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Nama: Bali Post
Tipe: Koran
Tanggal: 1994-03-19
Halaman: 05

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btu Paing, 19 Maret 1994 NEWS MAKER engang cara khusus. "Jumlahnya kita tambah dua kali lipat dari petu- gas rutin," katanya. Bahkan, tambah Widiyatno, dalam sua- sana lebaran ini Kepala Seksi (Kasi) dan Kasubsinya juga ikut mengawasi. "Pengamanan yang kita lakukan betul-betul khusus. Karena pengunjungnya ra- tusan," katanya. Sejak kunjungan (besuk) se- cara bebas, berkaitan dengan le- baran dilakukan sejak Idul Fitri (14/3) lalu, Widiyatno mengata- kan pihaknya tidak mengalami hambatan. "Berkat kerja sama yang baik dan rapi, semuanya berjalan aman dan tertib," kata- nya sambil berharap, suasana ini terus berlanjut hingga besuk be- bas (silaturahmi) yang diberla- kukan hingga Senin (21/3) atau setelah Lebaran Topat usai da- pat terlaksana dengan baik, aman, tertib dan lancar. (063) mbawa arakatkan nerima bantuan sapi juga diwa- jibkar membuat kandang. "Jika tidak membuat kandang, ban- tuan itu belum diberikan," tegas Sudadi. Namun, sejauh mana anjuran dinas Peternakan Sum- bawa membangun kandang ko- lektif, ini yang masih belum je- las. Di setiap kecamatan, bahkan desa masih terlihat ternak ber- keliaran dengan leluasa keluar masuk sawah. Berkeliarannya ternak di Sumbawa tak hanya meng- ganggu tanaman dan merusak - jaringan irigasi saja. Tingkat pencurian ternak akhir-akhir ini cenderung meningkat karena -pencuri leluasa menyeret hewan setiap saat. Kapolres Sumbawa Letkol R. Hidayat menerangkan, petani baru sibuk melapor ke po- lisi kalau sapi atau kerbaunya sudah hilang. Tapi mereka tak -menyadari dengan dilepas itu membuka peluang bagi si pen- curi melakukan aksi baik siang ataupun malam hari. "Kita se- -ring menganjurkan kepada pe- ternak segera membuat kandang untuk menghindari terjadinya pencurian. Sebab, keamanan i lingkungan itu bukan hanya tu- gas polisi semata," ujar Hidayat. (052) ni Agama a-bisa arah matahari terbit (timur) mu atau arah gunung. Arah mata- at hari terbit merupakan arah ulu/ ag arah suci, karena matahari di- ロー Sk identikkan dengan Surya Radi- tya sebagai sumber kehidupan dan sumber energi universal serta raja dari para dewa. Sedangkan gunung dengan. e hutan belukarnya merupakan e-waduk alam yang memberi ke- ra makmuran sepanjang zaman ke- wi pada makhluk di dunia. Melalui e-gununglah Tuhan melimpahkan a- waranugraha-Nya kepada kita sekalian. Sebab daerah yang gu- n- nungnya tinggi, pasti ditutupi da hutan belukar yang lebat dan ti- e-sumber kemakmuran. Sebalik- n- dak disangsikan lagi bahwa ba- sa nyak timbul mata air sebagai na nya, di mana daerah yang tidak ri, bergunung, hutan tidak ada, di- ua pastikan mata air sulit muncul. la- Daerah yang demikian ini men- k, jadi kering dan gersang. Dalam an Nitisara disebutkan, kalau ingin ah umur panjang, tidur dengan ke- g) pala menghadap ke timur, kalau au ingin mudah rezeki, tidur de- an, ngan kepala menghadap ke gu- ya nung. (065) Mataram at atas sulit laku. "Kita tidak ber- an ani main spekulasi karena pem- e- belinya terbatas. Kalau pakaian ekelas menengah cukup laku," li- kata Mrkus yang khusus men- at jual pakaian jadi. mi Dikatakannya, bisnis pen- ya jualan pakaian jadi di Mataram mi memiliki prospek cerah. "Per- a saingan sesama pengusaha pa- a- kaian jadi di Mataram masih se- B. hat," kata Markus seraya me- an n- nambahkan, pengusaha belum terlalu berani melakukan per- ki ang diskon yang mengakibatkan e- pengusaha merugi. Di Mataram n. as saingan tidak banyak, di sam- ping itu pembeli juga tidak ba- nyak. (064) ri Dilepas i jika ada warga yang mengata- kan bahwa Jon kini telah dibe- baskan konon dengan uang ja minan. "Masalah itu saya tidak tahu-menahu," tegasnya. Warga Lelede, merasa tidak T- habis pikir dengan tindakan pihak berwajib, dalam hal ini ca Polsek Kediri, yang membe- n baskan tersangka. "Kalaupun riia tidak dibebaskan, namun penahanannya ditangguhkan, apakah tidak lucu seorang ma- ling yang sudah pasti meresah- kan masyarakat penahanan- rinya ditangguhkan," ujar seo- ti rang warga dengan nada ma geram yang Jumat kemarin melihat tersangka (Jon) duduk h santai di rumahnya. Jon, kata a warga tadi, mengatakan telah g dibebaskan Kamis (17/3) siang di kemarin. ar Sementara itu, Kapolsek Ke- ol diri ketika dihubungi per tele- g pon Jumat kemarin