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Nama: Bali Post
Tipe: Koran
Tanggal: 1994-01-16
Halaman: 09

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Kliwon, 16 Januari 1994 NEWS MAKER 4 th Bali Post SEPEDA HARO USA PT. JASUDA Jl. Wahidin 10B Telp. 435650-434978 Denpasar-Bali C. 96 PENGOBATAN Yang Mana Problem Anda? GEMUK dan PERUT BESAR DIPASTIKAN!!! Turun 3 Kg 2 Minggu & Perut pasti kecil dengan jamu langsing (sedby kapsul) Tanpa Efek Samping Bu Slamet Depkes RI TR No.923262971 Hubungi: Jl. Gunung Batukaru 2K Telp.27198 Denpasar C. 12 JAMU TRADISIONAL Bu Slamet TANPA EFEK SAMPING Sedia Juga: Jerawat dipastikan tanpa ada bekas SARI RAPET SUPER-seminggu bebas lendir, bau/gatal/keputihan OBAT FLEK-menghilangkan flek karena matahari/cosmetik/KB Hubungi: J. Gunung Batukaru 2K Telp.27198 Denpasar JAMU TRADISIONAL Bu Slamet TANPA EFEK SAMPING Sedia juga: C. 13 Jamu Ambeian-sembuh tuntas tanpa op- erasi Empotan Super-jamu wanita untuk kehar monisan suami istri Jamu Diabetes-menurunkan 100-150 da lam 10 hari & hasil stabil Hubungi: J. Gunung Batukaru 2K Telp.27198 Denpasar JAMU TRADISIONAL Bu Slamet TANPA EFEK SAMPING Sedia Juga: C. 14 Jamu Lever-menyembuhkan sakit kuning Jamu Darah Tinggi - menu- runkan tekanan darah hingga stabil Jamu Kuat Pria - memulihkan keku- atan pria dengan sempurna Hubungi: Jl.Gunung Batukaru 2K Telp.27198 Denpasar manaaaa. ESTAURANT Nusa Dua M ion ar - Bali 79.23959 I C. 15 C117 B.49 Stereo hz has tersendiri Mary Joe Fernandez Books Final Appointment With Date MARY Joe Fernandez ruined Gabriela Sabatini's hopes of a first our title in 20 months as she eased into the women's singles final at Wales Open on Saturday. Fernandez, seeded third, beat the second-seeded Argentine 7-5, 6-1, a less stressful victory than in last year's French Open when she recovered from a set and 5-1 down against Sabatini to win the third-longest women's match in the Open era. Saturday's match was delayed several hours and them inter- rupted twice by rain, lasted only 90 minutes and earned Fernan- dez a final appearance against Japan's Kimiko Date who beat American Patty Fendick 6-2, 5-7, 6-1 in the other semifinal. Fernandez, absent from the tour in the latter stages of 1993 after abdomen disturbance and still feeling her way back to form, was understandably delighted with the result. "It was a very satisfying performance," said the American world number seven, who spent the pre-macth rain break playing dominoes. "I'm getting back there slowys, but I've still a way of Sabatini, 3-0 down almost immediately, saved two set points at 5-3 in the first set and began to approach the net with some success. But Sabatini folded completely after the second rain delay at 2-nd set, losing the final five games without reply against an opponent who grew visibly in confidence. Fernandez is seeded to meet world number on Steffi Graf in the guarter-finals at the Australian Open and may turn out to be serious obstacles to the German favourite. Sabatini, who last won on the women's tour at the Italian Open in May 1992, insisted her title drought is not a permanent prob- lem. "It's no going to happen right away but I know the results are going to come," she said. Date had to maintain her cough four during rain breaks before reaching only her second WTA tour final outside Japan. The 23-year-old fith seed was forced into a third set when Fen- dick saved a match point at 5-4 in the second but finally returned to the court at the fifth attempt to end the America. (Reuter) Minggu Kliwon, 16 Januari 1994 Bali Post U.S., Syrian Leaders To Tackle Mideast Issues Geneva- U.S. President Bill Clinton and Hafez Al-Assad of Syria hold a three-hour summit in Geneva on Sunday to tackle some of the hottest issues blocking the way to overall peace in the Middle East. But the two leaders, meeting for the first time clear have diffe- ring agendas which diplomats said it may not be easy to recon- cile at a brief encounter during which Clinton is bound to take a cautious line with the experien- ced Assad. The United States aims to ensure Syria's return af- ter months of absence to the Arab-Israeli peace process, a new round of which is due to start in Washington on January 24, and Damascus agreement to resu- ming a substantial dialogue with Tel Aviv. Syria will clearly be seeking to consolidate moves towards better relations with Washingtons, and to win a pledge from Clinton of U.S. support for a total Israeli withdrawal from the occupied Golan heights. The Territory had been captu- red by Israel from Syria in the 1967 Middle East War, and have since been settled by some 13,000 Israelis who are fiercely resisting any idea that the should move out agains as part of a peace deal. Leaders of the settlers have come to Geneva to demonstrate in support of their cause during the summit. In an open letter to Clinton said that it was their ba- sic human right to live and raise their families in the Golan. In advance of the Sunday mee- said it offers a chance to return to peace process launched just over two year ago involving all main