhatian snya di Maringkik, a pendidikan yang memprihatinkan. gat terpaksa kami lak banyak calon etiap tahunnya, ka fisik gedung seko- ak berat, hanya em- ngan tiga orang gu eadaan seperti ini at sejak sekitar 20 "keluh para guru uk di sana. (Izzul ASIH staff staff p. Irian Jaya ff st npasar Univ. Warmadewa Faperta Unud vai uri Kelod Dps. baik moril maupun kami rop. Irian Jaya) Berduka Cita: anak-anak K. 1248 * NEWS MAKER : LB. Murdani. Bali Post/Editor. Prefers Golf to Vice Presidency JAKARTA Indonesia's powerful defence minister has turned down a nomination for vice president saying he would rather play golf, the daily Suara Karya reported on Thursday. It quoted Marzuki Darusman of the ruling party Golkar as suggesting General Benny Murdani, once described as Indonesia's kingmaker, be nominated as vice president. "No. I want to play golf," Murdani told reporters after a parliamentary session on Wednesday. Darusman's suggestion came after a representative of the Indonesian Democratic Party nominated Interior Minister Rudini to be the next president. Indonesia will hold general elections in 1992. Presidential elections will be held in 1993 and President Suharto, who has held power uncontested for quarter of a century, is widely expected to stand again (Reuter). Franjo Tdjman. Croatia Will Respond Bali Post/Rtr CROATIAN President Franjo Tudjman, fearing an attack from Yugoslavia's army, pledged on Thursday that his re- public would defend its bid for independence. "The authorities of Croatia will respond with dignity and in a civilised manner to any political or military attack on Croatia," Tudjman said in a statement to media tycoon Robert Maxwell, owner of Britain's Mirror Group Newspa- pers. Fighting erupted in neighbouring Slovenia on Thursday after tanks rolled in to crush the Alpine republic's indepen- dence campaign. Slovenia said it was at war and at least 100 people had been killed or wounded. "We will try to solve every problem in a democratic way of defending our freedom using every civilised instrument," Tudjman said. Britain's Independent Television News (ITN) said Croa- tia's leaders were meeting in emergency session to consider a request for help from Slovenia. Yugoslav army tanks pounded through the Croatian city of Osijek, sparking panic among residents, but reporters said the convoy was heading for the Slovenian border, ITN said. Tudjman appealed to the international community to sup- port his republic's independence. No country has recognised the two republics' declarations of independence. The United States and Britain have urged them to remain within the 72-year-old Yugoslav federation. Croatia had offered to help create a "federation of sove- reign states" in Yugoslavia, Tudjman said. He said that when Belgrade rejected the proposal Croatia had acted in the same way that American colonies did in 1777 with their declaration of independence. (Rtr). Kaifu. Bali Post/Rtr Concern About Hong Kong JAPANESE Prime Minister Toshiki Kaifu told China's fo- reign minister on Thursday of the importance his country attached to Hong Kong. A Japanese official said Kaifu, who will visit China in August, also told Qian Qichen that Beijing should make compromises to improve its relations with Washington. The foreign ministry official quoted Kaifu as saying: "I would like to convey the strong hopes of Japan toward Hong Kong's future. It is important for Hong Kong to main- tain its economic freedom and vitality for the development of China's reform and open-door policy, as well as for Sino- Japanese relations and Sino-British relations." The British colony reverts to Chinese rule in 1997. Official figures show Japanese investment in Hong Kong in March 1991 at 9.85 billion dollars, the second most fa- voured destination for Japanese investment in Asia after Indonesia. It accounts for 3.2 per cent of total Japanese investment worldwide. The official quoted Qian as saying he agreed with Kaifu. China hoped Hong Kong would be a stable financial centre and it would work to that end. "There are a few problems. We are in close consultation with the British government and resolution of them is not so difficult," Qian said. Hong Kong and Beijing have failed to agree on plans for a new port and airport complex the Hong Kong government