Tipe: Koran
Tanggal: 1992-01-26
Halaman: 13
Konten
26. JANUARI 1992 eng r Bali Post/ist n drama "KURSI yang npasar, pada PSR Vill di Yang penting, katanya, bi- mil saja sudah lumayan pu- Sebuah pengakuan yang mpatik. si lain, dengan tampilnya di omba untuk pertama kali- Derti itu, Sanggar Topeng te- nunjukkan dan membukti- 192 buah "kerja" yang simpatik Dalam lomba, Sanggar To- memainkan naskah Kursi de- an 71- erincian pemain: Gunawan git ai Tuan Bandar), Diah Pro- a- (Nyonya Bandar), Daniel la as (Dokter Gantang), Basuki ya Cor), Balik Atmaja (Jongos 271 Maximinus (Pak Lurah), in h g oim (Hansip), Asih (Pur- Rudi Avlien (Saudagar dan Trisna (Pekerja). Ke- orang-orang di belakang a terdiri dari Silvia, Siswa, jah Verliastuti di bagian pe- musik dan lighting. Plus Jayendra sebagai pengasuh. ah Sanggar Topeng yang se- menggeliat. Semoga sanggar mjang umur. Semoga kita bisa at dan menantikan aktivitas bih lanjut. (Gus Martin). inggir sejak Loetoeng Kesaroeng 5), sebuah film pertama di In- sia yang dibuat oleh Heuvel- dan Kruger, sampai dengan Ong Rumpi (1991), seperti gulang ngulang kemuraman panjang. Tak pernah benar- r perfilman nasional kita (ke- dua tahun belakangan ini satu film kita sudah bisa unjuk gigi nia internasional) mempunyai cak keemasan yang bisa di- gakan sejarah. ini akan berlangsung terus, se- kesadaran untuk menjadi le- maik tak kita punyai. Kritik Film enyadari kondisi perfilman na- al yang memprihatinkan itu, ersambung ke Hal 11, kol 2) ma-kemari. Yang jelas, film merupakan produksi bersamá da NTT dan PT Romei Film dak bisa dibilang main-main. Bez akan marah jika nasib film rangkali dr. Hendrikus Fer- perti Nusa Penida. Khalayak Ota karang pun tunggu punya gu. Misalkan ada selentingan ar yang menyatakan masa pu- ertama adalah di Kupang pada mm Januari, kemudian diundur wal Februari. Apa betul? Yang ing adalah kejelasannya, bu- kesimpang-siurannya. Dengan lain, produser film harus ghargai keberanian Pemda romosi dalam gebyar-gebyar r perak. Pemain lokal saja mi- ya, tidak menuntut bayaran ji- memang dana tak tersisa. Inilah timewaan pemain lokal yang a mengabdikan diri sepenuhnya ak sebuah promosi. Sepanjang demi kepentingan rah, saya rela tidak dibayar," s Ida Saleh, pemeran pemban- alam MPDK di rumahnya. Ida pula kehilangan sebagian tunya untuk kerja di BTN Ku- ,ya, demi kepentingan dae- Masalahnya kini: penayangan. gan sampai nasib naas menim- IPDK. Jangan sampai film de- dana Rp 400 juta ini hanya ai-ramai di dalam poster bela- (Riyanto). NEWS MAKER Monica Seles Bali Post/Rtr She Eyes Grand Slam After, Winning Australian Open WORLD number one Monica Seles comfortably won her second Australian Open title on Saturday and made it clear she would play at Wimbledon this year in her quest for a 1992 Grand Slam. Seles, 18, picked up the fifth Grand Slam title of her short career with an seventh-seeded American Mary-Joe Fernandez 6-2, 6-3 in one hour 17 minutes. The Florida-based Yugoslav, who would probably have won all four titles in 1991 had she not missed Wimbledon, dismissed suggestions she might not play the tournament in 1992. "As soon as Wimbledon comes and I go, people are going to see that I really meant what I said," said Seles, wearing a floppy pink silk and lace bonnet and full-length country-style dress at her post-match press conference. "I will be going into Wimbledon with an open mind, I do feel I have a great chance, I am returning well but I think the key for me would have to be a great serve," Sales said. "I really would love to have the serve stronger... basically I still have a lot to improve everywhere." Seles withdrew from the British tournament last year suffering from shin splints, only to turn up at a lucrative American exhibition tournament soon afterwards. Her win in Melbourne earned her another 270,000 U.S. dollars, took her career earnings to 4.62 million U.S. dollars and showed again that only German number two Steffi Graf, who was a last-minute withdrawal through illness, can beat her on present form. (Reuter). Bali Post Rtr Deng Xiaoping (second right) and Deng Namchin Chinese