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Kata Kunci Pencarian:

Nama: Bali Post
Tipe: Koran
Tanggal: 1993-09-17
Halaman: 05

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Color Rendition Chart 2cm Jumat Wage, 17 September an Benih tas di NTB ike tani di Kediri, dan pembang Seed laboratorium mini untuk jet, kasi benih di Sumbawa Bes jak samping itu, bantuan itaju ini gunakan untuk meningka pro- SDM, khususnya yang ma ara, ngani kegiatan bidang prd nur, benih. uti, Ditambahkan, tanaman tan ngan bukan hanya padi, aana juga palawija. Palawija men ana kan komoditi pangan utam Der telah beras dan mempunya man anan penting, baik untuk je -be- sumsi langsung maupun industri dan pakan temak cara umum produksi palaw EE perti kedelai, jagung, ka jau, dan kacang tanah & ini terus menunjukkan pe em- katan dari tahun ke tahun la- kipun peningkatan produk di sebut lebih disebabkan ad Per- perluasan areal. (059) NEWS MAKER Iskandar dan Gangga misalnya. K ar, melihat jumlah tuan guru mg- tokoh masyarakat yang ada pa Lobar tidak hanya menjag m- Mudjitahid, tetapi ada ya ma lain," tutur salah seorang g mg- gota dewan yang enggan dis ok jati dirinya. an Kalau melihat surat yang m an suk, dukungan terhadap Mu go tahid terus mengalir deras itu mudian diikuti dukungan teh rs. dap Drs. H. Lalu Hartava er samping dukungan lewat air, surat sebelumnya, Harta GH mendapat dukungan tambala GH dari sejumlah kelompok mas ar, rakat. Seperti dari Forum Kam nikasi Remaja Masjid (FKE Lobar, MKGR Lobar (menyel se kan juga Siradip Arty), Yaya ma- Tawakkal Kekait Kecamata ma Gunung Sari, Kelompok T an Memalik Mudi dan Patuh Ang Bu- Kecamatan Gerung, KNPI S an tong Tengah, PSM Sekotong Fu- ngah, dan pemuka masyaria ng. Kecamatan Bayan. (058) miliki in Langka Eu, kehidupan jahiliyah menjad beradab. Karena itu, sebag a- insan yang telah dilimpahk ali oleh Tuhan beberapa karuni ta baik berupa iman, ilmu maupu mal amal, hendaknya mengint ka peksi diri, sehingga kita tida g- terjerembab dalam kehidupa n- jahiliyah. ak Lebih jauh, Abubakar men ai ingatkan pentingnya memil an ilmu pengetahuan yang dila "dasi iman yang kokoh. Tamp iman serta ilmu, maka ku u-kungan kemiskinan, baik kem a- kinan harta, kemiskinan mon h- maupun kemiskinan dalam g luas, tetap akan sulit dilepaska ari (ED). batkan n Proyek g ada masalah," tambah Achmad Di pihak lain, Achmad met emukakan masalah kesulitat di lingkungan Kota Bima. lan nyarankan agar di dalam K Bima, dibuatkan semacam a luran untuk kebersihan. Pada kesempatan yang sama Camat Bolo Drs. H. Achmad He sen mengangkat masalah kes litan air di wilayahnya. Kata d t sebenarnya untuk mengatasi sulitan tersebut ada sumber di Monggo yang kalau dibuat se macam dam maka dapat men airi sawah seluas 200 hekt "Air tersebut sekarang hanya bendung secara tradisional. J dibuat dam permanen, airnya samping mengairi areal pers wahan, juga dapat digunak untuk air minum," katany =(Ef). promosi digunakan untuk melakukan peperangan tersebut. Banyak lagi objek wisata di Lombok Namun satunya di Indonesis barangkali Pulau Moyo di Sumbawa. Pulau ini sepi jampi. Di sana diaktifkan w sata berburu sapi Bali dan rusa. "Suatu kebanggaan, p lau ini sempat disinggahi Lady Di," cetus Gubernur. Namun Lady Di ke sana tidak untuk berburu, melainkan lari ka rena bosan diburu rekan-rekan pers, kilahnya. Gubernur tidak menyebut Gunung Tambora, tetapi me nunjuk Istana Bima. Dahulu tutur dia, Kerajaan Bima dan Sumbawa merupakan kera jaan yang bertetangga. Putridi Kerajaan Sumbawa, kata dia suatu saat tertarik dengan Pa ngeran di Kerajaan Bima. Na mun untuk "apel", tentu diha dapkan persoalan transportasi yang sulit lantaran jaraknya yang jauh. Karena itulah, Bima kemudian membangun istana serupa yang ada di Sum bawa agar putri merasa betah tinggal seperti di rumah sendiri. si Tak pelak, Bima pun dipe nuhi peninggalan-peninggalan bersejarah. Salah satu pening galan itu berupa mahkota ke rajaan Bima yang dipenuhi permata mutu manikam. Ka rena bersejarahnya, mahkota dipinjam ke sana ke mari itu dan hampir keliling dunia, un- tuk dipamerkan. Konon, jum lah biji permatanya mencapai 999 buah. Benarkah itu? "Ra lau tidak percaya, hitung sen- diri," cetus Warsito diiring gerrrrr peserta. (057). Garry Kasparou Ball