Tipe: Koran
Tanggal: 1991-07-15
Halaman: 05
Konten
15 JULI 1991 Sunardi NEWS MAKER : -tua tim ost)- Bambang Sunardi RI dilantik seba- a DPRD Lombok ntikan Kol. (Pur- Tatan Suyatna kembali oleh or- bok Timur Abdul lantikan tersebut engan tugas dan ab yang makin Lombok Timur kan dan mening- ri segi kemampu- nil, tata laksana maupun kesiap- ngan masyarakat menjadi tekad a untuk me- yukseskan, mem- Han kewajiban o- secara nyata dan awab," tegas bu Kamis. penyelenggara- ntikan Wakil Ke- merupakan suatu dari proses yang sesuai dengan peraturan Hangan yang ber anggota kelom- g meraih sukses. u menurut Tang- Hibelikan mesin ung guna meno- ernakan mereka, risan dilakukan mingkatkan kese ota. Setiap ang arkan Rp 2.500 minggu dan pe 00 bagi yang da egiatan anggota mberian kredit n sebesar Rp ■mencicil pem butir setiap hari n, harga telur . Ditambahkan a anggota telah a KUD. (Me). ataram masuk ke PN Ma- Januari sampai outi, perkara pi- ngkat) sebanyak ambah 3 perkara , yang sudah di- k 124 perkara sa 2 perkara. Se- 32 perkara biasa perkara sisa ta a serta yang su anyak 29 perka rsisa 12 perkara. masuk 8 perka- h 1 perkara sisa mya serta berha- rkara. Yang ter lalu lintas ter- ara dan telah di- ruhnya. Hata, kata Gani, ak 167 perkara sisa tahun 1990 putus 149 perka- ersisa 177 perka- i tingginya per ang masuk di PN rut dia, disebab- berkembangnya daerah ini. "Ber- atu daerah men- a menyebabkan ktanah yang di- Zeta," katanya. nakan ut Tahun Islam akan ukhuwah Is amaan dan soli pemuda dan re tuk menghadapi al dan sosial ge- antinya mampu r atau motivator pemba adapi makin ber wan, melalui di- aja masjid, akan kepedulian da- pi pembangunan gumumnya, dan umat Islam khu- dian akan me an berpikir dan . uan untuk mam- am menghadapi lahan. (Edo) ORTS ESIA 11701 104 an Pengadilan erkara perdata MESTA sudah Berita Acara 91 CV KARYA 00. E.H. dan R.A. TAI AAN, dan N dan BERITA but: (i) TIDAK BAYARAN KE ngertian jikalau ng-piutang atas syarat-syarat akan memasti berikan; untuk dengan perse gungan jawab dan leverensir mulai prototype L DI SELONG dari beberapa YA SEMESTA an (yang akan NAN AN AM LOMBOK TEL). U 1375 Pat Bradley Bali Post/Reuter Have Finished Her Third Round PAT BRADLEY and Joan Pitcock ended Saturday's third round of the U.S. Women's Open golf championship right where they started it, tied for the lead after battling through some bumpy stretches. Bradley and Pitcock shot matching one-over-par 72s to finish 54 holes with totals of one-over 214. They shared a one-stroke lead over 1980 Open winner Amy Alcott and 19-year-old LPGA Tour rookie Brandie Bur- ton going into Sunday's final round. First prize is 110,000 dollars. Bradley bounced back from a triple-bogey on the difficult par-4 fifth hole, where she left two shots in the rough and then three-putted. She came back with birdies at the eighth and 12th holes and all the rest were pars. SENIN, 15 JULI 1991 Bali Post English Corner U.S.,Philippines Decide Bases Fate In Shadow Of Volcano MANILA- A rumbling volcano will loom in the background as an unusual but crucial factor when Philippine and American delegations resume talks on Monday to decide the fate of the largest U.S. military bases in Asia. After slumbering for six centuries, the 1,780-metre (5,800-foot) Mount Pinatubo upset the negotiations when it began erupting on June 9 and smothered Clark air base and Subic naval station with volcanic ash. U.S. defence officials say huge repair bills, which could run up to 800 million dollars, may force them to abandon Clark, but Ma- nila believes Washington will want to keep Subic at all costs. Chief U.S. negotiator Richard Armitage is expected to clarify American intentions about the two bases when he arrives on Monday and holds one-on-one talks with Philippine Foreign Secretary Raul Manglapus, head of the Manila delegation. Admiral Charles Larson, com- mander of the U.S. Pacific Com- mand, arrived on Saturday and servicemen and dependants to flee, talks on renewing the ag- reement on the bases which ex- pires in September, had drag- ged on for a year, with both si- des unable to agree on the dura- tion of a new treaty and how much money Washington should pay. Manila has offered a seven- year deal at 825 million dollars a year. Washington wants a 10 to 12-year agreement and says Ma- nila's price is too high. Manila's position Pinatubo's eruptions have ap- less money for Manila, but it would throw 25,000 workers out of work, officials said. The two bases together inject about one billion dollars into the economy and employ about 70,000 Filipinos. A U.S. departure would end 90 years of American military presence at the air base which Washington built in 1901, origi- nally as a cavalry outpost. ply point in the Vietnam and Gulf Wars. Subic, regarded as more stra- tegically important to Washing ton than