Leader Deng Appears Sprightly CHINA'S ageing leader Deng Xiaoping, whose health is a constant topic of speculation, looked sprightly and energetic in photographs appearing in Hong Kong newspapers on Friday. In pictures taken by the Beijing-funded China News Service on January 21, Deng, 87, is seen waving and taking in the sights during a visit to the Shenzhen special economic zone in south China next to Hong Kong. Deng, who is standing, is flanked by his youngest daughter, Deng Nan, and a travel official in shots taken during a visit to a tourist park. The Oriental Daily News carried a picture of Deng and Deng Nan sitting in a golf cart during the same tour. "Deng Xiaoping is over 80 years old, but he walks with such a sturdy step, his health must be very good," an employee at Shenzhe's trade centre was quoted as saying in the Beijing-funded Wen Wei Po. The Beijing-backed Ta Kung Pao daily said: "Deng was ruddy faced, his walk was steady and his health good." Deng last appeared in public about a year ago attending a Lunar New Year party in Shanghai, and rumours about his health have regularly surfaced. "Deng may have some small illness normal with old people, but his health is pretty good. He still plays bridge sometimes," said Tsui Sze-man, a representative of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, a Beijing-controlled advisory body. SIMPANG TIGA Restaurant (Rtr). MINGGU, 26 JANUARI 1992 Bali Post English Corner Commonwealth Gives Wary Welcome To New Aid Deal Moscow- Members of the Commonwealth of Independent States welcomed a new aid deal from the West on Friday despite doubts whether the riht goods were being sent in the right way to tackle the crisis. Alexander Zhitnikov, deputy head of Russia's Commission for Coordinating Humanitarian Aid, questioned plans for a 61 million dollar U.S. airlift of food and medi- cined. "Of course we need aid urgently and of course we are very than- kful," told Reuters by telephone. "But the main thing is to begin the process straight away and to use other means of transportation as much as possible." The airlift, to start on February 10, was pledged at a two-day confe- rence in Washington which ended on Thursday on coordinating help to the former Soviet republices. The United States and other countries also promised new huma- nitarian aid and soft loans worth over two billion dollars. A spokesman for Ukraine, a ma- jor food producer within the Com- monwealth, indicated food aid was not its top priority. "We are very grateful for the U.S. aid," said Vladimir Chorny, head of the information departe- ment of the Ukrainian Foreign Mi- nistry. "But at the some time our greatest need is U.S. technology and U.S. expertise. Zhitnikov said an airlift would probably bring less than 10,000 tonnes of aid to each of the 31 re- gions of Russia where goods were in drastically short supply. Earlier this month, using stro- nger language, he had said the mil- lions of tonnes of aid required could only arrive by rail or road. "We need huge quantities of aid- we do not need 100 parcels sent by air and accompanied by 60 people, he said then. "Donors would do better to give us the money they spend on jet fuel and let us buy goods on world markets." The airlifted aid, to be flown in by U.S. military planes at a cost of five million dollars, will comprise supplies of food and medicines sur- plus to Pentagon stocks from the Gulf War. "It can vividly show the peoples of the former Soviet Union that those that once prepared for war with them now have the courage and the conviction to use their mili- taries to say. "We will wage a new peace," U.S. Secretary of State Ja- mes Baker said at theend of the conference. In addition, U.S. President George Bush has promised to ask Congress for a further 645 million dollars of aid, bringing the total U.S. aid contribution to over five billion dollars. South Korea pledged 800 million dollars and Thailand 450 million dollars in concessionary loans. O- man pledged 200 million dollars to help Azerbaijan develop its oi nnustry. The European Community has promised