Post/Rtr Duels His British Challenger ONLY devotees of the world's brainiest game would by pay to sit for hours in a basement theatre, peering at almost invisible pieces of wood and being scolded if they break a tomb-like sil- lence. But for the hundreds of chess fanatics who come to Lon- don.'s Sovey Theatre, litle can rival the thrill of seeing world champion Garry Kasparov of Russia duel his British challenger Nigel Short in the flesh. "Real chess players would watch a good game in an old time or anywhere," said Keith Milner, a patriotic Short supporter who nevertheless admitted he bet on Kasparov to fight off the marat- hon 24-game challenge to his title. After three games, Kasparov leads the 24-game series 2-1/2 to 1/2. He needs only a 12-12 tie to retain the crown and is heavy favourite to dispose in quick order. Each time the world's top chess masters sit down to face each other, deahtly silence fills the cavernous art decorated theatre and lasts as long as the game, up to six hours a session. Kasparov at time springs out of his office-style chair to stroll off behind the grey and white chequered stage to have Swiss cho- colate and mineral water. Short sits much more passively in his heavy, throne-like wood and leather chair. Spectators are warned not to laugh if grandmasters, who pro- vide commentary fed into personal headphones, tell a joke or two. Chuckling disturbed the players on the first day. On the stage, the two combatants shuffle their feet, clasp their head in their hands or stare into space. But the vacant look is deceptive and both men make some of their most crushing moves without each other off, expert obser- vers say. (Rtr). Jumat Wage, 17 September 1993 Bali Post Aeroflot Hijacking Ends Peacefully In Norway Gardermoen, Norway - Norway. The hijackers were con- cerned they might have been tricked. Islamic militants who hijacked a Russian airliner to Oslo surrendered peacefully early on Thursday, freeing all 50 people aboard unharmed. Norway, which helped broker an historic peace agreement in the Middle East opposed by some ra- dical fundamentalists in the re- gion, agreed to study the hijac kers request for asylum. Police said there were either 44 or 45 passengers -- including a three-year-old child -- and six crew aboard the twin-engined plane. They were taken to a hotel to sleep. "None of the passengers or The Tupolev 134, hijacked du- crew was hurt," Justice Minister ring a flight from the Azeri capi- Grete Faremo said after a tense tal Baku to the Russian city of five-hour standoff ended around Perm in the Urals, landed in Nor- 1:30 a.m. (2300 GMT) at Garder- way late on Wednesday after a re- moen airport, north of Oslo. fuelling stop in the Ukrainian ca- pital Kiev. The hijackers said they had grenades and explosives. "The hijackers have got no guarantees that they'll get politi- cal asylum, But we'll examine the request," she told reporters. Three men walked down the stairs of the Aeroflot airliner with their hands over their head, dropped weapons into an explosive-proof case and stepped into a police car waiting on the tarmac. The trio, and a fourth man be- lieved to be an accomplice, were driven to a police station. Neither their motives nor their nationalities were immediately clear. Norwegian officials said they believed them to be of Ira- nian or possibly Azeri origin. Oslo's role Faremo said there was no rea- son to link the hijackers choice of Norway to Oslo's secret role in Police said a hijacker stood in the doorway of the aircraft bran- dishing a grenade after the initial release of 12 people, mostly wo- men and children. Sniffer dogs were taken aboard the plane to search for ex- plosives. Hijackers Main request Mediators, negotiation in Rus- sian and English, refused the hi- jackers main request for a gua- rantee of political asylum. "It could set a disastrous precen- dent," one official said. Before the plane landed, Nor- wegian special forces wearing bulletproof vests were deployed around the gardermoen airport, about 40 km (25 miles) north of In radio conversations with of- ficials at Kiev, the hijackers in- dentified themselves as Moslem fundamentalists and initially de- manded a Farsi-speaking inter- preter to ask for a crew who could