Sunday, March 4, 2012

ELIAN'S LONG ORDEAL.(MAIN)(Editorial)

The glimpse of America thatyoung Elian Gonzalez has gotten, culminating with the scene in Miami on Thursday, is of a political culture that defies the rule of law far more than it follows the law.

Civil disobedience is one thing. This country has a proud tradition of it. But to embrace civil disobedience requires accepting the consequences of the law. The zealots who are so determined to keep this 6-year-old boy in this country, and away from his sole surviving parent, don't honor the spirit or rule of law at all. In Little Havana, pledges of nonviolence are countered with cries of ``War! War! War!''

To even try to make the case for keeping Elian here is to …

KB layoffs.(Brief article)

Rumors that KB Home would be reducing staff as a result of the housing slowdown are true. As of mid-June, newspapers in Las Vegas, Southern California's Inland Valley, and Tucson, Ariz., had reported …

Pakistan chief justice: End judicial corruption

The Pakistani chief justice whose ouster sparked political turmoil called for an end to judicial corruption upon returning to his office Tuesday, a day after the president _ who had long blocked the judge's reinstatement _ reached out to reconcile.

Meanwhile, the capital remained tense after a suicide bombing killed an officer at a police station housing intelligence facilities _ a reminder of the militant threat to this shaky, U.S.-allied nation.

Supporters of Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammed Chaudhry threw rose petals on his car as it entered the Supreme Court compound. Chaudhry technically resumed work Sunday, the day after the justice who had replaced him …

CONSTITUTION REBOOT

Fini?

The Congress, whenever two-thirds of both Houses shall deem it necessary, shall propose amendments to this constitution; henceforth, the "necessary" stipulation contained in the previous clause shall be defined as the moment or circumstance in which conditions have become too outrageous, unsustainable or just plain f* * *ing stupid for this nation to survive unless rectified in a pronto fashion. Amendments which must be considered in the immediate future iest these United States go down the crapper are as follows:

" - Amendment XXVIII, specifying a real person as having one brain, one mouth and one vote each, thereby eliminating any other entity (to wit: a …

THEY MISSED A GM BOAT.

In March, Microsoft Corp. had the kind of golden opportunity that makes auto suppliers salivate: a special invitation to strut its stuff before an A list of General Motors executives who influence millions of dollars in purchasing decisions.

Instead of sweeping the big spenders off their feet, however, Microsoft's self-described "digital nervous system" - software and networking technology to power businesses into the future - had a nervous breakdown.

The event was a special two-day private showing of advanced technology at GM's Technical Center in suburban Detroit, where a handful of top suppliers such as Robert Bosch Corp., Motorola Inc., Siemens …

Dangerous obsession with being skinny.(News)

BYLINE: Joanne Hichens

With Donatella Versace's public acknowledgement that her daughter, Allegra, has anorexia, the disorder is again in the spotlight.

Once more calls are made for the fashion industry, and Haute Couture designers of wildly impractical clothes worn for show by rail-thin models, to take a stand against the abuse of the body as girls and women try to achieve "size-zero", the dress-size with a waistline to fit an eight-year-old.

Although there's no doubt that the fashion industry and media fuel the desire to be thinner, the causes of eating disorders lie far deeper than exposure to images of skinny celebs and ultra-thin super-models.

Eating disorders are characterised by the need to "use" food, either by bingeing and purging, or starving, as a means to suppress pain and anger, or whichever unbearable underlying feelings exist that cannot be faced in reality. Anorexia in particular is sustained by the irrational obsession with thinness, and the distorted view of the body as fat, no matter how underweight the sufferer …

Saturday, March 3, 2012

STRIKE WILL BE COSTLY TO MANY BONILLA WOULD LOSE $31,148 PER DAY.(SPORTS)

Byline: RONALD BLUM Associated Press

NEW YORK Bobby Bonilla, with a $5.7 million salary this season, stands to lose the most if baseball players strike in two weeks.

Bonilla would lose $31,148 each day of a strike, a total of $1,619,672 if a walkout continues for the final 52 days of the season.

Chicago White Sox pitcher Jack McDowell, who gained a $5.3 million salary in arbitration despite losing his case, is next at $28,692 per day, a total of $1,506,011, followed by Roberto Alomar of Toronto, Roger Clemens of Boston and David Cone of Kansas City, who each would lose $27,322 per day, a total of $1,420,765.

But the star players say they'll strike to defeat a salary cap even though they have the most to lose.

``There's no way the players are cracking,'' Clemens said.

No players would be paid during a work stoppage, according to lawyers for both the Major League Baseball Players Assocation and management's Player Relations Committee. For each day of a …

Suicide blast at mosque in Pakistan kills 30

An attacker wearing an explosive vest blew himself up inside a packed mosque during Friday prayers, killing at least 30 and wounding 40 more in northwest Pakistan, officials said.

No one claimed responsibility for the attack, but a local government official blamed the Taliban and said it was probably retaliation for a Pakistani military offensive against militants in the Swat Valley region.