tidak ada u, ditempat. (063) Oliver North Attacked By Former U.S. President Reagan FORMER Presiden Ronald Reagan is "pretty steamed" about alleged claims by Oliver North, his former national security aide, that he knew all about the secret Iran-Contra deal and was brie- fed about it by North himsefl. In a rare attack on a fellow Republican, Reagan was highly critical of North in a letter dated Wednesday and made public Thursday by Virginia Republican John Warner, Warner said North should withdraw his U.S. Senate bid "if he has any hint of adherence" to his Marine oath of duty, honour and country. North responded by telling reporters that Reagan had been "flat out lied to... about what it is that I have said and written." He wrote to Reagan blaming "misinformation" on foes out to bolster the "foundering political campaign" of a rival in his Virginia se- nate race. The right-wing North is running a maverick campaign to win the party's nomination at a state convention, despite a cold shoul- der from several powerful Virginia Republicans. If he defeats former Reagan budget aide Jim Miller for the nomination. North in November would most likely face Democra- tic Senator Charles Robb, the son-in-law of the late President Lyndon Johnson. "I do have to admit that I am getting pretty steamed about the statements coming from Oliver North, Reagan wrote. "The private meetings he said he had with me just didn't hap- pen," Reagan wrote to former Nevada Senator Paul Laxalt. Reagan's Violation Political analysts regarded Reagan's violation of the so-called "11th Commandment" -- Though shall not speak ill of another Republican -- as extraordinary but said the rift with Reagan may have more resonance with ordinary voters than with loyal North delegates to the rift with loyal North delegates to the Virginia nominating convention. "He's vulnerable if it somehow destroys his credibility as a general election candidate in the mind of the delegates," said Republican consultant Eddie Mahe, who noted that North al- ready has high unfavourable ratings with voters. But North predicted victory, and spoke of his admiration for Reagan. He said his words were being taken out of contect as part of "Washington insider politics at its worst." (Reuter) Bali Post/Rtr. ROBERT NEIL Lt. Colonel Robert Neil who is leading a five man British army team which has been missing for two weeks in the jungles of Borneo, March 17. The team formed part of an expedition to climb Mount Kinabalu, South East Asia's hig- hest peak. Sabtu Paing, 19 Maret 1994 Bali Post Arafat, Peres To Meet In Cairo Tunis- PLO leader Yasser Arafat and Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres are expected to meet on Sunday -- a move which could signal the resumption of Middle East peace talks. PLO executive committee mem- ber Samir Ghoushe said the PLO leadership meeting in Tunis had decided a U.S. proposal for such a meeting could only be accepted after the U.N. Security Council voted on a resolution condem- ning the Hebron mosque killings. Ghoushe said Dennis Ross, the U.S. coordinator for the Middle East peace process, put the idea of a meeting with Peres in Cairo to Arafat during a telephone call on Thursday. The Security Council will vote later on Friday on the resolution, three weeks after at least one Is- raeli settler killed and wounded dozens of Palestinian worship- pers at a Hebron mosque. The United States was expec- ted to go along with the resolu- tion, despite reservations over some of the language. "The United States have sug- gested that once a Security Coun- cil resolution is adopted, a mee- ting would be held between PLO leader Arafat and Shimon Peres on the basis that when (Israeli Prime Minister Yitshak) Rabin returns to Israel on Friday, a number of measures would be de- cided and then reported to Arafat by Peres," Ghoushe said on Friday. These measures concern Pa- lestinian security, he added wit- hout elaborating. Key for further move tinian) self-rule." "Our position is that adoption of the U.N. Security Council is key for any further move, Ghoushe said when asked whet- her the PLO had decided to re- sume peace talks stalled by the Hebron massacre on February 25. Diplomats and PLO Officials said on Thursday that new ideas had emerged from Wednesday's talks between U.S. President Bill Clinton and Rabin that were hel- ping