fly the airliner outside the former Soviet Union. Norwegian officials said the hijackers apparently first sought to fly to Iran. Ukrainian security sources said two of the gunmen were brothers, long-term Iranian residents of Azerbaijan and sym- pathisers of the pro-Tehran Hiz- bollah movement. Iranian Diplomat's Shocked An Iranian diplomat in Oslo, Mohammad Nikkah, told Nor- way's NTB news agency he was shocked to hear of the hijack and could not comment on the reports the hijackers were Iranian. Iranian television carried news of the hijacking on its main evening bulletin on Wednesday without comment and without any reference to a possible Ira- nian connection. Norway's only previous hijack involment was in 1985 when a English Corner NIKI GAMBAR TIANGE ANE MODEL PALING ANYARA, TUAN BOLI SADHA 95 1. Ini lukisan saya yang paling mutakhir, Tuan! BEH, MULA SAJA MELAH PAGAE- ENE, TUSING ADUNG TEKEN GOBANE. ORI- JIN LIMA BATISNE TUBUG BUIN BULBUL 2. Wah, memang betul hebat karyanya, tidak sesuai dengan orang- nya. Jemari tangan dan kakinya pendek-pendek dan kebal. 3. Memang kebanyakan pelukis Bali itu anak seorang petani, maka- nya postur tubuhnya padat, Ibarat "Gentong Rapuh Berisi Berem" tidak sesuai dengan penampilannya. A HALAMAN 5 ANAK MULA LIUN DURU GAMBAR BALINE PANAK PETANI, SANGK LA POTONGANE PADAT. "PAYUK PRUNGPUNG MISI BEREM 1. This painting of mine belongs to the very recent one, Sir! 2. Wow, his work is quite superb, but no in accordance to its painter. His fingers and toes are short and thick. 3. Most painters are really farmers' sons, that's why their body postu- res are solid. They look like 'A Jar filled with Berem' Red Wine", the content is not consistent to their outward appearance. brokering the peace deal signed the capital. Fire engines and se- drunk 24-year-old man brandis- The General Framework Of Balinese Painting (Part II) and Palestine ration Organisation in Washing- ton on Monday. Officials said the gunmen apparently knew little about the Scandinavian country. veral ambulances drove onto the hing an air pistol seized control of runway. a domestic flight. He demanded One hijacker was briefly allo- cold deer and gave himself up wed out of the plane after it lan- when he got it. He was sentenced ded to confirm the aircraff was in to three yars in jail. (Rtr). Europeans Thinking Twice About Florida London - Florida won a big vote of confi- dence from British and Japanese investors on Wednesday but the ninth murder of a foreign tourist in a year had European thinking twice about plans for a "Sunshine State" holiday. While airlines and travel com- panies said there had been no rush of cancellations of Florida bookings, officials in the state conceded the rash of killings would cut the number of interna- TOURISM ACTIVITIES A Guitar Recital At Bali Hilton tional visitors this year by more than 10 per cent. An Englishman was shot dead in his car on Tuesday during a robbery attempt at a highway rest area near the state capital, Tallahassee. He was killed wit- hin a week of a German man being "car-jacked" on a Miami highway and shot to death. Four Germans, two Britons, two Canadians and a Venezuelan have been killed since last Octo- ber while on holiday in Florida - six of them in the greater Miami area A London office worker said he cancelled plans on Wednesday to spend three weeks in a rented house near the Disneyworld city of Orlando in November, forfei- ting 50 pounds ($75) a head in de- posits just days before he would have had to pay in full. "Friends who were going with us have young children and they just did not want to put them at risk," he said. "If it were just me and my wife we would have gope ahead come news from London. Britain's Rank Organisation Plc and MCA Inc, a unit of Japan's Matsushita Electric In- dustrial, announced plans for a multi-billion-dollar expansion of their Universal Studios Florida theme park in Orlando. With American filmmaker Steven Speilberg as "creative consultant", Rank and MCA said they told local authorities on Wednesday of plans to develop into a world-class resort about 600 acres (240 hectares) of land Tampa and Fort Lauderdale, are still at abottleesame levels," a spokeswoman said, adding there seemed little travel