a huge aid package to prop up Russia's price reform plans and head off social unrest. Commonwealth officials have asked the West to pump in humani- tarian aid on an unprecedented scale. Russia has also asked for a multi- billion-dollar fund to stabilise the rouble and prepare the ground for it to become convertible. Further help is needed to over- come balance of payments prob- lems and help the country crawl out of the economic mire, Russian offi- cials say. But the conference, which dele- gates described as a useful first step in coordination a piecemeal inter- national aid effort, dealt with hu- manitarian issues than other plans. A follow-up conference in Lis- bon sponsored by the European Community is to be held in May. Japan has offered to host a third meeting. Frans Andriessen, the EC's ex- ternal affairs commissioner, said newffncing to plug a yawning ba- lance of payments gap would have to be broached when the donors meet in Lisbon. The main problems facing do- nors of foreign aid include asses- sing where aid should go and ensu- ring it reaches its destination. Commonwealth officials pled- ged to do their best to ensure sup- plies got through despite poor di- stribution networks and bureauc- ratic red tape. These Balinese women free themselves from being a mere object of paintings. Halaman 9 Jadua Bali Post/W. Sadha Where Are The Women Artists? "We express our gratitude to the U.S. for relief aid which we badly need," Igor Romanov, head of the object of numerous painters, who presidential press office in Ka- zakhstan, said by telephone. "We will do our best to guarantee the relief reaches the proper addres- ses." (Rtr). Salvadoran Congress Approves Amnesty For Leftists San Salvador- The Salvadoran congress on Thursday approved an amnesty al- lowing leftist rebel leaders to re- turn home on February 1 for the start of a formal ceasefire in the country's 12-year civil war. 0.0 The amnesty falls short of provi- ding a blanket pardon for war cri- minals, a measure the U.S. backed government had supported and The bill, which is to take effect eight days after its approval, was passed just a few hours after it was drawn up by a multi-party commis- sion during what ARENA party leader Armando Calderon Sol des- cribed as a difficult, last-minute meeting in Mexico. with peasant massacres and the rape-killing of American nuns in 1980, that shocked the nation and prompted an international outcry, "What we are about to sign isn't perfect, but it reflects the spirit of Chapultepec," Assembly Presi- dent Roberto Angulo, an ARENA stalwart, said in a speech shortly before the amnesty was passed. wanted extended even to army offi- leftist and right-wing lawmakers a- The amnesty was heralded by cers accused of some of El Salva- like as the first step toward formal at the United Nations, will be ex- dor's worst human rights abuses. But it was passed unaimously by the National Assembly, whichis controlled by President Alfredo Cristiani's right-wing Nationalist Republican Alliance (ARENA). The bill leaved it to a group of international figures, appointed by the United Nations and known as the Truth Commission, to investi- gate the worst human rights abuses during the war and determine what crimes should beexempt from par- I don. It also rules out any early release for two army officers imprisoned for the November 1989 killings of six Jesuit priests, their cook and her daughter. The execution-style murder of the Jesuits stands among the atroci- ties attributed to the army, along Let's Enjoy Jl. Kartini 24 Sumbawa Be- sar. Served East Java special food and receives ordering. Nasi Gabuli for Fridays only. KAWI RESTAURANT Jl. Imam Bonjol 253-20 Den- pasar-Bali Served: Fried Ri ce, Cap Cay, Fuyung Hay, Chicken Mie, Pak Lay, Ang Shio Hi, Chicken Pangsit Mie, Tio Cake, Udang Asam Manis, Swi Ke, Cah Shio. In- donesia foods: spesial from East Java Soto Ayam/ Daging, Pecel Lele (Lalap- an). Nasi Campur, Fried Chicken, Rujak Cingur, Fried/Roast Cuutle-Fish, Ga- do-gado, Tail Soup. Kayu Mas Food Centre Jalan Surapati 14 Denpasar Provides: Chicken