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Nama: Bali Post
Tipe: Koran
Tanggal: 1992-02-09
Halaman: 09

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GU, 9 FEBRUARI 1992 NEWS MAKER MINGGU, 9 FEBRUARI 1992 Bali Post English Corner Halaman 9 istini Bali Post/Bb. erjerat abella. Pengalaman yang di- ehnya selama terlibat dalam⚫ produksi beberapa judul u membuat dirinya merasa ekaligus tertantang. "Saya i- elajar akting lebih jauh. Saya maju, kalau mungkin dalam I dekat mungkin saya akan ," ujar dara yang pernah marai Rally Mazda '90 ini. ng lebih menunjukkan kese- pada apa yang dipilihnya, gkap dari ketegasan Sadewi ini ketika mengucapkan kali- mi: "Saya telah merasa klop n apa yang saya jalani. Ia bi- menuhi tuntutan saya. Walau sadar, sebe- juga a masa depan saya tak jelas," wa. angkali hanya ketegarannya- ng membuat ia tetap sanggup an. Empat tahun, tempo ak singkat, telah ia lalui de- ketidak-pastian. Namun Sa- mengaku tak merasa gentar. palagi melakukan kegiatan khas yang merupakan musik al kita. Dimanakah mereka bisa banyak mendengar dan ksikan musik keroncong itu, media massa seperti kaset, ra- an televisi jarang menampil- ara siaran atau tayangan mu- roncong ? Baik kaset, radio, i maupun beberapa pentas mya lebih malah terlalu ba- menyajikan hiburan musik ersambung ke Hal 11, kol 4) at Bali" berbagai kegiatan. Padahal ngaku tak mau sekolahnya "Saya berusaha membuat nya seiring. Studi dan karier an lancar," ujarnya. ngkin yang diucapkannya be- ari hasil jual suara, Ike Nur- tak perlu lagi minta biaya h pada orang tua. Bukan ha- , dan ini yg membuat tem- -ayanya iri, sekarang Ike te- nya mobil, sebidang tanah, pisito. jadi nama Ike semakin umbung. Dalam Biru Putih u, album terbarunya, Ike awakan lagu dangdut yang im. Di sana suara Ike ditim- ama dangdut dengan sentuh- sik Bali. Bisa jadi, semakin yang iri. (Bb). upang ang ini jelas identik dengan maan. Festival lagu-lagu saja muncul, yang bagi calon pe- merupakan tekanan berat. mun tunggu dulu. Sembari jutkan sekolah di Akademi sata Surabaya, lulusan Seko- ariwisata Kupang ini bakal i nyanyi. ahlah, bakat tak mungkin di- tkan begitu saja. Namun ke- in melupakan kampung hala- n Endang nanti, bukan kare- wa di Alor. Malahan peng- Andi Meriem Matalata ini at selalu. Ya, Alor yang be- ma ini diguncang gempa bu- ngakibatkan tiga dari empat milik ortunya, ambruk. memang. (Riyanto Rabbah). ng. Bali Post/Riyanto Omar Henry Bali Post/Reuter A Quality Left Arm Spinner THE first South African criket team to visit Australia for 29 years arrived in Perth on Friday to warm welcome from officials, compatriots and demonstrators alike. The 19-man party for this month's fifth World Cup were met by Australian cricket officials and a group of expatriate South Africans as well as a 30-strong group supporting the African National Congress (ANC) who chanted: "Criket yes, apartheid no." Glen Mashinini, one of the demonstrators, told reporters; "This is a rally of support, not a demonstration." Captain Kepler Wessels, who played test cricket for Australian in the early 1980s, added: "It is tremendous to be back. We could surprise a few people." The party includes two black players in their early 20s, brought along for the experience but not expected to make the final 14-man World Cup squad. They are Yassin Begg, a black wicket-keeper, and Faiek Davids, a Cape coloured all-rounder. Omar Henry, 40 was described by Wessels as a quality letf-arm spinner. "He's a handylate order bat and useful in the field. He is a very experienced player,' Wessels said. Wessels replaced Clive Rice, surprisingly dropped after leading the trip to India, as captain and said. as he defflected questions on Rice's omission, that it was a challenge. (Rtr). Barbara Mills Bali Post/Reuter Woman Dubbed "Super Sleuth" BRITAIN on Thursday named a woman -- dubbed "super sleuth" in the press because of her present job to be its chief state prosecutor for the first time. Barbara Mills, 51, takes over as Director of Public Prosecution from Sir Allan Green, who resigned amid scandal last October after police said they saw him approaching prostitutes in a London red light area. The Director of Public Prosecutions has overall supervision of all cases brought in England and Wales. Mills is head of the Serious Fraud Office, a state prosecuting agency dealing with corporate crimes where she took charge in 1990. Britain recently appointed its first female spy chief, Stella Riming- ton, who is to take charge of the M15 internal security service on February 25. The two appointments mark new erosions of traditional male dominance in the civil bureaucracy. Mills, a leading lawyer, has exercised sweeping powers at the Serious Fraud Office and it was her work there that