actors in the Middle East. Israel, Syria's deadlock But discussions between Is- rael and Syria have hit deadlock over the Golan issue. Damascus wants a clear Israeli pledge of to- tal withdrawal from the Golan, but Tel Aviv says it wairst what the Surians will offer in exchange. The Israelis are asking for what they call "full peace" the es- tablishment of diplomatic and trade relations and the opening of borders between the two coun- tries. But they know how far they are ready to pull back in return. The Syrians insist they will not bargain on land because, as one official said in Damascus this week, "this is a sacred issue and peace and occupation could not live together." Clinton, the fourth U.S. presi- dent to negotiate with Al-Assad, who is the longest-serving head of state in the Middle East, will be urging Syria to give clear sup- port to last September's peace deal between the Israelis and the Palestine Liberation Organisa- tion (PLO). Assad's First Reaction Assad initially reacted coldly ded over by the U.S. leader last September. Damascus gives san- ctuary to Palestinian groups acti- vely fighting to wreak the accord. But he has begun to soften his stance, a development welcomed by U.S. officials who recognise that the Syrian president, whose force has had effective control of most of Lebanon, holds the key to peace in the region. Clinton, wrapping up a week- long tour focusing on European security that has taken him from Brussels to Moscow with stopo- vers in Prague, Kiev and Minsk, was due to arrive in Geneva early evening on Saturday. Assad was expected in the early afternoon and was meeting United Nations Secretary- General Boutros Boutros-Ghali at the city's Hotel Intercontinen- tal-- where both the presidents are staying and where they will meet on Sunday morning. Swiss authorities have turned a large residential area around the ho- tel, a well-known Geneva lan- dmark and site of several East- West encounters during the Cold War, into a security zone guarded by police and army units. Frontier troops and customs English Corner ENE KENKEN TAMUNE MASEBENG PEDIH!? NAGIH STIK SUBA BAANG! SADHAS 00 Oooo.. RESTAURANT PESONA DURANG officers have stepped up controll 1. Why, the guest looks angry!? He asked for steak, and I have the border with France. At the served it to him! airport, sandbagged guard posts backed by armoured personnel 2. You had better learn good manners if you were functioning as waiter in restaurant! The price here is rather high, but the ting, the first between Clinton to the deal, sealed in Washington carriers have been set up. food they serve is not delicious. If you are not acquainted with and Assad, Syrian officials have after monks at a ceremony presi- (Reuter) Journalists Urge Probe Harding Into Harassment Claims Involvement In Kerrigan Plot London- British athletics journalists called on Saturday for an inquiry into allegations of sexual haras- sment against a sports writer suicide. Cliff Temple, 46, athletics cor- respondent of the Sunday Times for the past 25 years and also a leading coach, was found dead on a railway line last week. In a sui- cide note found at his home, he denied the harassment allegations. Temple was treated for one year after a divorce from his wife, who moved out of the family home with their four children to live with another man. The British Athletics Writers Association said it would ask the Athlethic Federation (BAF) to in- vestigate claims that Temple ha- rassed women athletes he Portland- coached. HALAMAN 9 SANGKALA ME LADAH ANAKE SOPAN YEN DADI PELADEN RES- TORAN! IA MEDAGANG MAEL, KUALA DEDAHARANE SING DAEN LAMUN TONDEN KENAL, EDA ANAKE NGORBANG "MESTER TERSINGGUNG A ANAK BASA KASAR-TO ORANGA PENUH KUALA LIU MATALANG KORSINE someone, you'd better not to address him with the word "mis- ter". He was offended because that word is rude. 3. This restaurant has been said to be full of customers, but in effect there have been many chairs empty!! Bodyguard Admits And Another Thing... A Little Word In Your Ear Oreson U.S. skating champion Tonya Harding's bodyguard has Other sports writers and coac- admitted he was involved in the hes say promoter Andy Norman beating of Harding's rival Nancy made the allegations to them. A Kerrigan, his lawyer said Friday, BAF spokesman told Saturday's and television reported Harding Guardian newspaper that herself was under gation for the Norman had undertaken that attack. any harassment should cease. In a critical article last year Temple said Norman held too much power in British athletics. The Guardian said Norman, who is engaged to British former world javelin champion Fatima Whitbread, declined to comment. (Reuter). Bodyguard Shawn Eckardt and his associate Derrick Smith were formally charged with con- spiracy in the January 6 assault and a third suspect, reported to be the man who committed the attack on figure skater Nancy Kerrigan in the knee with a me- tal police beton, turned himself into the FBI. Bal/Reuter ATTACK-Two of the main suspects in the Nancy Kerrigan assault are arraigmed January 