Clark, is a repair yard for the U.S. Seventh Fleet and holds the world's largest naval supply depot. "The mountain has added a new factor, a new dynamic," U.S. Ambassador Nicholas Platt said. "(It) is putting ash in the air every nine hours and it's dange- rous for jet aircraft," Platt said, when asked by reporters what factors could influence a U.S. decision to quit Clark. He added: "The future of any kind of a military facility de- pends on whether it can be used or not." Bombed by Japanese forces Scientists say Pinatubo may during World War Two, Clark continue erupting for three played a major role as a resup- years. (Reuter). inspected damage at the two ba-parently softened Manila's posi: Two Charged Over Murder ses. He is to meet President Co- razon Aquino on Monday. "By some stroke of fate, Pina- tubo suddenly erupted, struck at the very nerve centre of Philippine-American relations and brought clouds (over the ne- gotiations)," political analyst Teodoro Benigno said. Until Pinatubo exploded and forced more than 20,000 U.S. tion and sources close to the Phi- lippine panel said it was now ready to accept a 10-year deal. But Manila would insist on its 825-million-dollar fee, said the sources, who asked not to be i- dentified. A U.S. pullout from Clark could further damage the falter- ing Philippine economy. A withdrawal means not only "I started the day leading and am still tied, so I have Bangladesh's Government Blamed nothing to be ashamed of or disappointed about," Bradley, 40, said. Bradley said conditions allowed the field to draw closer. "Every day, the golf course has played differently. I would have liked to see the wind blow more, like when it gusted for the first two days. But it was calm, which brought a lot of people back into the golf tournament," she said. With one round left, 25 golfers were bunched within six shots of the lead. Included in that group were five past Open champions - Bradley, Alcott, JoAnne Carner at 218, and Laura Davies of Britain and Liselotte Neumann of Swe- den at 220. (Reuter). Joseph Socha Appears In Court Bali Post/Reuter JOSEPH SOCHA appears in court in this May 1991 file photograph to face 20 counts of rape in the Los Angeles area. Socha was accused of carving religious symbols into his victims, claiming he was a "messenger from God." He was convicted and on July 12 he was sentenced to 117 years in prison. The former U.S. Marine Corp seargent was discarged from the military after being diagnosed as a paranoid schizophrenic. (Reuter). For Campus Violence Dhaka Bangladesh's main opposition leader, Sheikh Hasina, has accu- sed the government of unleas- hing a reign of terror on the country's campuses where vio- lence has killed at least 12 peo- ple. She said the government un- der her arch-rival, Prime Minis- ter Begum Khaleda Zia, could stop the violence if it wished but was using the unrest for its own ends. "The government is carrying out a reign of terror through its student wing, Jatiyatabadi Chhatra Dal, to maintain its grip on educational institutions, Sunday newspapers quoted her as telling student supporters of her Awami League party on Sa- turday. "The government, if it wis- hed, could eliminate terrorism another meeting soon to coordi- nate their efforts and see how to cooperate with government measures to restore peace. But an appeal issued by the conference apparently made no impact on warring student groups who renewed their bat- tle on Saturday. Eyewitnesses said at least 12 students were injured when A- wami supporters opened fire on a rally of Khaleda's followers at Dhaka's Tejgaon College. Police say they fear wides- pread violence in the run-up to student union elections at Dha- ka University, the country's big- gest institution with 25,000 stu- dents, on July 31. (Reuter). Of Heart Surgeon Chang Sydney- Two men were charged on Sunday in connection with the murder of leading heart sur- geon Victor Chang who was gun- ned down in an exclusive Syd- ney suburb 10 days ago, a police spokesman said. Chiew Seng Liew, 48, was charged with Chang's murder in the early hours of Sunday after being arrested at Melbourne airport on Saturday afternoon as he was about to catch a flight. A few hours later Jimmy Tan, 39, of the outer Melbourne su- burb of Sunbury, was charged with one count of being an ac- cessory after the fact to murder, the spokesman told Reuters. Shanghai-born Chang, 54, who performed Australia's first heart transplant operation, was shot in the head and body on July 4 during an argument with two men of Asian appearance. The surgeon was found slum- ped in the gutter, lying beside his black Mercedes Benz sports car. Tan and Liew, who lives in the Melbourne suburb of South Yar- ra, were remanded in custody to China Denies Phnom Penh from campuses," said Hasina. Prime