to ease the crisis caused by the Hebron massacre. An Arafat-Peres meeting, along with expected passage on Friday of a U.N. Security Council resolution condemning the mas- sacre, could pave the way for the resumption of negotiations. Talks on implementing last September's PLO-Israel deal for limited self-rule for Palestinians in occupied territories was abruptly halted after the Hebron killings. As far as I know, some ideas emerged from the Washington summit," a European diplomat in Tunis said. "These are the moving of a small Jewish settlement from in- side Hebron, a Palestinian police presence in the city and a spee- ding up of negotiations on (Pales- New Ideas Another European diplomat said: "In spite of appearances, the Clinton-Rabin summit has pro- duced new ideas." Diplomats and PLO sources said one idea from Rabin was an agreement to allow a Palestinian police presence in Hebron. Rabin said he would be more than glad for some 1,000 Palesti- nian policemen in the Israeli- occupied territories to return to the jobs they abandoned at the start of a Palestinian uprising in December 1987. But Palestinians say they would resist the proposal as long as the police were under Israeli control. English Corner Earlier PLO chairman Yasser Arafat, asked for his reaction to calls by Clinton and Rabin for a resumption of talks, stressed the need to guarantee Palestinian security. Arafat on Thursday also recei- ved messages from Russia, France and Egypt's President Hosni Mubarak and Foreign Af- fairs Minister Moussa Amr. The PLO leader also met Nor- wegian mediator Terje Roed Lar- sen, who helped broker last Sep- tember's peace accord. (Reuter). Troops Comb Mountain For Soldiers Missing In Malaysia Kota Kinabalu, Malaysia - A British air force team on Fri- day began descending a treache- rous gully on Southeast Asia's highest peak in search of five Bri- tish and Hong Kong soldiers mis- sing for two weeks.. A massive rescue operation by Military Hospital in Hong Kong. a British team of mountain clim- bers, Malaysian soldiers and Helicopter hindered by park rangers has been launched for the five missing soldiers, who began their 10-day training expe- dition on February 22. clouds WASSALAM WALAIKOM. D SILATURAHMI SADHA 94 THE Lebaran is the holy day which marks the end of the Mos- lem fasting month. Also called Idulfitri, which literally means 'cleansing, this day is celebrated ?! 0000 HALAMAN 5 ANAK MULA KETO DI BALI, MAS...!) NEGARA PANCASILA 4DANE. Tegal Linggah Tolerance to the Dutch colonisation, which Even though, the Moslems and they faces together. Talking Hindus have enjoyed a good rela- about the war of independance, tionship for more than a hundred he added, "Theses were dark years. In 1967, the village was di- years, when people had to vided into two separate villages, struggle and face arrest daily. Linggah Bali, each with is own fate, and, thus, now share the. Tegal Linggah Islam and Tegal Both communities faces the same Perbekel. This was made pos- same destiny. Our brotherhood of the two communities: the Mos- now it is not suffering which we sible by the geographical division comes from our suffering. And lems are concentrated in the Nor- share but happiness too, as in the Southern part. thern part and the Hindus in the Lebaran day." by the Moslems of all Indonesia. Lalu, an honoured figure among the reasons to move of the first said that the good relationship This day takes a special signifi- to the Moslems, who had been re- Bugis were simple: rather than and mutual understanding bet- gah, which is one of the villages of as a proper person to meet. But gis of the Kampong Bugis chose lems dates back to the times of cance in the village of Tegal Ling- commanded by a friend of mine being fishermen, some of the Bu- ween the Hindus and the Mos- Singaraja with an important what was in wait was more than I become farmers. Moslem population. The 'silatu- had expected: barely fifteen mi- rahmi' ritual, or the customary nutes after I had arrived and in- visit people pay to each other to troduces myself, he invited me to "open their heart", and "forgive stay at his house for the night, each other" is juts one of the mea- and he really meant it: a bed had nings of Lebaran there. On the eve of Lebaran, called pitality and kindness touched me already been prepared. This hos- the 'takbiran" night, the