Soup of Surabaya, Fried Chicken cí Semarang, Vegetable Salad of Malang, Fried Rice, Rice and side-dishes mixed, Su- lung Soup of Surabaya, Chicken Pangsit Mie. The First And Still Famous Iki Karaoke And Japanese Restaurant In Bali, Address: Jl. Kayangan Utama, Kuta Telp. 53186, 53187. Ball Post/Ist TIARA DEWATA SUPERMARKE I TIARA DEWATA A DEPT STORE TRAGIA Restaurant, Nusa Dua Shopping Centre Served Indonesian, Chine- DEPT. STORE THE ONLY PLACE se, European and Fresh Sea- Activities food. Capasity 125 seats full AC. Daily open: 8.30 a.m. Supermarket; Dept. Store; fas- 22.00 p.m. for Breakfast, hion, beauty cosmetic & acceso- Lunch and Dinner with Bali- ries, sport wear & tools, Statio- nese Dance everynight. nery; Book Store: Shoes Play Tragia serves you the best. ground, swimming pool. Food Centre serves more than hun- dred kind of foods. International Direct Dial (IDD). Open: 09.00-22.00 Saturday Night & Nationaldays/ holidays 'eve close at 22.30. DEPOT RAMA Jln. Veteran 55 Denpasar. Specially served: Fried Chic- ken of Jakarta, Pingpong Chinese Meat-Balls, Rum- psteak of sea fish. Also ser- ved: Cantonese Food, Orien- tal Baked Rice, Cap Cay, Fried Noodle Dish, and many kind of special drinks, such as Milk of Soybean Essence, Es Teler Maju 57. Depot Ra ma gives you foods and drinks with high taste. We grant you will surely be satis- fied, Let's try and enjoy. Open Singapore Restaurant Jl. Diponegoro 98 Kertha Wijaya A-8-9, Denpasar 07.30 a.m. 15.00 p.m. 17.00 p.m. 22.00 p.m. Provides: Fried Chicken, Rosed Chicken, Soto Madu- ra, Chicken Soto, Tail Soup, Pecel Tempe, Lalapan Ikan Goreng, Fried Rice with Shrimp, Fried Mie, Rosed Fish, Bubur Ayam. pusat perllarsen the me Dewata Ayu DEWATA AYU Shoping Centre It is presenting a new mo- dern fashion and rich in sop- histicated mode. We prepare all the things that you need for your everyday life and they would be offered in good prices. Remember that we also have a very specific food and it would be prepa- red in our food corner. We are located in Sudirman Street 20 Denpasar. RUMAH MAKAN PADANG MURAH MERIAH Not Just The Name But Also The Reality Now the 10 Th. Branch at Jl. Ngurah Rai, Nu- sa Dua Phone 71122 location service, and Quality are the Best with Reasonable Prices. MAWAR Restaurant Served: Chinese, Sea foods, and East Java special foods. Meals at minimum cost Rp 750,00 per perseon. Also ser- ved box meals/cakes for wedding/birthday party, re- ception and tour group. implementation of the peace ac- cords the government sighned with leaders of the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN) rebels last week at Cha- pultepec Castle in Mexico City. And in a country named for Christ the Saviour, several also ce- lebrated the fact that it offered par- don and forgiveness for foot soldi- It stipulates that anyone found quilty of offences committed after December 31, 1991, when the pea- ce accords were finally concluded cluded from the amnesty, along with anyone linked to the exempt cases identified by the Truth Com- mission. If the ARENA-controlled legis- lature votes against the commis- sion's findings, crimes such as the killing of Salvadoran Archbishop Oscar Arnulfo Romero 12 years ago could be excluded from prose- cution. ers on both sides of El Salvador,s With approval of the amnesty, brutal civil war. rebel sources said the entire high command of the FMLN was expec- ted to return to El Salvador on Fe- bruary 1 for the start of the cease- fire. (Reuter). "It's a first great step toward our national reconciliation," said a lawmaker for the centre-left De- mocratic Convergence party. BEAUTIFUL women, wrapped galleries and museums. up in sarongs, balancing the co- lourful towers of offerings on their heads or dancing gracefully in bright costumes, are very often the depict the exotic beauty of Bali, connecting the attractive image of the female Balinese with the soft and luxuriant vegetation of that is- land's landscap thus adding to the cliche. That women play an im- portant part inthe arts of Bali as a subject matter of painting, but don't seem to reverse the