Minister Visit Hasina made the accusation a day after Khaleda convened an all-party conference to discuss how to end the violence, which has become one of the most se- rious problems facing her four- month-old government. Battles fought with guns and bombs, mostly between student supporters of the two leaders, have killed at least a dozen peo- ple and injured more than 500 since March in the capital Dha- ka and elsewhere, police said. Key Role Students have traditionally played a key role in Bangladesh politics. They were the main for- ce during the 1971 war of inde- pendence and have since domi- nated political activities, inclu- ding elections. The all-party conferenece held on Friday, which was also attended by the Awami League, agreed in principle to launch a joint effort to end campus rest. Beijing- China has denied a report that Phnom Penh Prime Minis- ter Hun Sen, due to make his first visit on Monday for a mee- ting of rival Cambodian fac- tions, had been invited back by Beijing for a second visit. A Foreign Ministry spokesm- an said China had agreed to Hun Sen's visit to attend a two-day meeting of Cambodia's Supre- me National Council (SNC) that starts on Tuesday. Permission for that visit was made at the request of former Cambodian monarch Prince No- rodom Sihanouk, who is chai- ring the SNC meeting, the spo- kesman was quoted by the offi- cial New China News Agency as saying on Saturday. A foreign press report that he had been invited back by Bei- The parties decided to hold jing for a three-day visit "does not square with the fact", the Gorbachev Asks West For Consumer Good To Ease Pain Of Reforms London- Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbac- hev has asked the West and Jap- àn for an "infusion of consumer goods" to help his country make the painful transition from co- mounism to capitalism, a senior U.S. official said on Saturday. The request is apparently ai- med at winning popular support for tough Soviet economic re- forms by providing the coun- try's consumers with some of the benefits of capitalism early on. Gorbachev made his plea for Western and Japanese consu- mer goods in a 23-page letter outlining his economic reform plans that was delivered to lea- way?" he asked. The question of aid for the So- viet Union is shaping up as the biggest issue that will face the leaders of the Group of Seven- Britain, Canada, France, Ger- many, Italy, Japan and the Uni- ted States - at their July 15-17 economic summit here. The leaders have agreed to meet Gorbachev on Wednesday, but only after they have comple- ted their formal summit ses- sions. ning to bring the cracks under- lying that consensus to the sur- face. Italy has responded much mo- re favourably than the United States to the Soviet proposals. An Italian official said that Gorbachev has presented an e- conomic reform plan which stresses human rights and the importance of dialogue with re- bellious republics. bodia's 12-year civil war, the Khmer Rouge, whose reign of terror in the 1970s killed a mil- lion Cambodians before Viet- nam invaded in 1978 to install Hun Sen. The New China News Agency report did not rule out the possi- bility that Hun Sen could return to Beijing, but took issue with the report that it would be at China's invitation, thus official. No representative from Phnom Penh has officially visi- ted China since Vietnam inva- ded Cambodia. "The Chinese side will recei- ve them by treating them equal- ly," the Chinese Foreign Minis- try spokesman said in reference to those attending Tuesday's meeting. appear at the Melbourne magis- trates court on Monday. No pleas were taken. The arrests follow a week- long investigation in Melbourne by homicide detectives from a New South Wales police task force set up to probe Chang's death. Police said several premises were raided in Melbourne over- night and numerous people de- tained for questioning. The detectives are expected to apply at Monday's hearing for the extradition of Liew and Tan to Sydney. Chang, who led the heart tran- splant team at St Vincents, a pri- vate Sydney hospital, perfor- med heart bypass surgery on Australia's richest man Kerry Packer in October. (Reuter). Japanese In Peru Tokyo- Japanese authorities said on Saturday they would review se curity for Japanese working in Peru after Maoist guerrillas shot dead three Japanese agri- culture engineers. Path The technicians, engaged in a project to improve vegetable crops, were killed on Friday by about 15 hooded Shining guerrillas in Huaral, 100 km (60 miles) north of Lima, Peruvian police said. Peruvian employees out of the The guerrillas earlier forced Japanese-financed agricultural cooperation centre where the three worked. news that such a terrorist attack "We were shocked at the occurred," a spokesman for the semi-official Japan Internatio- nal Cooperation Agency (JICA) said in Tokyo. 