Edisi 20 April 2015 | International Bali Post

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I N T E R N A T I O N A L

I N T E R N A T I O N A L

16 Pages Number 87 7th year Price: Rp 3.000,-

Monday, April 20, 2015

Entertainment

Gwyneth Paltrow flunks food stamp challenge

WEATHER FORECAST Dps

23 - 32

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Monday, April 20, 2015 Indian farmers protest gov’t plans to ease land acquisition

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LOS ANGELES - Four days proved too much for Hollywood star showbiz network reported. One in seven Americans, or 46 Gwyneth Paltrow when she tried to get by on a $29 food-stamp budmillion people, live on what the get, only to give up when chicken and black licorice beckoned. The “Iron Man” and “Shakespeare in Love” star was challenged by celebrity chef Mario Batali to live on the equivalent of the average US government food stipend for low-income families. The goal was to raise funds and public awareness for the Food Bank For New York City, which provides millions of free meals to New Yorkers in need. With $29, Paltrow filled her grocery basket with a healthy-looking mix of eggs, black beans, lettuce, kale, a tomato, some avocados and corn tortillas. “As I suspected, we only made

it through about four days, when I personally broke and had some chicken and fresh vegetables (and in full transparency, half a bag of black licorice),” she wrote on her Goop.com blog Thursday. Giving herself a C minus for her efforts, Paltrow blamed income inequality between men and women for the difficulties that “hardworking mothers” face in feeding their families. Paltrow, a mother of two, was seen Tuesday at a Los Angeles film promotion event that featured with an $80-a-head prix fixe menu -- although it’s unclear if she ate from it, the E!

US government officially calls the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP. The US Department of Agriculture, which oversees SNAP, puts the weekly cost of food for a young family of four at between $151 to $247. If Paltrow, 42, was trying to prove the near-impossibility of living on food stamps alone, the point was missed by many critics on social media. “Looks like Paltrow did some conscious uncoupling from her food stamp week,” snickered one cynic on Twitter, riffing off the way she and Coldplay frontman Chris Martin labeled their 2014 divorce. (afp)

Ringo Starr, Green Day rock their way into Rock Hall CLEVELAND — Ringo Starr was ushered into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame with a little help from one of his famous friends. The mop-topped drummer who kept the beat for the Beatles, Starr was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a solo artist on Saturday night during a ceremony jammed with scintillating performances and touching moments. Starr was the last of the Beatles to be inducted for his individual work, getting in after bandmates Paul McCartney, John Lennon and George Harrison. He was always the fourth Beatle — John, Paul, George ... and Ringo — but now he’s been immortalized as a frontman. Starr was inducted along with Green Day, underground-icon Lou Reed, Joan Jett and The Blackhearts, soul singersongwriter Bill Withers, guitarist Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble, The Paul Butterfield Blues Band and The “5’’ Royales.

The 74-year-old Starr was inducted by McCartney, and then stepped to the podium and said: “My name is Ringo and I play drums” — as if anyone didn’t know. He was then joined on stage by Eagles guitarist Joe Walsh on “It Don’t Come Easy” before McCartney came out to play bass, the two living Beatles jamming again, to “A Little Help From My Friends.” With plenty of punk attitude and energy, Green Day thrashed its way into the Rock Hall. The Bay Area trio, which formed as teenagers and helped make punk rock radio friendly in the 1990s, briefly turned the star-studded event into one of their high-intensity shows with a powerful set of some of their most memorable hits. From the opening power chords of “American Idiot,” Billie Joe Armstrong, Mike Dirnt and Tre Cool had the crowd at Cleveland’s Public Hall dancing in the aisles.

More hotels in South Badung threat of water crisis

IBP/Eka Adhiyasa

Brash and belligerent, Green Day blasted onto the music scene just as Seattle’s grunge sound was growing stale. The band borrowed riffs from punk pioneers like The Stooges and Sex Pistols, flavored them with some power chords and pop hooks and helped redefine a genre. Reed was both daring and provocative as a songwriter and lyricist, pushing boundaries with ballads about forbidden subjects like drugs, prostitution and suicide. Reed’s songs like “Walk On The Wild Side,” ‘’Vicious” and “Heroin” remain vibrant today. Although he died in 2013, Reed continues to influence a young generation of musicians touched by his rebel ways. (ap) Billie Joe Armstrong, front, and Mike Dirnt, from Green Day perform at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony Saturday, April 18, 2015, in Cleveland.