earned her the title "super sleuth" in the tablid press. She said once that her job was to show "there is no fraud too big or too costly to be dealt with by the criminal system". Mills is married and has four children. (Reuter). Habash Enraged By French Detention PALESTINIAN leader George Habash was so furious at being held by police during his stay in a Paris hospital that he pulled medical monitoring wires off his chest, a senior aide said in an interview published on Friday. Foud Abu Ahmad, a senior member of Habash's Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), told the Frenk daily le Figaro that Habash's health suffered badly from the furore over his admission to France but was now improving. "He is better now but the aggressive attitude of the French security services has a severe effect on his health and he needs more rest," Ahmad said. "Dr Habash was so angry he pulled off the instruments stuck to his chest. All that was very bad for him." Habash's three-day stay in France last week was a major embarrassment to President Francois Mitterrand and his government and cost five senior civil servants their jobs. Frustrated by in-fighting within the Palestinian independence movement, Habash pioneered acts of guerrilla violence against Israeli targets outside the Middle East, including a series of plane hijacks in the 1970s. He was said to be suffering from a stroke when he was flown to Paris from Tunis by the French Red Cross After news of his presence broke, he was placed under police custody in his hospital room for 24 hours before being hundled out of the country. Ahmad said between seven and 10 French security officers had rummaged through his belongings, briefly confiscating documents and trying to force a lock. (Reuter). At Least Nine Killed In Challenge To New Rulers Algiers - At least nine people have been killed and 74 wounded in Algeria since Moslem fundamentalist took their campaingn against the country's new military-backed rulers onto the streets after weekly prayers on Friday. Algiers Radio and the Algerian news agency APS said troublespots across the country seemed calm by Saturday. It was the most wides- pread violence since riots last June. The clashes between militants and the security forces shook Alge- ria's main cities. Troops fired auto- matic weapons and demonstrators set up barricades of burning tyres and rubbish. A burst of gunfire rang out in the capital before dawn on Saturday, apparently ending a bout of street fighting seen by some local com- mentators as a bid by the Islamic Salvation Front (FIS) to start a ge- neral insurrection. The FIS, deprived of almost cer- tain victory through the ballot box last month, disputes the legitimacy of the ruling High Council of State set up after elections were cancel- led. The front wants the electoral process to resume. The Algiers press interpreted Friday's protests, which defied a ban on demonstrations, as a coor- dinated attempt by the FIS to loo- sen the council's grip on power. "This bloody Friday will no der the headline "Attempted In- surrection". organ of the former ruling National Liberation Front (FLN) party, said, "This Friday, the FIS earned the name Front of Fitna (civil stri- fe)." Deaath Toll But Algiers radio said late on Friday the death toll in the city could be as high as seven. Hospital staff were summoned to Algiers hospitals to help emergency units, it added. "It seems strangs they would call instaff just for two dead and that number of wounded," said one di- plomat who knew of at least two dead in Algiers. Others were killed in the towns of Medea, Khenchela, El Eulma and Batna, a mountain town in the southest where at least 12 people were killed and 66 wounded in run- ning battles between Tuesday and Thursday. Mohamed Benchicou wrote in Le Matin that the FIS had "opted to destabilise the authorities and set the country ablaze". Another commentator said, FIS leaders used mosques, no- have been arrested and some have been jailed. It was the trial of i- mams which sparked the unrest in Batna and in nearby Constantine this week. A Western diplomat who hs fol- lowed the unrest said the fighting on Friday affected all but two of Algeria's largest towns -- Blida and Skikda. "It looks like they were trying to return to te "FIS fortress" days of last June," he said. Demanding Islamic State Last June, FIS militants came out on the streets to demand an Islamic state. Fifty-five people we- re killed in the fighting with securi- ty forces which followed. President Chadli Benjedid, who resigned in January, responded by declaring a state of siege, calling in the army and imposing curfews. The High Council of State, which had ried to prevent unrest on Friday by deploying hundreds of