90 Japanese technicians and vo- JICA has instructed about lunteers working in Peru to as- semble in Lima to discuss secu- rity in their areas, he said. Technical Assistance "At this stage, we have not de- cided to review our policy of tec- hnical assistance to that coun- try. We'll discuss safety prob- lems," he added. The SNC is composed of the Phnom Penh government and Peruvian President Alberto the three guerrilla groups oppo- Fujimori, the son of Japanese spokesman said. sing it and would represent immigrants, has been seeking Phnom Penh's official SPK Cambodian sovereignty under a Japanese investment and aid. News Agency on Wednesday U.N. peace plan that calls for Three dealers selling quoted Hun Sen as saying he the world body to run Cambodia Japanese-made cars have been had accepted Beijing's invita- before elections. attacked in Lima in recent tion for a second visit from July weeks. Almost 23,000 people ha- 22-24. ve died in political violence sin- ce the Shining Path took up arms against the government in 1980. (Reuter). Beijing is chief arms supplier of the Phnom Penh gover- nment's main eneinies in Cam- Tuesday's meeting was called by Sihanouk to prepare for a full session of the SNC in Bangkok next month. (Reuter). Stidar Whew What a ob! MILIE MONUMEN PERSONAL SURAKA Halaman 5 I do this for the Sake of social justice! al لرصدا Cremation: A Tradition Of Social Harmony NGABEN or pelebon ceremo- ny, or cremation, is regularly criticized including in this paper-as a waste of money and a sign of the continued irratio- nality of the modern Balinese. Would not a crematorium do the work better, with a proper ly adapted ritual, argue the critics? Go to hell with the tourists, they say. times of judgement and punis- and members of related or de- hment, not only in the presence pendant clans. All are called to of God, but also in that of one's assist: some prepare offerings, own fellow villagers. In the others help with implementns worst instances-very rare now-, such as the cremation tower for the roads of the village and the carrying the corpse to the ceme- cemetery might be "closed" to tery or the sarcophagus where it the dead. The body would stay would be burned, while others to rot in the family compound, play ritual music or recite holy until, eventually, the family ma- manuscripts, each following a kes amends and pays up the re- tightly defined division of labor What these critics overlook is quired fines. Sometimes, di- and scheduling of activities. that, besides its function as a scontent surfaces during the All this indirectly amounts to step in "the release of the soul", journey to the cemetery. Car- a big social game: participants the cremation is also - although ried by entranced men, the body from lower groups are reminded it is not perceived as such by the may be shaken and the crema- of their humble position, while locals-a very efficient tool of so- tion tower toppled. Ten years equals or superiors are presen- cial cohesiveness, as shown be- ago, we were told of a corpse ted with a show of the wealth that had once been thrown on and power of the departed per-. the roadside and stabbed son's family. low. The Balinese system of village solidarity is best displayed du through its shroud on the groin: the departed had been accused Higher Costs. ring death ceremonies. The ban- neighborhood, is usually called ped a young girl. It would be the more hands are called in for jar, the village cooperative a few years before of having ra- There is more to it however: banjar suka duka, or neighbor difficult to attain expected re- the preparation of the ceremo- hood for the sharing of joy and lease after such a treatment. ny, the higher the costs. The sorrow. Much of the ritual work Thus, death is an occasion of most expensive is not the bull or to the death ritual. It is the peo- "watch out", to beware. Interes- meals that have to be freely and performed in the banjar relates warning. The living are told to the cremation tower, but the ple of the local banjar neighbor- ting, isn't it? hood (s) that are entrusted with the preparation of offerings and the carrying of the deceased to Necessary Correctives To such a society as Bali with the village cemetery. The fami- its traditional caste system and ly "controls" the dead in its a widening gap in the distribu- compound, as well as on the cre- tion of wealth, cremation also mation grounds before the fire provides necessary correctives, is alighted; but in the meanti- as shown below. generously provided for all the parrticipants. If not, the dead man is in for a bad journey to the cremation ground, as explai ned above. Thus, power is exer- cised, indeed, but money is also spent and chanelled back to fel- low villagers