It was unclear whether any military figures or prominent anti-Taliban local officials were in attendance at the Sunni Muslim mosque in the village of Haya Gai in Upper Dir, …

PLUS SPORTS

Russian Breaks Butterfly Record Denis Pankratov of Russia broke a9-year-old world record in the men's 100-meter butterfly today at theEuropean champions with a time of 52.32 seconds. Pankrotov, 20,bettered the mark of 52.84 set by American Pablo Morales at the 1986World Championships. Morales' record was the oldest men's swimmingrecord on the books. The Russian also set the 200 meters butterflyrecord this year at a meet in Canet, France, with a clocking of1:55.22. Street, Lobo Nominated for Award World Cup downhill champion PicaboStreet and women's college basketball player of the year Rebecca Lobohave been nominated for the Women's Sports Foundation Sportswoman ofthe Year Award. …

Research from S.B. Scruggs and co-researchers yields new findings on cardiology.

According to a study from the United States, "There is little direct evidence on the role of myosin regulatory light chain phosphorylation in ejecting hearts. In studies reported here we determined the effects of regulatory light chain (RLC) phosphorylation on in situ cardiac systolic mechanics and in vitro myofibrillar mechanics."

"We compared data obtained from control nontransgenic mice (NTG) with a transgenic mouse model expressing a cardiac specific nonphosphorylatable RLC (TG-RLC(P-). We also determined whether the depression in RLC phosphorylation affected phosphorylation of other sarcomeric proteins. TG-RLC(P-) demonstrated decreases in base-line …

KIDS' SUMMER ADVENTURES BEGIN AT TEN BROECK MANSION PROGRAM BY KATHLEEN DOOLEY STAFF WRITER.(LIFE & LEISURE)

Lars Ojukwu, a seventh-grader at Philip Livingston Magnet Academy, Albany, is spending time this summer at the Ten Broeck Mansion, a Federal-style house and museum in the middle of the city.

For the second successive year, the Arbor Hill youngster is part of the mansion's three weeks of Summer Adventures for Kids.

``I love it. This year, I made a sculpture out of old things. We took other people's treasures and used things we picked up on a walk on the grounds, and it turned out beautiful,'' said the 11-year-old.

In addition to doing artwork with sculptor Jed Cleary, kids visited Albany Center Galleries and held an exhibition opening.

This week, Ojukwu is working on …

Phelps using $1M bonus to start swim foundation

Michael Phelps will put his $1 million bonus to good use, announcing plans to start a foundation promoting water safety and youth swimming. Joe Gromek, president and CEO of Warnaco, Speedo's U.S. parent company, presented a check to Phelps on NBC's "Today" show Tuesday.

The company, which has sponsored Phelps since he was 16, promised him a $1 million bonus if he tied or broke Mark Spitz's record for most gold medals at a single Olympics. The swimmer eclipsed the mark by winning eight golds at the Beijing Games _ seven of them with world-record times.

Company spokeswoman Audra Silverman said Speedo …

Eureka, an LMA.(limited marketing agreement, KVIQ)

Miller Broadcasting Co. has entered into a limited marketing agreement with The Ackerley Group for operation of Eureka, Calif., CBS affiliate KVIQ(TV). The Ackerley Group, which owns or operates nine TV stations, including KCBA(TV) …

BP happy with new oil-leak effort, but no promises

Underpromising with hopes of overdelivering, BP said Sunday that it is making progress on what could prove its most effective effort yet to contain the Gulf oil leak, but cautioned that the verdict could be several days away.

A new cap being placed atop the gusher is intended to provide a tight seal and might eventually allow the oil giant to capture all the crude leaking from the well for the first time since an April 20 oil rig explosion set off the environmental crisis. But several prior failed attempts to stop the leak have made BP PLC careful to keep expectations grounded.

"We're pleased with our progress," said BP senior vice president Kent …

Friday, March 2, 2012

Chunghwa Looking for Mainland China - Analyst Blog

Chunghwa Looking for Mainland China - Analyst Blog

Chunghwa Telecom Co. Ltd. (CHT), the largest integrated telecommunications service provider of Taiwan, is gradually moving toward Mainland China for future growth. The company is all set to enter the Chinese wireless value-added services market in 2011. Chunghwa will establish two joint ventures. The first one will be with Spring House Entertainment Tech, a Taiwan-based record level and animated cartoon producer, and the second one with local Chinese partners for offering mobile value-added services.

After introducing home grown 3G TDS-CDMA technologies in China, wireless value-added services became the major growth driver for the telecom operators. Chunghwa is desperately pursuing this new opportunity. The company already invested in online music platform Kkbox, Spring House Entertainment Tech, and digital map developer Kingwaytek. Chunghwa is also negotiating with China Telecom Corp. Ltd. (CHA) to enter into the Chinese market. The company is also eyeing the lucrative $33.3 billion Chinese cloud computing market.