companies could do to reverse the decline in visitors to Miami. The German magazine Stern, in its September 16 issue, blamed the spiral of violence in American "Murder belongs to the American on the proliferation of hand guns. way of life, like Coca-Cola and hotdoogs," it said in an article on the killing s. Travel agents in Belgium, they own adjoining the park. France, Italy Spain said the kil- IN Bali there are no 'artists hard done by' nor are there fa- mous and socially spoil artists; the painter is no more no less than his fellow Balinese. Fur- thermore he has no desire for ori- ginality, and doesn't claim to have any unique message to ex- press. His art is one more of "transmission' of given forms and themes, than one of research into new ones. secon- Signature is a recent arrival and nowaday still dary. One borrows, 'sells' or steals good signatures. Esthetic existant; the artists class them- judgement is almost non- selves not according to esthetic criterious but according to the traditional systems of stratifica- tion, or to the commercial viabi- lity of their work. The best are the oldest, and whose paintings are bestsellers. Knowledge of art his- tory is almost null, visit to other artists and contact with other's work thought visists to museums or exhibitions is extremely rare. The art object has no exiting au- tonomy for the artist; he would never expose paintings on 'his' walls for the sake of decoration. All these factors are worth con- sidering because in them lie the basis of the "difference" in the de- velopment of Balinese painting Impact of economy factors But one most also consider the impact of the economic factors which are, in the modern tourists saturated Bali, more and more important. Firstly, losing their traditional Positive sides religious function, without ha- linese landscape. ving acquired an esthetic fun- ction the painting tend to become But lest we get too cynical, more and more neutral commer- such developments also have cial objects. From that follows their positive sides, firstly, in the mass production. Nowaday pain- field of production there is no po- ting are made in Bali very much tential talent that is not given an the same way as transistors are opportunity to paint. Is this the made in South Korea. The inter- case in modern industrial national division of labour is vi- societis? money. sible in art! Painting is becoming I doubt it. Secondly, one should more and more of a good job, the not forget the relative prosperity best way, in some places, to make brought by painting. Villages for- mely poor and isolated like Pa- The madness of the phenome- nestanan and Pengosekan can non is fascinating; in the area now aspire to new modes of life between Sukawati, Gianyar, and consumption. Painting is a Payangan and Tegallalang there village industry, it provides jobs are thousands of people making a in the villagess, thus steaming living out of painting, either as the flow of migrants to the big producers or as merchants! Pain- city. That in itself is something. tings have become part of the Ba- Jean Couteau. Many in the travel business lings had no impact on bookings Australia And Britain May Face Messy Divorce tried to play down the impact of to Florida. (Rtr). the killings, making pains to point out the long odds of anyone being attacked, especially if one avoided the Miami area. Advice to Clients At the same time, they were advising clients to take all pre- cautions and follow the advice in special pamphlets issued by their governments and the Florida authorities. Florida Biggest Business "I don't think there is any Tourism is Florida's biggest doubt this (latest murder) will af- business, producing $31 billion in fect our business, but I don't revenues last year, and one in 40 think it will have a significant visitors to the state are Britons, impact," said Tim Evans, marke- making them the top overseas ting director of Beach Villas, a contingent. small British tour group. The British account for a sixth The German Travel Agency Ball Post/Rtr of the 6.5 million people from out- GmbH said tourist number to side North America who went on Miami had fallen by 15 per cent holiday there last year. since April, when a Berlin The Germans were next, at