role be- coming active artists by themsel- ves, is the impression you could easily get wondering through the Where are the women artists, wondered Mary Northmore, a teacher of English origin, actively interested in arts and married to the famous Indonesian artist Ab- dul Aziz? Discussing the disturbing question with friends, among them women painters, whose aclieve- ments had been largely ignored by the public until then, she felt the urgent need to create a platform for representing the work of female artists, which led to the foundation of the "Organisation of Women Ar- tists on Bali" in summer 1991. The first exhibition "Pameran Seni Ru- Burmese Moslem Refugees Flood In To Bangladesh Chittagong, Bangladesh ses of a peace effort. Nearly 5,000 Burmese Moslems "We have reports that Rangoon have streamed into Bangladesh in is keeping up its military prepara- the past three days, joining at least tions along the border although 60,000 other refugees, as Rangoon they have accepted our proposals deployed more troops on the ense for a border meeting on January border between the two, military 28," one source told Reuters. sources said on Friday. pa 10 Seniwati di Bali" In Ubud last now living on Bali; her paintings September turned out to be a suc- showing expressive, masklike faces cess and found encouraging res- in non-naturalistic colours. Many ponse, proving the women's art to of the women artists of course fo- be equally interesting as that of cus on topics of importance espe- their male colleagues. In order to cially to women, such as the rela- strenghten that first sign of life, tionship between mother and Mary Northmore established the child, demonstrated among others Seniwati Gallery of Art as the first by the moving pictures of Čokorde place dedicated solely to the work Mas Astiti, which develop a quiet, of female artists. Abdul Aziz' for- yet intense atmosphere with their mer house and studio in Ubud was shades of blue and mauve and their chosen as a suitable site full of artis- calm, simple lines. And a number tic atmosphere and tradition, and of paintings refer to the art of eve- since December 1991 you can visit ryday life of the Balinese women; the light rooms in Jalan Sriwedari constantly withering, but skilfully brightened by colourful paintings produced; the offerings. and drawings in different styles and techniques. As a representative of the famous Wayang style of Ka- masan, using not only the traditio- nal colours, produced from special stones and plants in a time consu- ming process, but also using the scenes of the ancient epics Mahab- harata and Ramayana as models, you will find Ni Made Suciarmi, as skilful artist. By making their traditional work a topic of the art, created by them- selves, the women gain selfcon- sciousness and pride and free themselves from being a mere es- thetical object for women artists through the existence of that galle- ry can not be overestimated, as the foundation is not only a shop win- dow of female art, but a centre of exchange, information and con- tact. Connections to everseas insti- Batuan Style tutions are established, further ex- Another well-established style hibitions in Jakarta and Australia are planned, workshops for intro- of Balinese painting, the one of Batuan, is represented by Gusti ducing techniques as wood carving Ayu Natih Arimini, painting lively and etching will take place. The pictures full of charming details Seniwati Gallery defines itsellf as and enchanting stories. Sri Sup- an ongoing development, collec- riyatini too has gained recognition ting and promoting the work of ar- for her very different style of dark tists, widely ranging in experience, glooming paintings, which are ric- background, education, and style hly structured and have a rough, of painting, but sharing one charac- our homes, taking our sons to la- bels fighting for an independent you to explore the texture with Burma believes the Rohingya re- almost relieflike surface tempting teristic: they all are women. bour camps and torturing women, homeland in Arakan get most of refugee