and the poor. This makes cremation the most effi- Therefore we may well have me, the body, which is deemed The cremation is undoubtedly as a mass of defiling matter, has the most important of all the ri- cient tool in redistributing mo- to cross the village on the shoul- tuals that run through the cycles ney in Bali, closing the econo- ders of fellow villagers, who of life and death. The more the mic gap and strenghtening bear the burden of "throwing a person's wealth and the higher bonds accross the line of social way" (ngutang) the "demonic" the status, the biggest and more division. body (buta), so as to allow the elaborate the ceremony, al- soul to tread the path toward though several factors have to to rephrase our cliches on feu- expected release. But, whatever be taken into account: the spe- dalism and tradition. Their resi- the religious connotation, it gi- cifications of sacred manus- lience in Bali allows a relatively ves the villagers the upper hand cripts (lontar), the directions of better distribution of wealth too of the dead body. They treat an affiliated brahmin's family than in many other developing it-or mistreat it-according to (paguruan), or just the expecta- societies. their mood and opinion of the tions of the locals. But, in any Hence, if and when you attend a dead and his/her family, parti- case, the event tends to be a big Balinese cremation, let your ca- cularly in relation to the way one. Princes' or brahmins' cre- mera rest for a while and think they fulfil their billage duties. mations sometimes involves up of this: not only are you witnes- Death and cremation are, thus, to hundreds of people for days sing a ritual for the release of and even months relatives, the soul, but also a practice of banjar (neighborhood) members social harmony. (Jean Couteau) U.S., Soviet Union Agreed To Extend Their Negotiation "The plan is more than a sta- tement of intent," said the offi- Soviet Need cial. "It shows a real commit- U.S. Treasury Secretary Nic- ment to reshaping things in the WASHINGTON- holas Brady told a. small group Soviet Union." (Reuter). of reporters on Friday that Gor- bachev wants the West to recog- nise the importance of the So- PLO Chief ders of the world's top indus- viet Union and the need to bring trial democracies before their e- it rapidly into the international Meets Saddam "The tenor of what's being as- conomic summit starting on economic fold. Monday. The Soviet Union has also as- ked for is he wants recognition BAGHDAD- ked for formal ties between the of the fact that the Soviet Union Soviet Union and the Interna tional Monetary Fund and rai- sed the possibility of Western contributions to a fund to help stabilise the Soviet currency. The letter also outlines reduc- tions made by the Soviet Union in its military spending, U.S. of ficials said. Japan and the U.S. are already looking at ways the West can help Moscow convert its arms factories to civilian u- ses. The senior U.S. official, who declined to be identified, des- letter as deftly and diematically worded but said it did not stand up to hard-nosed "What is meant by an "infu- sion of consumer goods' any. scrutiny. Palestine Liberation Organi- is an important country in its sation leader Yasser Arafat own right and shouldn't be as- has met Iraqi President Sad- ked to stand in line forever to dam Hussein for the first time hope for the G7 to recognise since the end of the Gulf War, that." the Iraqi News Agency (INA) In the run-up to the summit, said. the industrial democracies had form. Arafat, who strongly suppor stitched together a fragile con- ted Saddam against the U.S. sensus that the Soviet Union led allied coalition, expressed should be given advice and not hope during his last visit to money, at least until it can show it is serious about economic re- Baghdad in mid-February that he and Saddam would pray to- The Soviet Union would be of gether in Jerusalem after Iraq fered associate membership in emerged victorious in the war. the IMF that would allow it to INA said Arafat and Sad- draw on the Fund's economic dam, who met on Saturday expertise to plan reforms, wit- night, discussed the latest de hout being able to borrow from velopments in the Palestinian question and other Arab is- it. Gorbachev's letter is threate sues. (Reuter). economic summit of industriali- VOT Peasants Battle Flood In Eastern China rea. HUANGNITOU, China - means "yellow and mud head Rains lashed eastern China village", is in the northeast su- Secretary of State James Ba- sed nations is to be held. Bes- "We're making progress on "They came much more en- again on Sunday where mil- burbs of Wuxi in Jiangsu pro- ker and Soviet Foreign Minister smertnykh delayed his original all of the major issues that are thusiastic (in the afternoon) lions of peasants