wants to build. Beijing's approval is vital to attract private financing. Kaifu said he hoped for stable relations between China and the United States. Washington should understand the importance of China and that China was heading in the right direction. "We hope China will make efforts to compromise," he said. A fierce debate is raging in Washington over the condi- tions under which the United States should extend China's most favoured nation (MFN) trade status for another year, with billions of dollars in exports at stake. Qian said China welcomed the stand of President George Bush on this issue. Bush favours unconditional extension of MFN. "We consult with the United States on many issues, inclu- ding trade, transfer of technology, arms control in the Mid- dle East. We hope these consultations will play a positive role to China-U.S. relations," he said. On a four-day official visit, Qian on Thursday also met former Prime Minister Noboru Takeshita. He later left To- kyo for the ancient capital Nara where he was staying overnight before returning to China on Friday. Kaifu's visit to China was announced on Wednesday by chief cabinet spokesman Misoji Sakamoto after it was ag- reed at talks between Qian and his Japanese counterpart, Taro Nakayama. It is a major diplomatic victory for Beijing after two years of efforts to rehabilitate China's image following the 1989 crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrators. (Rtr). SABTU, 29 JUNI 1991 Bali Post English Corner Rival Cambodian Factions To Meet In Beijing Beijing stu 00 Bangkok Rival Cambodian leaders have agreed to meet in China next month to try to iron out differences over a United Nations peace plan, a guerrilla source said on Friday. It would be the first time the rival factions have met in China. Beijing has been the main bac- ker of the Cambodian guerrillas in their 12-year war against the Vietnamese-installed Inment in Phnom Penh. gover- The informal mid-July mee- ting would be preparation for a formal session of Cambodia's Supreme National Council (SNC) in Bangkok, said the guerrilla source, a member of the faction loyal to former mo- narch Prince Norodom Siha- nouk. Among those attending would be Hun Sen, premier of the Phnom Penh government, he said. The meeting would also inclu- de a representative of the Uni- ted Nations, and France and In- donesia, which co-chair the Pa- ris International Conference on Cambodia. Officials of the Phnom Penh government could not immedi- ately be reached to confirm they had agreed to a Beijing meeting. The guerrillas and the gover- nment made significant prog- ress in narrowing their differen- ces during talks this week at the Thai beach resort of Pattaya. But important differences re- main over the U.N. peace plan, which calls for foreign adminis- trators virtually to run Cambo- dia during a disarmament per- iod ahead of elections. While the guerrillas have ac- cepted the plan in full, Phnom Penh wants amendments to pre- vent a return to power of the Khmer Rouge whose rule from 1975 to 1979 caused the deaths of more than a million Cambodi- ans. is accepted. U.N. cannot send major force The United Nations has said it cannot send a major force to mo- nitor the ceasefire until the plan Diplomats said proper moni- toring would require thousands of personnel and the United Na- tions was unwilling to commit money to sustain that kind of force without a definite politi- cal settlement. Among the points the Cambo- dians agreed in Pattaya was a ceasefire and a moratorium on arms shipments into their coun- try. Sihanouk said he would presi- de over the SNC, a "super gover- nment" of the factions, when it sets up headquarters in Phnom Penh in November. On Thursday the former mo- narch urged the factions to res- pect the ceasefire and asked fo- reign countries which have been providing military aid to stop doing so immediately. In a statement issued "in my capacity as former King of Cam- bodia" Sihanouk also urged countries to stop allowing their territory to be used to transport military aid to the factions. The guerrillas have received Chinese arms through Thailand for the past decade. China says it stopped sending weapons when the U.N. plan was announ- ced last year. Thailand's Foreign Minister, Arsa Sarasin, on Thursday