woman was murdered in front of 430,000. her mother and two children af- ter assailants intentionally cras- hed into their car. The Bali Hilton International, together with the Austrian Em- bassy organized a Guitar Recital by Mr Helmut Jasbar a leading guitarist from Austrian recently. More than 150 people in the Bal- Iroom attended and enjoyed the excellent performance. (*). While the state stands to lose well over $3 billion in tourists- related income, it got some wel- "Other destinations, such as Bali Post/Rtr Sydney- If Prime Minister Paul Kea- ting gets his way, Australia's long marriage to Britain could end this century but like most divorce, the parting could be messy. Keating wants a republic by 2001, the centenary of the coun- try's federation, in recognition of fading ties to Europe and gro- wing bonds with Asia. But the plan is under pressure as many Australians ponder how the switch would be made and who would replace Britain's Queen Elizabeth as head of state. So far, popular opinion is in TOURISTS SHOT- Florida De Keating's favour. The most re- partment of Law Enforcement cent poll in early August showed special agent Dennis Williamson 62 percent of Australians favou- holds a reward flyer at a press were against it. red a republic and 34 percent conference Sept. 15, answering questions about the shooting of two British tourists Sept. 14 which left a man dead and his companion wounded at a hig. hway rest stop. U.N. Human Rights Report Slams Cambodian Faction Phnom Penh. An end-of-mission U.N. report has accused Cambodia's former rulers and guerrilla factions of large-scale human rights abuses, including torture, disappearan- ces, intimidation and murder. A copy of the Human Rights Component Final Report obtai- ned by Reuters also gives war- of the possibility of renewed ning ethnic violence against Cambo- dians of Vietnamese descent. rights concern in Cambodia. rabble-rousing among the coun- Khmer Reouge guerrillas, bla- try's political factions. med for the deaths of one million Cambodians during their Interim Government Blamed 1975-79 revolutionary rule, of One senior U.N. human rights responsibility for 104 murders, official, who declined to be na- monstly of ethnic Vietnamese. med, blamed the current interim The Khmer Rouge were ousted government for failing to take by invading Vietnamese troops steps to protect ethnic Vietna- who installed a puppet gover- mese settlers, many of whom nment in Phnom Penh in Ja- have lived in Cambodia for nuary 1979. At least 28 incidents of abduc- decades. He also accused a minority It said U.N. peacekeepers had tions and disappearances invol- coalition partner in the current attributed all major attacks ving 188 people were also linked government of publishing Nazi- against ethnic Vietnamese to the to the Khmer Rouge, the report style racist propaganda to incite Khmer Rouge. But "racist and in- said. hatred against the Vietnamese. flammatory rhetoric by other po- The Maoist-inspired insur- Son Soubert, an official with litical parties and the unwilling- gents who rejected participation the Buddhist Liberal Democracy ness of the SOC (old Phnom Penh in the Cambodian peace accords Party -- formerly a Washington regime) administrative structu- they signed in 1991 have a backed non-communist guerrilla res to provide adequate protec- decades-long history of fomen- faction -- had published articles violence tion have made clear the extre- ting against advocating the Vietnamese as Most Cambodians harbour said the U.N. official. mely tenuous position of the Viet- Vietnamese. namese minority community. ethnic "self-defence", The likelihood of continued long dormant suspicions about While the Khmer Rouge was to violence against ethnic Vietna- Vietnamese territorial designs blame for ethnic violence, "the mese remained a major human on Cambodia - fertile ground for joint administration book no "Look, Australia will be a re- public as inevitably as we're standing here," Keating told re- porters in Washington this week before travelling across the At- lantic to met the Queen on Saturday. Indeed, the change sometimes seems inevitable for a country first settled by Britain as a penal steps whatsoever to protect the It said future human