14 in the Multnomah County Court in Portland. From R: Derrick Brian Smith and his attorney Robert Goffred, Shawn Eric Eckardt and his lawyer Mark McKnight. Eckardt, Tonya Har ding's bodyguard, allegadly contacted Smith to arrange the assult on skater Nancy Kerrigan. The two men are charged with criminal conspiracy to committ assault. WE ARE OPENED ORIENTALE Chinese Restaurant LUNCH TIME 11.00 - 15.00 DINNER TIME 18.00 - 22.00 WHERE FOOD AND TASTE BECOME ONE JI. Hayam Wuruk No.130, Denpasar 80235 - Bali C 3129 The injury forced Kerrigan out of last week's qualifying cham- pionship for the Winter Olym- pics, which was won by Harding. But the U.S. Olympic Committee gave Kerrigan anyway, and the U.S. Figure Skating Association if evidence showed she was invol- ved NBC Nightly News, citing law enforcement sources, repor- ted that Eckardt has told investi- gators Harding was involved in the planning of the attack and said the investigation was now focused Harding if any - Harding and her ex-husband Jeff Gillooly played in the alleged conspiracy. Harding has denied any invol- vement in the attack. rious physical injury of a pretty young of mising career." Kerrigan, meeting with repor- ter outside her Massachusetts home, said she could not under- stand the attack. She said the condition of her knee, which is improving daily, is her only con- sideration of getting ready for the Olympic Games. Asked about the arrest of Har- ding's associates, she said, "I don't think I can ever understand the issue, because I can't thing that viciously." She declined comment on Harding in general. Harding and her former hus- band Jeff Gillooly were spotted by television camera crews emer- ging from their rural home near Portland, and their lawyers later issued a statement saying that the couple have been cooperating with outhorities. IT is curious- is it not? - how a single word, a small word, even an innocent word can destroy an illusion. One can be in the throes of some intense discussion on the merits or otherwise of Plato's per- ceptions of divine love when one's opposite number can throw in the word "bogey" and point to a spot slightly above one's left nostril. This has the effect not unlike the explosion of "Fat Man" in the de- serts of New Mexico. The whole course of history seems to change. One blushingly reaches for some handkerchief or some ot- her suitable material like the table cloth, to wipe away the of fending blackened blob; but Plato and divine love skulk silently away. There seems to be no point now. One has been found out: Eckardt said little conspiracy anything one might say or do of during his brief hearing where he importance can only be comical and Smith, alleged driver of the when you have been spotted with getaway car used for the January a bogey on your nose. Eckardt has previously said 6th attack in Detroit, were for- So it was when I was taken to Gillooly asked him to arrange the mally charged with conspiracy. dine at Amandari not long ago. I attack, according to published Smith's lawyer entered no plea stress: taken to Amandari. As on his behalf. you probably know, a light glass Mark McKnigt, lawyer for the Judge Donald Londer retur- of hock at the Amandari Hotel is 350-pound Eckardt, entered a ned both men to custody under $ liable to drain much of the gold not quilty plea on behalf of his 20,000 bail while awaiting a re- reserves of the Bank of Indone- client but then told that the body- port on whether they could be re- sia; and on what the editor of this guard admitted his involvements leased recognisance. reputable organ is pleased to pay Shane Stant, the alleged hit me, I am lucky if I can scrape to- "He feels dirty. He feels what man who turned himself in to the gether the rupiahs for a nasi he did was wrong," McKnight FBI in Phoenix, Arizona, has bungkus from the ibu's warung said outside the Portland cour- been jailed and held pending pos- down the road. But taken I was, troom. "It is a rather monstrous sible extradition in the case. and all dressed up in my most thing to be involved with -- a se- (Reuter) eye-catching finery. To Get Kerrigan Out Newspaper reports claim that attack was motivated by a desire to get Kerrigan out of the way so that Harding could become su- perstar and earn millions from product endorsements. reports. in the case and was sorry. Calcutta- At Least 100 Feared Dead In Indian Boat Collision They said 21 passagers and three crew had been found alive, but there appeared little hope for the rest even were still searching. The collision occurried some 90 km (55 miles) south of Cal- One of the steam Maubhaya, cutta in the early hours of the More than 100 people were fea- red drowned when two pilgrim boats collided in the Bay of Be- ngal on Saturday and one was torn in half, police said. We were greeted handsomely by We were ushered impeccably by gracious girls with winsome looks. A very professional lady asked our purpose and we infor- med her we wished to dine. Had we a reservation? Alarmed that our evening might be thwarted would like to wait one moment we replied