Mos- deeply. It was the proof of the along the streets of their streets, age between the Hindus and the lems usually hold a procession good relations existing in this vil chanting Allah Hu Akbar, Allah Moslems. "It has been this way Hu Akbar (God the Almighty) for 150 years, "said Haji Abbas, a while beating a big tambour bor- Moslem who had just completed rowed from the mosque of their his second pilgrimage to Mecca. village. This procession and Moslem's Origin drum performance are a common sight not only in Javanese villa- "Most of the Moslems of Tegal The village has recently ben of the village." I believe every- ges, but even in remote Sumatra- Linggah originate from the Kam- reunited. After the unity, even body has a good side. In this vil- nese forest district. However, among the Hindu images of Bali, pong Bugis (the village of the Bu- though the largest part of the village, the good side is building up gis men) in Singaraja," he said, lage were Hindus, the first vil understanding between the two the performance takes a unique referring to the famous seafarers lage chief was a Moslem, Haji Ab- communities. Sulendra also Five others started the expedi- the descent into Low's Gully, a flavor, and it is surely a unique of the Celebes. However other bas. "We agreed between oursel- and sisters." Is this an abstract pointed out, "We are brothers tion with the missing men but terrifying drop of some 1,800 me feature of Tegal Linggah-large Moslems, from other parts of In- ves that the two communities "The route to the gully's bot- split up before Low's Gully and tres (5,400 feet) from Kinabalu's field), a village located in the di- donesia have later settled in the would alternate in ruling the vil- concept of democracy and equa- tom is both difficult and techni- stumbled out of the jungle ex- pinnacle named after the British strict of Sukasada with a 35% village from Java. Also, there are lage. If the first chief was a Mos- cally demanding," he told a news hausted and malnourished on officer who first climbed the Moslem population. I visited the village of Tegal "said Haji Abbas, the first head of Hindu and so on," said Haji veral Hindus married to Mos- even several Balinese Moslems lem than the second would be conference in the state capital Saturday, a week behind sche- mountain in 1851. (Reuter). Linggah on the night of takbiran the united, "Nobody knows who Abbas. Kota Kinabalu. dule. Two remain in the British night. Although I had never met lems have became Moslems: was the original founder of the What is the cause of this tole- They are really brothers and sis- him before, I went directly to the Moslems part of the village, but rance? Mangku Dana, a Hindu, ters. (Benito Lopulalan). residence of Ustadz (teacher) "Eight climbers are starting on the route down into Low's Gully on Mount Kinabalu taken by the lost soldiers," said Lieutenant- Colonel Anthony Schumacher, head of the rescue team scouring the jungle-clad mountain in Ma- laysia's Borneo state of Sabah. "I have no idea of the condition of those still missing. Their staying power depends on the in- dividual. They had rations and water supply for 10 days," Schu- macher said. Schumacher said Malaysian air force helicopters have flown around the jagged 4,101-meter (13,450 feet) high mountain, but were hindered by low clouds. The missing soldiers had been on similar expeditions to Mount Kinabalu but had not attempted Stephanopoulos Called Village Reunification "When death hits a family, all the people come and help, re- gardless of their religion," said Putu Sulendra, the present chief of the Moslems married to Hine lity? No, it is an experience. Some dus have become Hindus and se- Before Whitewater Grand Jury Smoke And Greasy Fingers Threaten India's Taj Mahal Washington- Another top aide to President Clinton was called Thursday to appear before a federal grand jury probing the Whitewater af- fair as two other senior White House aides said they told grand jurors there was no illegal or unethical White House conduct in Whitewater. A few blocks from the federal courthouse, the Senate neared an end to bitter partisan battles over Whitewater as it voted unani- mously to conduct hearings ón the affair though it left the cru- cial question of the hearings' ti- ming to the chamber's Democra- tic and Republican leaders. Close Clinton adviser George