filled san- vince, one of China's most fer- Alexander Bessmertnykh on Sa departure for Moscow from Sa- outstanding and while we've not than they came from the mor- dbags to shore up the banks of tile areas. "Some of the best land in turday failed to conclude a stra- turday to Sunday. But those ti- come to closure yet, there's still ning session," the diplomat the mighty Yangtze river and tegic nuclear arms treaty during mes are now open. reason for encouragement," he said. "There is minor but stable protect outlying areas of China is flooded, that's the a third day of talks and agreed "The secretary and the minis- told Cable News Network's progress." Shanghai and Nanjing. tragedy," said the manager of to extend their negotiations for ter have delayed their original- "Newsmaker Saturday" prog- While it was possible the two The worst floods in a centu- a Wuxi toy factory that was a fourth day. ly scheduled departures from ramme. ministers might complete their ry threaten damage to the out- forced to close along with The two ministers, who were D.C. (District of Columbia). The two sides have discussed work at the weekend, U.S. offi- skirts of the two cities after most others in the city when due to leave Washington on Their departure times will be possible dates for a summit in cials have said the final deal devastating the countryside of floodtides raged through the a- Sunday, have delayed their de- determined tomorrow," Tutwi- Moscow but are waiting to com- might be left for Bush and So- Jiangsu and Anhui provinces. partures so they can continue ler said. viet leader Mikhail Gorbachev plete the treaty before making a Floods are receding in Wuxi, More than 1,300 people have their talks, State Department final decision, Scowcroft said. to close when they meet in Lon- been killed by the floods cau- although the danger is far ler said in a written statement Thursday, Baker and Bessmer during the talks: "We made a spokeswoman Margaret Tutwi- At the start of their talks on Later, he told reporters that don on July 17 for the economic sed by torrential rains that from over in the city of four summit of industrialised na- began unusually early in May million. Nearby lake Tai, Chi- after nine hours of meetings. tnykh had raised high expecta- (START) proposal. The Soviets tions. and have swept vast areas of na's third largest fresh-water "While it was a long day and tions that this would be the final have not accepted our proposal. The major remaining obstacle China from the northeast to lake, is slopping over its much was accomplished, not all round of negotiations and that But they have come a long way was "downloading," which in Sichuan province in the sout- banks, submerging causeways the issues have been resolved at they would complete their plan- towards it." volves removing warheads from hwest. this time," she said. ned two days of meetings on Fri- Both sides have made comple- land-based ballistic missiles In the village of Huangnitou, Tutwiler said the ministers day. tion of START a pre-condition and then counting the missiles would meet again at 9:30 a.m. But the marathon, intensive for a summit that could be held under treaty restrictions as ha- huge pumps rumbled through EDT (1330 GMT) on Sunday. talks apparently have been in Moscow within weeks. ving a new, lower number of the night to clear head-high Hundreds of residents were "In light of the ongoing di- tougher than expected. water and free 1,000 villagers A Soviet diplomat told Reu- weapons. mobilised to build a "New scussions, the ministers have in- Earlier, President Georg ters that after two earlier ses- Because downloaded missiles marooned since last week. structed their delegations not to Bush's National Security Advisions between the ministers on could be uploaded in a crisis, The earth shook as muddy Great Wall" along the banks brief the press at this time. The ser Brent Scowcroft said the ne- Saturday, the Soviet team was the United States has expressed water was sucked from the of the Grand Canal, which has ministers expect to meet the gotiators had made progress on more upbeat about prospects concern that liberal use of this streets and shot out in great been a major transport artery press tomorrow," she said. all major issues blocking the for finishing the pact before practice would allow the Soviets spumes through 12 powerful for 1,500 years. The waters are Baker was to leave on Sunday treaty but still had not produced Bessmertnykh returns to Mos- rapidly to break out of the trea- jets. subsiding, but are still at da- morning for London where the an agreement. cow from Washington. ty limits. (Reuter). Huangnitou, which literally nger levels. (Reuter). and roads. The cotton crop is soggy and and peach trees are badly da- maged in many areas. Color Rendition Chart 2cm