Abdul Barek told repor- their support from Burmese refu- your fingertips. ters in southeastern Bangladesh. Military sources in Chittagong gees in Bangladesh. (Reuter). on Thursday said Burma was bri- nging in more troops and building new military positions near the border, despite Rangoon's promi- from Burma's western Arakan sta- The said the Moslem refugees te, called Rohingyas, fled across the border, saying Burmese soldi- Relations between Dhaka and Rangoon worsened last April when thousands of Rohingyas started fleeing into Bangladesh to escape alleged persecution in Arakan, the ers had burned their homes and only Moslem-majority state in arrested thousands of young men. mainly Budhhist Burma. "Thet are still driving us from One of the surrealistic artists is Yannar Ernawati, Java-born, but The gallery is open from 10-1 and 2-5, every day except Monday and Friday. HOTEL'S ACTIVITIES VIA Fear, Hunger For Thousands ANUARY 19-24. 1992 In Besieged Sudan Town Juba, Sudan- of the Sudan People's Liberation Thousands of terrified, hungry Army (SPLA) and the government civilians have crowded into the in Khartoum is closing in on them. government-held southern Suda- Living conditions are appalling. nese capital of Juba, besieged by In a four-roomed building that on- rebels who have emerged from the ce served as a school, 300 people jungle to bombard the outskirts have found shelter. Many others with artillery. sleep outside. The United Nations is currently flying in 1,400 tonnes of food aid from Uganda, but the supplies are sufficient for only a few weeks. plies, the refugees here were at the point of complete starvation," said one relief official. "Until we began bringing in sup- The U.N. had to win permission from both sides to mount the mercy airlift, part of its Lifeline Sudan relief operation started in 1989 to bring relief to the south. Rebels have apparently moved The SPLA, which is fighting to within a few km (miles) of the what it sees as domination by the town's southern side. Their shells Arabised Moslem north over the have killed about 100 people and mainly Christian, black south now wounded scores in the past two controls most of the vast region of months. the vast region of southern Sudan. Kampala-based relief officials "The shelling is indiscriminate, Juba, 1,200 km (750 miles) south complain that both rebels and go- it's not directed at military tar- of Khartoum, is the biggest prize. vernment care more about fighting gets," a relief official told a Reuter Despite a split last August between the war than the welfare of civi- correspondent who visted the dere- two factions if the SPLA, led by lians, hundreds of thousands of lict town of Friday. John Garang, anew campaign a- whom have died in famine since the Juba's population of 90,000 po- gainst Juba has been mounted with war began in 1983. pulation has been trebled by refu- the onset of the the dry season. Some analysts say that the army gees from the countryside since the Once-bustling markets have has forced civilians to remain in town first came under siege in been deserted. Many residents Juba to to discourage rebels from 1988. subsist on lily harvested from the launchig a major offensive. Now the civil war, nearly nine River Nile and cooked into a foul years old, between southern rebels purple porridge. (Reuter). THE ONLY ONE I' CHOOSE PM 8 FKC PINGUIN 103 FM STEREO JL. Jend. Gatot Soebroto I/I phone: (0361) 25509 Denpasar - Bali The 10Th Annual Meeting Of INCLEN (Dr. Harry Hill) Bali Hilton International was the venue for the tenth annual meeting of the International Clinical Epidemiology Network (INCLEN). The meeting was officiated by HE Mr Adhyatma, the Minister of Public Health in a ceremony which was held in the Grand Ballroom of the hotel. In the picture, HE Mr Adhyatma striking the gong to mark the opening of the meeting. Listen To The Leader..... ONE "O" FIVE FM STEREO CASS fm 105 tereo PM 8 FKB The Best Radio Station In Town PT RADIO CASSANOVA JL. VETERAN 4 DENPASAR - BALI-INDONESIA : (0361) 25814-33020-24229-22782 BK.10 Color Rendition Chart 2cm 4cm