Stephanopoulos became the se- venth White House staff member to be subpoenaed to testify before a grand jury on the Whitewater case. A White House statement said Stephanopoulos' attorney had re- ceived the subpoena issued by in- dependent counsel Robert Fiske. "I welcome the opportunity to give Mr Fiske the facts," Stepha- hopoulos said, according to the statement. The White House did not say why Stephanopoulos, 33, had been ordered to testify. But Fiske is probing all as- pects of a tangled controversy in- Clinton Confident On U.S. Chinese Relations Washington- President Clinton said Wed- nesday he was confident the Uni- ted States would be able to work through differences with China on human rights. Secretary of State Warren Christopher's talks with Chinese leaders this week were marked by a sharp confrontation over human rights, which Washing- ton says must he improved if Bei- jing's preferential trade status is to be extended in June. countries. "I think you can safely assume mer president -- to speak to the Winston Lord, the council's for we have been and will continue to be spending a good deal of time on "I think if Ambassador Lord symposium. the issue of our relations with had been present, the former sec- China, that our policy is what it retaries might have learned a has been that human rights are great deal more about the secre- important, but that other issues tary's trip to China, and I think are important too," he said. cluding the Clintons' involve- ment in a money-losing land ven- ture known as Whitewater when he was Arkansas governor; the failure of the Madison Guaranty savings and loan, whose head, James McDougal was a partner in Whitewater; and the suicide last summer of White House aide Vincent Foster. Stephanopoulos joins a large group of administration officials summoned to testify on the mat- ter. Six senior White House offi- cials and four present of former Treasury department officials were subpoened two weeks ago to explain meetings and conversa- tions on Whitewater. First to be subpoenaed White House counsel Bernard Nussbaum, whose resignation over the affair takes effect next month, was the first of two aides to appear Thursday before the grand jury. He testified for more than four hours and later said he had an- swered every question. He was "delighted to cooperate," he told reporters, adding: "We have not- hing to be ashamed of." Nussbaum said that he and everyone in the White House counsel's office had behaved "et- hically and legally." Following Nussbaum into the grand jury room was White House Deputy Chief of Staff Ha- rold Ickes. After more than 2-1/2 hours of testimony, Ickes said it will be- come clear that there has been "no unethical conduct or wrong- doing" once the investigation has been completed. ving Nussbaum, Ickes and fede- ral regulators might have inter- fered with a government investigation of Madison Gua- ranty activities that could have benefitted Bill and Hillary Rod- ham Clinton. Congressional Involvement In the Senate, the call for Whitewater hearings was draf- ted in daylong negotiations bet- ween Democratic Leader George Mitchell and Republican Leader Bob Dole. The non-binding resolution, attached as an amendment to an unrelated bill by a 98-0 vote, sta- ted that the two Senate leaders "should meet and determine the appropriate timetable, procedu- res and forum for appropriate congressional oversight." Agra, India - From the timeless calm of the Taj Mahal, the busy smokestacks across the Yamuna river look very far away. But preservationists say pollu- tion from industry, vehicles and a nearby oil refinery -- not to men- tion millions of tourists -- threa- tens to erode the 17th-century white marble monument and may already have caused it per- manent harm. "There is damage to the Taj - you can't get away from it," said Amita Baig, an architecture con- sultant at the non-governmental Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage. "We are terribly concerned." Nearly everyone agrees the gleaming mausoleum, built in this north Indian town by Mug- It said hearings could cover hal emperor Shah Jahan as a ges- "all matters related to Madison ture of love for his dead wife Guaranty Savings and Loan As- Mumtaz Mahal, should be sociation, Whitewater Develop- protected. ment Corporation and Capital But how bad the damage is, and whether