re- peated Thai denials that it is a transit route for weapons to the guerrillas. Vietnam Welcomes Results Vietnam welcomed results of a meeting in Thailand this week of Cambodia's warring factions, saying the talks represented a step towards peace in Indochi- na, newspapers said on Friday. "Vietnam welcomes and hig- hly values the results achieved at the SNC (Supreme National Council) meeting in Pattaya," newspapers quoted a Vietname- se government spokesman as saying. The SNC is a national reconci- liation body comprising repre- sentatives of Cambodia's war- ring groups. lity, friendship and cooperation in southeast Asia and the world," the spokesman said. "Together with other coun- tries, Vietnam will contribute its utmost to help reach a com- prehensive political settlement soon in Cambodia which is ba- sed on respect of Cambodian so- vereignty and conforms with the United Nations charter," the spokesman said. Although the Pattaya talks were viewed by diplomats in Thailand as a success, several problems remain. The far-left Khmer Rouge, most powerful of the three guer- rilla factions opposing Phnom Penh, wants the U.N. peace plan adopted as it stands. But Phnom Penh, which is backed by Hanoi, wants it amen- It agreed during a June 24-26 ded to prevent a return to power meeting in the Thai resort of of the Khmer Rouge, whose rule Pattaya on a ceasefire, a mora- from 1975 to 1978 led to the torium on foreign arms sup- deaths of a million Cambodians. plies, a new governing council" Heng Samrin, Cambodia's and council leader. president and secretary-general of the ruling People's Revolutio- nary Party, headed a Cambodi an delegation at a congress of the Communist Party of Viet- nam in Hanoi from June 24 to Under a U.N. peace plan, the SNC is supposed to run Cambo- dia while U.N. administrators and a peace-keeping force help prepare the country for elec. tions. 27. "Vietnam considers this a cor- His government was installed rect move towards a political so- by Vietnamese troops who inva- lution to the Cambodian issue ded in December 1978 and top- that is in the true interest of the pled the Khmer Rouge. Cambodians and of peace, stabi- (Reuter). To Kashmiri Militants Promise To Free Missing Israeli Soon Srinagar, India, - Kashmiri militants said on Friday they would soon free un- harmed an Israeli missing after colleagues fought back against guerrilla kidnappers. He did not say where or when Yitzhaki away before the police Yitzhaki would be freed. arrived were from a different Residents on the outskirts of group than those who seized six Srinagar saw Yitzhaki being Israeli men and two women dragged away by armed men af from a houseboat on Srinagar's ter six Israeli men jumped their scenic Dal Lake. The women we- captors and started a firefight re freed shortly afterwards. that left one Israeli and a mili- wounded early on Thursday. tant dead and three Israelis to have hidden in bushes and They said Yitzhaki appeared could not join the four Israeli "He was taken over by our survivors as they took refuge in people and he will be released a nearby house and called the soon unharmed," a JKLF spo- police. kesman told an international news agency in Srinagar by te- lephone. The Jammu and Kashmir Li- beration Front (JKLF) said zhaki after four other Israelis their men took away Yair Yit- fought their way out of a kidnap attempt by another militant group on Thursday. they thought the men who took The residents said at the time Slovenia At War, Says Its Defence Minister Ljubljana, Yugoslavia - The rebel republic of Slove- nia, defying a crackdown by fe- deral authorities, said it was at war with the Yugoslav army which has launched an all-out campaign to crush its bid for in- dependence. In an unprecedented conflict, Slovenian police shot down two Yugoslav army helicopters on Thursday killing a total of five people. European countries and the U- nited States that they would not recognise the self-proclaimed states. Nine of the 12 EC members, who have called for a peaceful resolution of the conflict, on Thursday called for the creation of a pan-European security fo- rum to launch an investigation of the Yugoslav crisis. First Test tions by the army in the deci- Opposes Kidnappings The JKLF has opposed kid- nappings, despite playing a