rights colony in 1788 but isolated in the Vietnamese," he said late on concerns for Cambodia included South Pacific with an ever in- Wednesday. a new of limit the powers of the creasing Asian population. Since U.N. sponsored May police and military. "The republican debate is a de- elections, Cambodia has been ru- "Their current lack of accoun- bate on making sense of our loca- led by a coalition government led tability and growing autonomy, if tion. It's part of embracing where by royalist chief Prince Norodom unchecked, could seriously un- we are in world and getting rid of Ranaridh and Hun Sen, leader of dermine progress (to restore law our old British connections which the former Vietnamese-installed and order) on all other fronts," to longer serve us," said Austra- government. the report said. lian author Thomas Keneally. The old Phnom Penh regime was charged with complicity in 121 politically motivated attacks and six incidents of torture. Cambodia's prinsons and judi- Most Difficult Steps cial system were in an appaling But bidding the Queen state, it said. farewell promises to be among "The legal system doesn't work the most difficult steps in Austra- UN's Inability at all. Prisoners don't get out-lia's history. they don't get processed," said The report lamented the Uni- the official. "People are starting to realise that becoming a republic is a le- ted Nation's inability to deal with "The situation is appalling. gal, constitutional and political instances of human rights viola- Prisoners are still dying of star- minefield," said Tony Abbott, tions during its 18-month peace- vation, as recently as two weeks executive director of Australians keeping term in Cambodia. ago in Phnom Penh." for a Constitutional Monarchy. "The general lack of enforce- The U.N. Transitional Autho- Monarchists hope the process ment measures for human rights rity in Cambodia winding of rewriting the constitution to violations was clearly one of the down its operation. Almost all of accommodate a republic will be main frustrations faced by the the one 22,000-strong mission to complicated enough to frighten Component throughout its man- be withdrawn by mid-November. many people into keeping the sta- date," it said. tus quo. Realising it will be difficult to push through a republic despite favourable early opinion polls, Keating organised a broad cam- (Rtr). Japan Economic Steps Disappoint Before Unveiling Tokyo- Japan is set to announce a pac- kage of economic steps to boost Japan's slumping economy later on Thursday, but the measures have disappointed markets, eco- nomists and Washington even before their unveiling regulation and steps to pass the benefits of the strong yen along to consumers. "Social infrastructure" The five to six trillion yen ($47.7 billion to $57.6 billion) "It's a damp squib," said Peter package will also include one tril- Morgan, chief economist at Mer- lion yen ($9.6 billion) for spen- rill Lynch Japan. "The overall net ding on "social infrastructure" to impact on spending will not be improve the standard of living, that great-possibly three tril- two trillion ($19.1 billion) in hou- lion yen ($28.8 billion) and that's sing loans, expanded loans to help small and medium-sized bu- putting an optimistic spin on it. With an economy in danger of sinesses, and tax breaks for hou- contracting this fiscal year and a sing and education, local media growing trade surplus, domestic reports said. Businessmen and economists and foreign pressures are moun- ting on Tokyo to take meaningful agree deregulation measures will help boost domestic demand economic action. Prime Minister Morihiro Ho- eventually. But many argue sokawa's coalition government, more traditional macroeconomic scount rate -- are also needed. tumble in morning trade and the ption tax dan be raised to cover paign to sell the idea to the public. But a ruling coalition member Nikkei share average fell 333.33 the revenue gap. He assembled a Republican told reporters the package would points or 1.59 percent, to financial markets for their fasci- country, hold town hall meetings Some economists chastised the Advisory Committee to travel the not include income tax cuts. 20,614.46 at midday. "In as much as the package "Many