troops, riot police and paramilitary gendarmes around mosques which are FIS bastions, has not commen- ted on the violence. France's Interior Ministry said TH ANGKUTAN BURUH. C.V. DEMEN AJUM BIAR GANDUL YANG PENTING SAMPAIDI PEROYEK There is an inflow of trucks full of non-indigenous coolies going to the construction sites of Bali. PEROYEK BUKIT BALI Bali Post/W. Sadha New Trends In Balinese Labor Market than you spend in a day, in that paradise of yours. ployment. There are few jobs out- side the handicraft and tourism sec- tors, and "bachelors in arts and science" flock to the city while une- village entrepreneurs. ducated craftsmen are turning into Inflow of Coolie Labor The consequence is an inflow of non-indigenous coolie labor. Bali finds itself, for the first time, with one of the scourges of underdeve- lopment: a migrant, homeless un- Many of these workers came to Ba- li lured by its reputation as an is- land of riches, with jobs all over the place. Others came "booked" by a "mandor" or labor contractor, so- AIR-CONDITIONED comfor- table, with a driver and a guide, the taxi cruises along the large road, Bali's job market is changing at a the so-called by-pass, the road to rapid pace, and become mobile the rice-terraces, the barong dance and sophisticated. Areas which we- and the artshops. In other words, re, until recently basically agricul- your road to Paradise. You stop, tural and sociologically very stable, While the "home industries" derclass. take some pictures, and carry on, are now experiencing such a tre- creates jobs in Balinese villages, smiling. But, unnoticed by you, mendous growth that there is a they do not provides the skills, or "The FIS, after losing the battle of one member of the council, Tedjini there is another flow, at roughly shortage of specialized labor: this "the availability" needed by the ot- doubt very rapidly put the question the mosques, is trying to win back Haddam, was to resign of dissolving the FIS on the agen- the steets. The ministry said Haddam, rec- opposite drection. These are not area. the same pace, that comes in the applies in particular to the Gianyar her booming industry of the island: da," Le Matin newspaper said un- tor of the Paris Mosque, would step taxis, but trucks. They stop, too, Silversmiths from Central Java are cal Balinese, who live harmonious- me of whom operate as far as Wes- the construction industry. The lo- tably at Friday prayers, to recruit downfollowing complaints the two but for different reasons. All along now working in the silver shops of ly on the whole, in big and often tern Java. All suffer the same inse- militants and spread their call for posts were incompatible. the road, there are young men with Celuk and Ubud, producing "typi- pretty compounds laid in smoothly curity in their jobs. Once the con- "There must have been some ge- an Islamic state. The new rulers, in APS later quoted Algeria's am- spades, waiting for them to come. an attempt to clip the wings, have bassador to France, Smil Hamda- A small sign, and the driver under- lack of ready hands, agricultural are not ready to compete with the fore, it is over with their construc- cal Balinese silver", while, due to a organised neighborhoods (banjar) struction is finished, and often be- banned political sermons and gat- ni, as saying Haddam would return stands and brakes. He has barely workers are imported from villages landless poor coming from the o- tion jobs. And it is not easy to find to Algeria on Saturday to clarify come to a complete halt before of the Northern part of the island. verpopulated areas of Java and new ones indeed, as new "man- the situation. (Reuter). they have jumped into the back of Such a movement of labor was un- Lombok. It is good policy indeed, dors" keep arriving, with other the truck. After a few more stops, thought of just a few years ago. for the construction companies, to groups of workers. Some laid-off the truck is full, with its cargo of There was a time, not too long ago, dig into the bottomless pool of la- workers take up odd jobs, while men. Who are these men? They are when the job opportunities, rare as bor from outside the island: being other go back home, to their villa- not tourists, like you, but coolies. they were, existed mostly in the poorer, it is cheaper: 3000 to 4000 ges of Java and Lombok, with the As you go to paradise, they are plantations of the central part of rupiahs a day for a coolie. The Bali- few hundred dollars they saved going elsewhere: the construction Bali. The economic boom and new, nese, well-protected and relatively from their stay in Bali. sites of Bali -- Nusa Dua, Jimbaran job opportunities offered by the "prosperous", are too demanding, Labor mobility, thus, is changing "home industries" today are not and, thus, put themselves automa- the social and ethnic face of Bali. sufficient, though, to offset unem- tically out of the market. Wayan Kemoning neral call gone out for action (by FIS militants) yesterday," added on foreign diplomat. The newspaper El Moudjahid, Fears Of Fresh Violance Johannesburg- A prominent official of the Zulu- bassed Inkatha Freedom Party (has been assassinated, triggering fears of a fresh wave of violence in Natal province township police said on Saturday. Eyewitnesses said police reinfor- cements were being sent to Umlazi township, near Durban, to cool tempers after Winnington Sabelo, a regional Inkatha leader and Kwa- zulu homeland member of parlia- ment, was gunned down in his shop on Friday night. Sabelo was killed just two days after he and a local official of Nel- son Mandela's African National Congress made a joint appeal for calm following the death of eight people last week in clashes bet- ween their supporters in Umlazi. Nineteen others were killed in neighbouring townships. At least 91 people were reported to have died last month in Natal unrest. "Tension are running high here. People are forming groups. Anyt- hing can happen anytime," an eye- witness told Reuters by telephone. Police spokesman Henry Bud- hram said Sabelo, one of the most prominent Inkatha colleagues of Zulu leader Mangosuthu Buthelezi to be murdered in months, was working in his shop when a man approached him and asked to buy cigarettes. "After he has been served, the man suddenly pulled out a firear- mand shot Mr Sabelo three times before fleeing on foot," Budhram said. The Natal strifle, which has clai- med more than 5,000 lives since 1987, and similar fighting around Johannesburg in which 4,000 peo- ple have died, pose the biggest threat toSouth Africa's shift from apartheid to democracy. Battles with rifles, homemade pistols, handrenades and cane- cutting knives have erupted despite a peace past signed by the gover- nment, the ANC and Inkatha last September. (Reuter). Sihanouk Postpones Trip To China, North Korea Phnom Penh the provisional national council There have been three gun at- Cambodian head of state Prince which brings together the gover- tacks against political figures in the Norodom Sihanouk postponed a nment and three factions who capital in the past four weeks trip to China and North Korea fought to oust it until a peace ac- Last month, a former KPNLF planned for later this month after cord was signed under U.N. auspi- supporter who switched to Phnom diplomats urged him to remain in ces in October. Penh in 1988, Tea Bunlong, was the politically-restive capital, offi- The former king has been recog- abducted and shot dead and his bo- cials said on Saturday. nised by all as head of state and is dy dumped at a picnic spot outside Meanwhile a curfew imposed on seen as having a crucial role in hol- the capital. His killers have not Phnom Penh since bloody riots in ding the complicated peace formu- been found. December was lifted from Friday la together. night-- a popular decision judging -by the crowds who headed to the city's night spots. Sihanouk's plans to go to Beijing for medical checks then on to Pyo- ngyang to celebrate the birthday of his old friend and host President Kim Il-sung caused concern among the Cambodian political factions On January 28, former transport "Prince Sihanouk will combine miniter Ung Phan, recently relea- both visits to China and North Ko- sed from 17 months in detention rea in April," said Ataul Karim, for trying to set up new political civilian head of the United Nations party, was fired on by unknown Advance Mission in Cambodia. assailants who wounded him three "He'll be in Phnom Penh for the times. entire month of March." The head The National Assembly on Ja- of the U.N. Iransitional Authority nuary 30 hastily passed tough new in Cambodia, Yashushi Akashi of anti-terrorism laws to counter the and the diplomatic community in Japan, and the international peace- renegade attacks. Phnom Penh. keeping force's military comman- People convicted of conspiring der, Australian General John San- to kindap and murder now face life Diplomats said his absence derson, are expected to arrive in imprisonment under the new laws. would leave a leadership vacuum which, combined with recent secu- rity problemes in the capital, could lead to a bout of renewed political unrest. Phnom Penh in March. The city authorities saw the si- "The people...... need the prin- tuation as having improved suffi- them," said leng Mouly, a senior after anti-corruption riots on De- ce here and he has listened to ciently to lift the curfew imposed official in the Khmer Peoples Na- cember 21 in which at least five "The SNC (Supreme