ma- anti-Indian revolt in Kashmir in jor part in the eruption of the January 1990 by seizing the daughter of India's then interior minister the previous month. They swapped the minister's JKLF men and the street cele- daughter for five jailed senior ONAL Halaman 5 TRAVEL INN LODGE Bali Post/Rtr REBUILD-An alley next to Olongapo's main business district is filled with mounds of volcanic sand from rooftops of houses and buildings blanketed by debris from Mount Pinatubo. The city, among the hardest hit by the eruption, is slowly rebuilding its facilities. Thousands Flee Towns Near Erupting Volcano brations that followed were the Manila- police have reported more than cars, buses and buffalo-drawn that could engulf their homes. 2,400 deaths. Volcanologists said a fresh do- me of magma, or molten rock, was building inside Pinatubo's still-smouldering crater and this could lead to a new explosion. cano that heavy rains were ex- debris. beginning of a revolt in which Thousands of villagers fled in pected to unleash big mudflows carts on Thursday after scien- They said mudflows could The Israelis were taken from tists warned of bigger mudflows swamp villages around the U.S. the houseboat by a previously from an erupting Philippine vol- Clark air base near Pinatubo group called cano. little-known and in adjoining Zambales pro- Clutching sleeping mats and vince where many towns remain other belongings, about 12,000 buried in volcanic ash. residents of the threatened towns of San Marcelino and Cas- sions of the government," he said, referring to the gover- nment's call for the army to se- Pasdaran-e-Inquilab-e-Islami (Guardians of the Islamic Revo- cure borders in Slovenia. lution) influenced by the Irani- an revolution. Fierce fighting erupted at As resistance mounted, tanks were checked by barricades of buses, trucks, bulldozers and cars in many areas but thrust them aside. Near the industrial city of Mariibor, local people set trucks ablaze to block tanks on a bridge. By calling for an investiga- Slovenian Defence Minister tion, the nine EC members were Brnik Airport near the Sloveni- Janez Jansa said at least 100 testing for the first time new ru- an capital of Ljubljana, and at people had been killed or woun- les to help avert conflicts in 20 other places, Jansa said. In ded in clashes as Yugoslav tanks post-Cold War Europe agreed Trzin village, near Ljubljana, swept through the northwestern recently by the 35-nation Confe- reporters saw Slovenian units fi- republic and secured 12 of the rence on Security and Cooper- re at federal army vehicles, ap- 27 border crossings in Slovenia. ation in Europe (CSCE). parently killing at least two sol- "To put it briefly, Slovenia is The assent of 13 of the CSCE's diers. at war," Jansa, in combat fati- members is needed to invoke Panic spread through Ljublja- gues, told a television intervie- the procedure. na after a helicopter was shot Yugoslav army tanks moved out of the sky, bursting into fla- into Slovenia early on Thur- mes in a brilliant white flash. sday, ringed the main airport Men clutching rifles took up po- and headed towards the borders sitions throughout the city fea- with Italy, Austria and Hunga- ring an army attack. Slovenia and Croatia, seeking a looser federation of sovereign states, had long pledged to sece- de from Yugoslavia. wer. The Yugoslav government, which has outlawed the inde- pendence declarations made by Slovenia and neighbouring Croatia on Tuesday, confirmed that five people had been killed and said 12 more soldiers had been hurt. The government is facing the threat of a collapse of the Yu- goslav federation--six republics and two provinces - after 72 years of troubled existence. Slovenia and Croatia decla- red their independence despite repeated warnings from other ry. Jansa said the federal army would fall apart because of its multi-ethnic composition, com- prising the many nationalities in the Balkan federation. Their moves are opposed by Serbia, Yugoslavia's biggest re- public, which wants a centrally ruled federation to continue. At least 22 people have been killed On the outskirts of Srinagar, summer capital of India's only Moslem-majority region, the Is- raelis attacked the kidnappers and wrestled guns away from them. The three wounded men, now recovering