it is irreversible, is a Management Services Inc." But it said the hearings controversial point. So is pin- "should be structured and se- pointing the exact source of the quenced so as not to interfere pollution. with Fiske's investigation. Baig said a government scien- It also said that none of the tist surveying the Taj had conclu- developed by the ASI have resto- reliable power supplies to Agra, to remove the need for diesel ge- nerators, and iversion of heavy vehicle traffic on a by-pass around the town. Yogendra Kaushal, president red many areas, but some parts of the National Chamber of In- have been permanently stained. dustries and Commerce in Agra, ASI chemist S.K. Singh said said the court action cost thou- some areas cleaned only last year sands of jobs and threatened the were already getting dirty. survival of small firms, which could not afford equipment cos- The Agra Development Autho- Stop People Touching ting as much as 10 times their an- rity (ADA) says it is developing a nual income. "green belt" round the Taj and "If you don't stop people touc- Many local industrialists say planning an outer ring road. Steps already taken include hing, it will become yellow they have been made scapegoats again," he said. "We can clean, for what they claim is greater pol- shifting a railway switching yard but if something is cleaned very lution churned out by a state- from near Agra's historic sand- frequently it is bound to get owned oil refinery 50 km (30 mi- stone fort, and limiting vehicle damaged. les) to the northwest at Mathura. access to the Taj itself. Most arguments still focus on The Supreme Court warned Critics say the ADA's ap- this month it might shut down proach is inadequate, slow and industrial air pollution. small-scale iron foundries and in- curb its emissions. Baig said there were about 405 the refinery if it failed quickly to piecemeal -- especially as boo- ming tourism is bringing and But Baig said monitoring had more visitors and traffic to the al- Agra area, plus a big glass indus- shown that sulphur dioxide le- ready congested city. try in nearby Firozabad -- all of vels were actually lower at Mat- "A lot of city planning has to be them fouling the air. hura than at Agra. "A much more done at a much more dense level India's Supreme Court last intense problem for the Taj is to cope with this. It needs politi- August ordered closure of 212 Agra itself, especially vehicles," cal will," Baig said. factories in the area, mostly she said. small iron and glass plants, until they installed approved pollution control equipment. numerable brick kilns in the About half to three quarters of them have reopened with the equipment, although state pollu- tion control office not yet checked wheter emissions are within offi- witnesses called to testify should ded the marble had lost some of cial limits. be given immunity over Fiske's its lustre. objections. But officials of the Archaeolo- Fiske has opposed any cong- gical Survey of India (AI), which ressional involvement, saying it the Taj, say there is no evidence is responsible for the upkeep of could compromise his own that acid rain from industrial investigation. Clinton said Whitewater hea- eaten into the marble surface. emissions of sulphur dioxide has rings in Congress would be a waste of money. No Major Change But he told reporters that a de- cision on hearings, which had been eagerly sought by congres- place," said R.K. Sharma, ASI's "No major change has taken The grand jury is examining sional Republicans, was not up to sury Department meetings invol- branch of government. (Reuter). ces there is some physical da whether White House and Trea- him but to Congress as a co-equal director of science. "In some pla- Australian Boy Acquitted mage like pitting. But that's quite common in any building which is more than 350 years old." Of "Sleepwalking" Murder mediate danger came from two Melbourne- Sharma said the biggest im- they would have been in a better main sources: very fine dust position to comment knowled- which collects under the arches of State Department's step geably about the secretary's boy's state of mind is sleepwal- the domed mausoleum, and the An Australian boy, said to king," said the counsel. The boy ravages of the estimated 5,000 McCurry said. The State Department, mean- He found it "curious' that the hain be