National tional Liberation Front (KPNLF), people were killed. Council) would be like a headless one of the guerrilla factions. chicken without "Snooky here," one diplomat told Reuters, refer- ring to the prince by one his nickna- mes. A letter from mayor Hok Lundi to the garrison commander said: Some Difficulties "If there is new instability, the cur- There's been some difficul- few will be imposed again. ties in maintaining law and order Restaurants, shops and the capi- Sihanouk returned to Phnom and if this continues and the people tal's booming enter tainment in- Penh in November after 13 years as know the prince is leaving then the dustry were hard hit by the curfew. a guerrilla leader-in-exile to head people will be concerned." (Reuter). herings outside mosques. At least 42 imams (preachers) U.S., Mexico, Canada To Resolve Free Trade Disputes Chantilly, Virginia - Trade ministers from Mexico, the United States and Canada will make fresh efforts to resolve ob- stacles blocking a proposed North American free trade zone at two days of talks opening on Sunday. A year of discussions has resol- ved no major issues but negotiators are hoping to reach agreement this year, a senior U.S. official said. "Our hope is to achieve a lot of significant U.S. industries to Mexico to take advantage of low wages. If Democratic Party candidates are seen to win votes by attacking the proposed pact, the Republican Party administration might put the talksonhold, political analysts say. But the official said the timing of an agreement was being dictated not by politics but by the time the U.S. Congress needs to consider it before adjourning next October. and measurable "It is the calendar that works a- progress," to be followed by preli- minary agreements at talks in Dal- las, Texas, the U.S. official said. The aim is to fold a free trade pact with Mexico into a similar ac- cord with Canada to form a North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) from the Yukon to the Yucatan. The official said the negotiations taking place in a U.S. election year -- would not be driver by poli- tics. Some U.S. congressmen and tra- de unions argue that a free trade agreement with Mexico could add to U.S. unemployment by luring gainst us rather than the political situation," he said. Delegations at the meeting, in a conference centre in Chantilly, near Washington, will be headed by U.S. Trade Representative Car- la Hills, Mexican Commerce Sec- retary Jaime Serra Puche and Ca- nadian Trade Minister Michael Wilson. They last met in Zacatecas, Me- xico, last October. Cars, and the amount of North American parts and labour they must contain to qualify for duty- free treatment, are one of the most contentious areas. (Reuter). Bali Post/Rtr and Kuta -- where they will earn in a month, or possibly a year, less France, Russia Sign Landmark Treaty Paris - France and Russia pledged in a landmark treaty on Friday to hold their nuclear arsenals to a "minimum sufficiency", consult on crises and work for a European se- curity treaty. Presidents Francois Mitterrand and Boris Yeltsin signed the ac- cord, the first between the Russian Federation and a Western county since the collapse of the Soviet U- nion last year, on the last day of the Russian leader's state visit to Paris. The 26-article treaty called for annual meetings of the French and Russian presidents, enshrined pledges of economic cooperation fighting the spread of weapons of mass destruction, it said France and Russia "agree on the need to act so that armaments, in particular nuclear weapons, are held to a le- vel of minimum sufficiency." "The two parties will cooperate with a view to the conclusion of a European security treaty," it said. Diplomats said this reflected a French drive to give legal force to the European Security and Coo- peration accords, an idea viewed with scepticism by some other Western states. Consultation The text, which supersedes a Franco-Soviet treaty signed by for- mer Soviet president Mikhail Gor- bachev in Rambouillet in 1990, and commited the two countries to prevent new divisions in an increa- singly "confederal" Europe. Stressing a joint commitment to committed the two countries to consult on crises that threatened said. "You've lost quite a lot of international stability, and possibly time." act together. France pledged to promote clo- ser ties between Russia and the Eu- ropean Community to ease its in- tegration into the European econo- my. It also promised help and trai- ning for Russia's transition to a market economy and pledged to work for full Russian membership of international financial institu- tions. On the eve of the signing cere- mony, Yeltsin rounded on a select group of French industrialists, ac- using