in an army hospital in Srinagar, handed over three AK-47 assault rifles and a grena- de seized from the kidnappers. A further 62 Israeli tourists were taken out of the Kashmir Valley on Thursday by bus un- der heavy police escort. Police said on Friday they planned to evacuate all foreign tourists. Teams went to hotels, boar- ding houses and the ornate hou- seboats for which Srinagar is fa- mous and took about 30 to poli- ce headquarters on Thursday night, they said. They would probably be eva- cuated on Friday, they added. Kashmir officials said the go- vernment was discussing whet- her to ban foreign tourists from In a surprise development, fe- the valley or to advise them not deral deputy prime minister to visit its Himalayan grandeur. Zivko Pregl said the army may this year in clashes involving The attempted kidnap of the have overstepped the power en- Serbs and Croats, the country's Israelis was the second seizure trusted in it by the government. biggest nationalities and tradi- of foreigners during the revolt. "There is no basis for such ac- tional rivals (Reuter). Lessons To Be Learnt For Tyson And Ruddock Las Vegas- One factor could decide Mike Tyson's heavyweight rematch with Donovan "Razor" Ruddock Bali Post/Rtr Mike Tyson (Reuter). dock has also added a new ele- ment - extra weight. Fresh Threat Chief volcanologist Raymun- do Punongbayan told reporters satellite photographs showed magma was again building insi- de the crater and had reached a U.S. officials discounted a width of 60 metres (180 feet). He said the dome would allow fresh threat to the U.S. Subic Bay naval base, 80 km (50 miles) pressure to build within the vol- northwest of Manila, which is cano until it exploded in anot- still recovering from the deluge her major eruption. It was diffi- of debris from the last major ex- cult to forecast when this would Plosions on June 14 and 15. tillejos abandoned their homes as Mount Pinatubo pelted the towns with ashfalls on the 19th day of its eruption. "Ashes began falling heavily on San Marcelino this morning but already it looked like five o'clock in the afternoon in the town," said a Filipino reporter look at the geography there is even years before another big at the scene. "There is no threat. If you Moore. be. It could be "weeks, months or A U.S. marine identified by no way that mud can flow eruption", he said. It depended police as Cresencio Balbuena of through the mountain to here," how quickly energy was built up San Diego, California, was inju- said Subic spokesman Jerry beneath the solidifying dome. "We cannot tell exactly what red when a mini-bus rammed his The Philippine government will happen," he added. jeep near Castillejos while the Pinatubo continues to eject has set up early warning obser- soldier was driving to town to vation posts to alert villages of ash and steam some 10,000 me- evacuate his Filipino in-laws. mudflows which can move at 25 tres (30,000 feet) into the sky Pinatubo, 90 km (55 miles) kph (15 mph), sweeping aside while unleashing regular tre- north of Manila, has killed at everything in their path in a mo- mors that rock surrounding a- least 343 people and forced a- rass of steaming hot sand and reas (Reuter). bout 250,000 to evacuate foot- hill towns and villages since it Fourteen Bus first erupted on June 9. Officials manning a presiden- gers of Tamil Eelam, fighting for an independent homeland in tial action centre in San Marce: Passangers Killed the north and east of the Indian lino, who also took flight, said In Rebel Attack the new evacuations would fur- ther congest the dozens of refu- Colombo- gee centres set up by the gover- Tamil separatist guerrillas nment in Manila and nearby detonated a bomb beneath a bus provinces. in eastern Sri Lanka and killed Philippine scientists on Thur- at least 14 passengers, police sday warned tens of thousands said on Friday. of villagers living near the vol- prepare the way he should have. Ten pounds is a lot. Sure he'll be slower. "After two or three rounds the last time he was huffing and puffing like a train," he said. Tyson, 1.83 metres tall, weig- hed in at 97.9 kg, his lightest since 1988 when he weighed 97.8 kg before beating Larry Holmes. In Ruddock, Tyson faces his Ocean island, were responsible for the attack. No further