sleepwalking when he of the gun discharging, he said. have been in a trance-like state was only awakened by the sound tourists, Indian and foreign, who while, took the unusual step of council, as sponsoring organisa- shot his father dead last year, Psychiatrists had told the visit the Taj every day. During his acquitted of murder on court the boy was not responsible les of sand, Sharma said tests Unlike bigger airborne partic- Christopher was lectured on the secretaries of state and the Coun- who could bring a little more Friday. for his actions because of his state had shown the fine dust contai- dangers of linking the two issues cil on Foreign Relations, bastion knowledge and light to the and warned the United States of the American foreign policy es- discussions." The 17-year-old boy shot his The prosecution said the boy rode the marble and gave it a yel- ned pollutants which could cor would suffer as much as China if tablishment, for faulting U.S. po- McCurry also rejected the ar- father in the head with a shotgun had been devastated by his mot- lowish tinge. it revoked Beijing's Most Favou- licy toward China. gument that human rights and as he lay on a couch in the family her's death from cancer weeks be- trade benefits should not be di- home in a Melbourne suburb last fore the shooting and he and his ple carving their names in the red Nation (MFN) status. Apart from vandalism by peo- rectly linked. April 4. father argued constantly. The boy's sister testified that stone, the sheer number of visi- of mind. The three ex-secretaries, Cy; "I'm confident that we will be rus Vance, Henry Kissinger and able to work through this and Lawrence Eagleburger, were "The problem happens to be The boy, aged 16 at the time of strengthen our relationship and part of a council symposium that is a policy set by the presi- the killing, cannot be named by her brother loved their father but tors is also taking its toll. our advocacy of human rights Tuesday that raised strong new dent that reflects the strong sup- law. We had pleaded not quilty to standards set by the father were to run a hand over the exquisite over the long run. That's what I doubts about linking human port of the United States Cong- murder and was acquitted by a impossible high. She also said the carving and stone inlay work in- think will happen," Clinton told a rights to trade benefits following ress. Two-thirds of the United Victorian Supreme Court jury. Christopher's trip to Beijing. news conference. He noted that a decision one extending MFM is still weeks away and promised "an enor mous effort to try to reconcile di- fferences between the two Few can resist the temptation father encouraged her brother to States Senate, over half of the Outside the court the boy's de- share his passion for weapons. side the monument. The buildup State Department spokesman House of Representatives, are in- fence counsel said his client had The boy told reporters outside of grime has turned many areas Mike McCurry said the council sisting that the president follow no memory of events leading to court he would resume his schoo- to a filthy brown, made worse by invited and then disinvited the through on the policy he articula- the shooting or the shooting ling and was aiming for a scholar- years of incense burning inside administration's top Asia expert ted in his May 1993 executive or itself. ship with the Australian Air Assistant Secretary of State der," he said. (Reuter). "The closest analogy to the Force. (Rtr). the tomb. Painstaking cleaning methods Baig said all industries should ultimately be moved out of the 1970's Official Report city, but they would have to be Kaushal said the government phased out gradually. "You can't just say: 'I'm shut- should implement other ideas to ting you down tomorrow," she protect the Taj recommended by said. "It's a human problem as an official report in the late well-you have to look at people's 1970s. These include provision of entire livelihood." (Reuter). TOURISM ACTIVITIES Visit Of Turkish Armed Forces Chief The chief of staff of the Turkish Armed Forced-General Dogan Gures recently visited Bali and stayed at Kartika Plaza Beach Hotel-Tuban. In the picture are Mrs. Gures, General Dogan Gures, Executive Assistant Manager Wayan Astawa and Public Relations Manager Violetta Simatupang.(). Color Rendition Chart 2cm 4cm