negatively. If we she would go and look to see if they had a table available. We waited with held breath; hopping from one foot to the other like to the sumptuous flower arrange- menu now escapes me but was chandelier in the bar; I recalled ments, to the marble floors and chicken cooked with chilli and gi- the dark grey mass of the swi- stone carvings, to the precision of nger. We had starters, too, which mimng pool and realised I the architecture and the high po- used to be called hos d'oeuvre in thought it must be like diving lish on all the surfaces. Everyt- the days when restaurants really into a grave to plunge into that hing about the place spelled per- were restaurants. These happily black, uninviting hole; it was ir- fection. I was already slavering wiled away the 30 minutes it took ksome to have to squint myopi- with the prospect of the perfect for the meats to arrive. We chat- cally at the menu by the trivial meal that would accompany this ted happily about this and that lighting in the restaurant, so mo- perfect hotel. The professional and Plato's ideas on divine love. lady returned: yes, there was a Then it happened. The waitress table available. Our relief and joy hovered over my right shoulder that we had passed muster and and passed a shaking plate in would be allowed to eat at Aman- front of me with the words: "You dari was akin to the elation felt want steak, Mister?" and drops of by a new father on given the intel- steak juice spilled onto my lap. ligence that his first born and wife are both well and healthy. We had joined the elite. dishly gloomy. And was the food good? Our steaks, far from being medium rare, were so rare they practically leapt off the plates and mooed at us, and my friend Dodi thought the eminently for- gettable Indonesian dish was better cooked by the ibu at the Irritated Beyond Measure warung down the road. My host's Mister? I was addressed as wife opined the lamb chops were We had a drink at the bar and "Mister"? I, who was even now on the scrawny side and would admired the dark marble rubbing shoulders with well, if have been better had they not swimming-pool which tumbles not the Great and the Good, cer- been burnt to death. And the wai- precipitously over the edge and tainly with the very rich - I was to tress called me "Mister"! into the gorge of the Ayung River be called "Mister"? Suddenly, It's a hotel. It's only a hotel and below. We oohed and aahed pri- with that one word, the whole il- no more remarkable than a thou- vately to each other as famous fa- lusion, the whole theatrical pre- sand other hotels like it round the ces casually drifted in and out. tence came crashing to the floor world. Am I being too harsh on ("Was that...? No! It just looked and I saw it all for what it really Amandari? We all make mista- like him. I think it might have was. The smiles of greeting were kes. But that's just the point. been...") We chomped merrily on all sham; I was now irritated Amandari sets itself (and its pri- the cashew nuts which came au- beyond measure by the snobbery ces) up to be the very best, the tomatically with our champagne of the professional lady who had perfect, the ne plus ultra of ho- cocktails. All in this modern-day kept us waiting when she knew tels. If the management allows Garden of Eden was perfect. We all along they had plenty of va- the staff to address their guests felt privileged to have been allo- cant tables; I groaned at the pre- as "mister", what possible hope is wed in; and the more so when a tentious architecture and parti- there for the future of mankind? Ketua Marga handsome waiter ushered us to cularly that grossly hideous our table for four. We could just see in the tene- brous light of the restaurant AIDS Hit 3 Million People there were only two other tables occupied. But of course we knew Geneva infections. it would fill up with important An estimated three million Reports AIDS cases totalled people later. A waitress silently people worldwide revesn fered 851,620 at the end of December, arranged our napkins across our full-scale AIDS since the disease against 718,894 last July, the laps and flipped open the leather- was first identified in the late WHO said. But while one half of these bound menu folders. By twisting 1970s, the United Nations World them this way and that to catch Health Organisation (WHO) said were reported by developing coutnries, the U.N. body said it what little light there was, we on Saturday. scanned the menu with all the de- But in a-yearly report, it esti- believed Third World states ac- had been given carte blanche to and one million children have de- tres of actual cases. light of children in a toy shop who mated around 14 million adults counted for well over three quar- have whatever they wanted. My veloped the HIV infection -- host ordered steak, medium rare, which the WHO and many lea- and so did I, not wishing to ap- ding medicay causes AIDS. pear any more greedy than he The estimates far higher for lamb chops and my friend Dodi ever the cautious one stuck firmly to an Indonesian dish