Rapid growth of hotel rooms in South Badung triggers wasteful use of underground water. Consequently, it is not impossible for the area relied to produce regionally generated revenue (PAD) will be hit by water crisis.

MANGUPURA - The increasing number of hotel rooms in South Badung, and the groundwater depletion that they bring, means that this region, which has been relied on to produce “regionally generated revenue” (PAD) will be hit by water crisis.

AP Photo/Mark Duncan

The number of rooms available in the richest county in Bali has ballooned to 61,206 rooms. There are 98 star hotels that account for 16,360 rooms. In 2009 there were 505 non-star hotels, but by 2014 this number had already increased to 855 hotels with a total of 34,815 rooms. The problem is that elite area accommodations do not buy there water from the Municipal Waterworks (PDAM), but instead drill into the water table (ABT). If there are more parge scale projects, such as the mega project proposed for Benoa Bay, the ground water will most certainly be severely depleted. Secretary General of the Indonesia Hotel and Restaurant Association (PHRI) of Badung Chapter, Gusti Kade Sutawa, argues that a water crisis will obvioussly have an impact on the sustainability of

tourism. For this reason, he hopes there will be no more mega projects built in South Badung. “We know the area is already over saturated with hotels, so building anymore poses a threat to water sources, because nearly all such projects tap into the groundwater,” said Kade Sutawa when contacted over the weekend. According to Sutawa, tourism industry players in South Badung have been trying to reduce their use of underground water by increasing the amount of water that they get from the Municipal Waterworks. A number of five-star accommodations have been managing their waste water so that it can be reused. “The tourism industry has been using this breakthrough method (of recycling waste water-Ed),” he said. However, he added that the pro-

cessed water has yet to be used for bathing, cooking and drinking because of the negative connotations associated with such water. “Processed waste water is only intended for watering lawns and for the fire hydrants. It has not been used for drinking water because it comes from urine and other waste, so it is inappropriate for human consumption,” he explained. Sutawa, who is also Operations Manager for the Puri Saron Group, hopes that the government is preparing regulations to prevent anymore hotels from going up. “If the number of hotel rooms continues to rise, it is not impossible that South Badung will face a drought. If this happens, tourism will go bankrupt,” he predicted. A member of the Badung Tourism Promotion Board (BPPD), I Putu Anom, said that Bali’s carrying capacity for tourism, has been noted in a study made by the Center for Tourism Research at Udayana University in 2000. “The number of hotel rooms that the

study predicted up until 2010 has been far exceeded. A water shortage has occurred due to the rampant development of the tourism sector as well as housing construction in general,” he explained. This Chairman of the Indonesian Tourism Intellectual Association (ICPI) of Bali Chapter, suggests that the government conducts a study about the carrying capacity of Bali, so that development can be done with proper planning and in relation to the results of such a study. “Currently a water crisis has already hit South Bali. Therefore, the government needs to exercise extreme caution in issuing any more permits for accommodations, particularly for projects that require lots of water and land,” he said. In the meantime, the Regent of Badung A.A. Gde Agung said that he has arranged for clean water to be supplied to meet the demands of people in South Badung. The clean water service of Penet River has been running properly through funding assistance from the central

government, while the pipeline construction is being financed by the province of Bali and Badung County. The development of this drinking water provision system (SPAM) is meant to meet the needs for water in South Badung. “The multi-year project has not been fully completed as it still faces constrainst in the matter of the pipeline installation. After completion, it will allow for 300 liters of water per second. South Badung requires a total of 150 liters,” he explained. Additionally, the government of Badung is also building a clean water facility at Tegeh Sari. Hopefully, South Badung can start enjoying this clean water in April 2016. (kmb27) News can also be heard in “Bali Image” at Global Radio FM 96.5 from 9.30 until 10.00 am. Listen to Global Radio FM at http:// globalfmbali.listen2myradio.com or live video streaming at http://radioglobalfmbali.com and http:// ustream.tv/channel/global-fm-bali.


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