market players expect nation with quick macroecono- and gather feedback. doesn't address these two points, few substantial steps to be an- mic fixes and said Hosokawa's it's disappointing," said Baring Securities economist Geoffrey Barker. The yen jumped in morning trade in Tokyo on U.S. officials comments that the expected pac- kage was unlikely to satisfy them. Washington has been de- manding that Tokyo boost its eco- nomy as a way to suck in imports and cut Japan's bulging trade surplus. Dollar - Yen Rate The dollar opened at 104.58 which ousted the long-ruling Li- steps early income tax cuts of yen and 1.5966 marks after clo- beral Democratic Party in Au- around 5 trillion yen ($48,0 bil- sing in New York at 105,95 yen gust, has said the pillars of the lion) and a cut in the Bank of and 1.5962 marks. new economic package will be de- Japan's 2.5 percent official di- Tokyo share prices also took a nounced in the economic package so the lack of fresh buying incen- tives helped pull down share pri- ces," said Kenichi Nagasu, a Cosmo Securities broker. The nine-member committee, coalition was on the right track which will report at the end of the with deregulation. month on what minimal constitu- tional changes are needed to "Financial markets are disap- create a republic, hit a nerve as pointed... because their view- Australians passionately deba- point is too short-term," Barker ted the previously unmentio- Economists said hope remai- said. "Ultimately the solution is nable -- dismissing the Queen. ned Hosokawa's government to make Japan a more transpa- One of the trickiest obstacles would decide on income tax cuts rent, open economy." ahead of a sweeping overhaul of An advisory panel to Hoso- will be the question of who repla- the tax system to be implemented kawa set up to debate how to do ces the Governor-General as pre- next fiscal year or later, even if that started its deliberations on The Governor-General, the the move was not included in Queen's representative in federal Thursday's package. The panel, headed by Gaishi parliament, is the commander- "What matters in the next few Hiraiwa, chairman of the power-in-chief of Australia's military months is income tax cuts," ful Japan Federation of Econo- and has the power to dismiss the Morgan said. So far, the Finance mic Organisations (Keidanren), government. Thursday. sident of republic. Ministry has fought the notion of is to issue sweeping plans for de- In 1975, the Governor-General cutting income taxes and finan- regulation and revival of domes- Sir John Kerr sacked the Labor cing them with deficit bonds until tic demand by the end of the year. government of Gough Whitlam Japan's three-percent consum- (Rtr). for not passing money bills through the Senate (upper house). Would the new president have the power to sack a government? Would the president be elected by popular vote or appointed by the prime minister? If elected, would the president have potentially CAREER more power than the prime mi- nister? Current Governor-General Bill Hayden, a former republican and Labor Party leader between Public opinion polls show Aus- 1983 and 1988, warned that can tralians want a popularly elected elected president without the president while politicians are restraints of the governor- rallying behind one elected by general could spark political turmoil. parliament. (Rtr). monkey forest OPPORTUNITY WITH AN INTERNATIONAL HOTEL COMPANY The Monkey Forest, a New FUN PUB in Jimbaran is looking for self motivated, enthusiastic and experienced people to fill the following positions : 1. Disc Jockey 2. Fun Pub Manager 3. Waiters/Waitresses JOB REQUIREMENTS 2 & 3 2 & 3 All All (DJ) ( FPM ) (WTR ) Management Hotel or School Hotel Certificate Minimum 2 years experience in a top fun establishment for DJ and FPM. Fluent in both oral and written English. One other language will be an asset. Age maximum 35 years for Disc Jockey and Fun Pub Manager, 25 years for Waiter/ Waitresses. Please write the position code on the top left side corner of the envelope and address your application with complete Curriculum Vitae Certificates of employment and two recent photographs to : HUMAN PO. RESOURCES BOX 35 NUSA DUA No later than September 26, 1993 U.2163 4cm