them of hesitating to invest in his new democratic Russia. Itali- an businessmen, he told them, had been much moe active. Although Russia was in the midst of a painful transition that made it hard to do business, he said the economy would stabilise by the end of the year and would offer lucrative opportunities for firms bold enough to take a risk. "You'll never get to drink cham- pagne if you don't take risks," Yel- tsin said. The Russian leader raised the spectre of a new dictatorship if ur- gent help was not forthcoming to underpin his reforms. "If our reforms fail, then I tell you we can feel the breath of the brown shirst and red shirts on the back of our necks," he said, refer- ring to the possibility of a fascist or "You are too circumspect," he communist backlash. (Reuter). Seventy-eight In Philippine Presidential Race Manila- Seventy-eight candidates have signed up to contest the Philippine presidential elections, including a former crocodile hunter, a graft- busting ex-judge and the world's best-known shopper. Politicians launched a three- month election campaign on Satur- day, with leading contenders fan- ning out across the country of 62 million people to win support in a battle that could be one of the most wild and closely-fought in Philip- pine history. Candidates were busy register- ing with the Commission on Elec- tions (Comelec) right up to the midnight deadline on Friday, with former first lady Imelda Marcos leading a torchlight procession to Comelec headquarters in Manila's old walled Spanish city of Intramu- ros. ELECTION-Former Philippine solicitior general Frank Chavez who is running for senator in the May elections accepts comedienne Fe de los Reyes's (L) invitation to dance on stage during a light moment of the nearby church, the flamboyant 62- After praying on her knees at a proclamation rally for pro-administration candidates in Manila February year-old widow of ousted dictator 7. THE ONLY ONE I' CHOOSE PM 8 FKC PINGUIN 103 FM STEREO JL. Jend. Gatot Soebroto I/I phone: (0361) 25509 Denpasar - Bali B49 leads the mainstrem LDP party. Ferdinand Marcos led the proces- mos, the cigar-chewing general and one-time crocodile hunter who sion of around 300 loyalists car- who kept her in power through six rying flaming bamboo torches coup attempts. Others in the race are business Mercos, the world's best-known "If not for Eddie Ramos, our tycoonaadd Aquino's estranged shopper who left behind a collec- democracy would have ended right cousin Eduardo Cojuangco, Vice tion of 1,200 designer shoes when in he first coup attempt in 1986," President Salvador Laurel, former she was hounded into exile in 1986, Aquino told some 8,000 cheering Senate pesident Jovito Salonga,for isthe most famous in a line-up of delegates of the Strength of the mer cabinet minister and graft- long-time politicians, a former ge- People party which proclaimed Ra- busting judge Miriam Santiago, neral and a popular film actor. mos as its candidate on Friday. and movie actor-turned senator Jo- Comelec officials said 78 candi- "Thanks to the valiant efforts of seph Estrada. dates had registered to contest the Cory Aquino, we have institutio- As well as a new president and May 11 presidential polls, 18 for nalised our democracy and out Congress, the Philippines will elect the vice-presidential slot, and 286 people now enjoy the fruits of free- more than 17,000 local officials in were lined up to fight for 24 Senate dom. But the taks remains unfinis- the May 11 voting. Politicians fear seats. hed," responded Ramos in his ac- violence and confusion. Most of the 78 stand little chance ceptance speech. Aquino sees Ramos as standing of getting even, a small share of the the best chance of preventing a co- vote--one promicesto free all pri- Honest Bureaucracy meback bye either Marcos, or Co- soners from Manila jails -- and the "In simple terms, we offer a go- juangco, whowas one of the late field is expected to be dominated venment that works, a bureaucracy dictator's closest business associa- by eight leading contenders. that is honest and a administration tes and is backed by many of Mar- President Corazon Aquino, who that responds to the public purpo- cos's former allies. led the struggle to oust the Marco- se,' he added. The Marcos family is accused of ses, is not running for re-election, Ramos will get the strogest chal- stealing up to five billion dollars but has thrown her wight behind lenge from Speaker of Congress from the Philippines during their her former defence chief Fidel Ra- Ramon Mitra, a veteran politician 20-year rule. (Reuter). Listen To The Leader..... ONE "O" FIVE FM STEREO 105 fm's OVA terco 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 2cm Color Rendition Chart