details were imme- diately available on the attack, which took place at Lahugala in Amparai district. The Tigers were blamed for a suicide bomb attack on a milita- ry headquarters in Colombo last Eight people were injured in the attack on Thursday night. Friday. The rebels shot at passengers The Tigers are suspected of and set fire to the bus after the assassinating former Indian pri- me minister Rajiv Gandhi in the blast. "The casualties could be mo- south Indian state of Tamil Na- re," a police officer said. du on May 21. They have denied Police said the Liberation Ti- any involvement (Reuter). Journal Of The 13Th Bali Art Festival Activity Time : 10.00-13.00 : Traditional Kakawin Poetry-reading with Gender Wayang accompaniment by the Regency of Klungkung. : Wantilan Hall. : 10.00-13.00 -- which man learned his lessons fight were that a failure to use a best last time out. jab to set up his awesome left Tyson, 25 on Sunday, beat the hook and not bothering to bob Canadian last March when the and weave meant being punis- kg more than last time. It was his title to James "Buster" Time He weighed in at 107.9 kg, 4.5 toughest opponent since losing Saturday, June 29, 1991. referee stopped the fight in the hed by a man who, as Tyson put the result of having cut down on Douglas in January 1990. seventh round, a decision that it, "hits like a (expletive dele- the roadwork in favour of other Friday's fight, for which Ty- caused uproar at Las Vegas' Mi- ted) mule". exercises aimed at the cardi- son is 9-2 ON favourite, will be rage Hotel. ovascular system as well as a his fourth since that humilia- Place Although Tyson was far ahead For his part, the 1.90-metre change in diet. on all judges' scorecards, Rud- tall Ruddock paid scant atten- tion. He knocked out journeym- "I wasn't thinking about co- dock, 27, had looked set to make tion to those who told him to use ming in heavier. I was thinking round last June and stopped A- an Henry Tillman in the first Activity it a long night for the former his 28-cm reach advantage and about coming in stronger," said lex Stewart in the first round undisputed heavyweight cham- throw at least occasional right Ruddock, who looked like he last December. hand jabs to set up his powerful had added mostly muscle for Then Tyson, now 40-1, caught left hook. Friday's scheduled 12-round Ruddock with three-punch As it was, when those left fight. "I was a little bit surprised combination to the head, sen- hooks came they surprised Ty- by his (Tyson's) strength. He's ding him reeling against the ro- son about as much as seeing the strong for a little guy." sun set at night. pion. pes. Referee Richard Steele quic- kly stopped the scheduled 12- round fight, setting off a near riot in the ring with Ruddock's supporters battling Tyson's cor- nermen. Failure to Use A jab Tyson's lessons from the first "I don't think that was totally Sacrificing Speed But in emphasising power, I : Presentation of Gebug Ende by the Regency of Karangasem. Place : Art Centre. Time : 20.00-23.00 Activitiy Tyson bet friends 150,000 dol- lars that he would knock Rud- Place dock out last time. That goal and his ridiculously easy last two : Sendratari "Jarasanda Antaka" by students of STSI- Denpasar. : Ardha Chandra Open-stage. : 10.00-13.00 fights may have made him vul- Sunday, June 30, 1991. Time nerable. But he said of Ruddock ear- Activity Place Place If both men heed the lessons Time me in that first fight," Ruddock Ruddock will be sacrificing lier this week: "I beat him befo- Time said recently. "It became a mac speed against Tyson. re and I'll beat him again. He'll Activity ho thing to fight Tyson "There's no substitute for get knocked out." didn't stick to my game plan. I running," said Tyson's trainer, didn't use my right hand as Richie Giachetti, after Wednes much as I should have." day's weigh-in. "It (Ruddock's For Friday's rematch Rud- extra weight) tells you he didn't of their last meeting, the Mirage Activity Hotel parking lot could see an intriguing contest (Reuter). Place : Balinese Style Fashion Show For Children : Ksirarnawa Stage. 20.00-23.00 : Fashion Show For Adults. : Ksirarnawa Stage : 20.00-23.00 : Sendratari "Jarasanda Antaka" by the Students of STSI Denpasar. : Ardha Chandra Open-stage. Color Rendition Chart 2cm