the name of which on the was split in two by the collission morning in thick fog, which ham schoolboys waiting to hear their who was paying. His wife asked than formally reported figures the 1970s, the report said. The and around 250 passengers were spilled into the water as the re- turned from a pilgrimage to the holy Sagar Islan, they said. pered initial rescue work. Some 15 hours later, just 10 examination results. bodies, nine of them women, had been found. (Reuter) Looking About Us WE had time to look about us: Pope Says Nationalism Has Become A God In Bosnia Vatican City- Pope John Paul on Saturday regressing, he said. Speaking of another Carib- He said exaggerated froms of bean country, Haiti, the Pope said conflict in Bosnia has a "new natinalisme in Bosnia and elsew- said "readymade political solu- paganism" that glorified here had led to the exaltation of tions be imposed on the Haitian nationalisme. race and ethnicity and the blind people" because this risked gi- In his annual "state of the glthe state. ving rise to fresh division of Ha- world" address, he also said Cuba "We are faced with a new paga- tians themselves. Haitian people should not be left to languish in nism: the deification of the na- have to build their own future. isolation and he expressed hop tion," the Pope said. He warned U.S. President Bill Clinton has Middle East peace process under that the passage from nationa- refused to rule out a possible way would end the "heavy suffe- lism to totalitarianism was swift. American invasion of Haiti to rings" of the Palestinian people. He said it would be a scandal if restore President Jean-Bertrand The Pope, who has called an in- Europe let international law and Aristide to power. ternational day of prayer for order be 'ridiculed by the actions peace in fon January 23, reserved of armed bands". some of his strongest comments Although the Vatican prefers for the situation in the Balkans. whiter called "humanitarian in- "The fighting goes on. The tervention", Church officials most iniquitous forms of extre- have suggested he would support mism are being seen. The peoples some form of limited military ac- are still in the hands of torturers tion to "disarm the aggressor" in morals," he said. Bosnia if all other attempts The 73-year-old Pontiff con- failed. demned "in the most categorical manner, the crimes against man Suffering in Cuba The United Nations declared a world oil embargo against the country's military rulers because they refused to allow the democ- ratically elected Aristide to reas- sume power under an internatio- nally brokered plan. Vatican Decision Israel In other sections of the long French-language address, the Pope said he hoped the Vatican and humanity which are being In another section of his decision to recognise Israel fully perpetrated before our very speech, the Pope said the people last month would benefit all be- of Cuba were suffering material lievers in the world. The Pope, eyes." He appealed to all sides to lay difficulty both internal and ex- who supports a Palestinian ho- down weapons. World leader ternal factors. "It is important meland, said he hoped the Middle should double efforts for peace that this country should not be East peace talks would bring an ace and Europe should not hide in left isolated. Cubans should be end to the "heavy sufferings for a cocoon of resignations, he said. helped to regain confidence in the Palestinian population". themselves," he said. A Palestine Liberation Orga- Havana blames its economic nisation delegatin next week has Crimes Againt Humanity crisis on a longstanding U.S. eco- wiged the world to express wor- Suggestions of permanent tri- nomic embargo one year ago with ries about the consequences the bunal to judge crimes against hu- a ban on trade with the island by Israel-Vatican deal could have manity signalled that society was foreign-based U.S. subsdiaries. for Jerusalem. (Reuter), Africa accounted of reported cases, 67 per cent of the estima- ted incidence of the disease since represent an increase of half a United States accounted for 40 million in AIDS cases since the per cent of reported cases but last report in July and of one mil- only 13 per cent of the estimated lion in the incidence of adult HIV total. (Reuter). TOURISM ACTIVITIES DEP EME ENDIDIKAN KEB AN A Social Visit From Holiday Inn Bali Hai Holiday Inn Bali Hai marked the beginning of the year 1994 with a visit to the disabled school for deaf and mute children (SLB B) on Jalan Bypass Nusa Dua Jimbaran. In conjun- ction with this visit, the hotel also donated 400 kilograms of rice and snacks for the children. Seen on the picture are The Headmaster; Drs. I Gd. Wayan Sumendra (far left) and the General Manager of Holiday Inn Bali Hai Patrick G. Fiat (centre) with other staff members. Holiday Inn wordlwide, which is owned by Bass PLC of the UK, operated more than 1,770 hotels and 338,000 guest rooms in over 50 countries and territories around the world. Holiday Inn is the world's largest single hotel brand. (*). Color Rendition Chart 2cm 4cm