Chunghwa is aggressively promoting its mobile data and value-added services.� The company is rapidly losing revenue in its fixed-line services (both domestic and international) segment.Chunghwa competes in a tough environment with Taiwan Mobile Company and Far EasTone Telecommunications Co. Ltd., the two other major service providers. We expect fierce competition going forward as the Chinese giant, China Mobile Ltd. (CHL), has purchased a significant stake in Far EasTone Telecommunications.

Chunghwa has witnessed significant subscriber growth for its mobile Internet services, due to the rising demand for 3G mobile broadband and smart-phones in Taiwan. Mobile subscriber base at the end of 2010 was 9.68 million, up 4.4% year over year. Out of this, 3G wireless subscriber base was 5.43 million, comprising an impressive 56.1% of total mobile subscriber base. In 2010,mobile-VAS revenue of Chunghwa was $364.6 million, up 30.8% year over year. The company expects revenue from this segment to rise further by almost 35% in 2011 to $490 million.


"CHT" Free Stock Analysis: Buy? Sell? Hold?
"CHL" Free Stock Analysis: Buy? Sell? Hold?
"CHA" Free Stock Analysis: Buy? Sell? Hold?
Zacks Investment Research

For the sake of The Job

Seven years ago a series of articles began in the New Yorker thatsoon set readers to marveling. "Cop's Diary" was by a streetpatrolman about his labors in some of the worst neighborhoods of theSouth Bronx, and they not only described in high relief a fiercepersonal war against crime but also showed extraordinary sensitivityand introspection. Most of all, they were literate and literary,their prose burnished to an eloquent sheen. The writer used the nomde plume "Marcus Laffey."

His real name is Edward Conlon, and he has now given us a massive562-page memoir that is an extended essay on the cop's life, BlueBlood (Riverhead, $28.95). It is an astonishing book, full …

MEDICAL TEAM SAVES LIFE WITH 'COOL' PROCEDURE

JOINT BASE BALAD, Iraq, April 14 -- The U.

S. Air Force issued the following press release:

Members of the Air Force Theater Hospital emergency staff here recently performed an unconventional medical procedure to help save a Soldier's life.

The 332nd Expeditionary Medical Group staff used therapeutic hypothermia to ensure the patient, who had suffered cardiac arrest, would fully recover.

RAMADI, IRAQ (0-1 HOUR)

The incident started March 29 at a forward operating base outside of Ramadi, Iraq, when a Soldier attempted to discharge a large extinguisher. According to Capt. (Dr.) Will Porr, the 703rd Brigade Support Battalion, Ramadi Battalion Level II surgeon, when the victim discharged the bottle, the built-up pressure may kicked the bottle into his chest. The blunt force trauma likely caused his heart to stop.

Dr. Porr said there were no witnesses and estimated the patient may have stopped breathing for approximately three minutes before first responders arrived. The Soldier didn't have a pulse, but medics who performed cardiopulmonary resuscitation were able to restart his heart. Within an hour he was medically evacuated by helicopter from Ramadi Battalion Level II center to Joint Base Balad's Air Force Theater Hospital, 63 miles to the northeast.

According to the American Heart Association, more than 95 percent of cardiac arrest victims die before reaching the hospital. A victim's chances of survival are reduced by seven to 10 percent with every minute without CPR and defibrillation. Brain death and permanent death start to occur in just four to six minutes after someone experiences cardiac arrest.

AIR FORCE THEATER HOSPITAL (1-13 HOURS)

When the patient arrived, the emergency medical staff started its initial assessment.

Capt. (Dr.) Paul Haggerty, the 332nd Expeditionary Medical Operations Squadron Intensive Care Unit flight commander, notified Army Maj. (Dr.) Daniel Carlson, the 332nd Expeditionary Medical Group cardiology consultant, about the trauma patient. During Dr. Haggerty's assessment, Dr. Carlson volunteered his thoughts regarding the potential management of the patient's case.

"The patient was comatose upon arrival but was promptly resuscitated, which made him an ideal candidate for therapeutic hypothermia to improve his chances for a good neurologic outcome and return to full function," said Dr. Carlson, who is deployed from Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, D.

C.

According to Dr. Haggerty, therapeutic hypothermia is a process in which the body of a patient who was successfully resuscitated after sudden cardiac arrest is cooled to 89-93 degrees. By cooling the body, the brain's metabolic requirements are reduced and, in turn, this helps patients to recover neurologic function. Also, reducing the body temperature decreases tissue swelling and damage to the brain from interrupted blood flow during cardiac arrest.

"There have been several studies which show that patients cooled for a period of 24 hours have improved neurologic outcomes and improved mortality," Dr. Haggerty said. "This procedure is becoming more widely instituted in the U.

S. as part of resuscitative care for patients who have survived cardiac arrests."

Although they had never before been a part of this procedure, medical staff members here were receptive to the idea. Dr. Haggerty, who is deployed from Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, turned to appropriate medical sites on the internet for solutions.

After referring to the University of Pennsylvania's website for post-cardiac resuscitation care, Dr. Haggerty quickly implemented the protocol and directed the majority of the medical care.

"We didn't have cooling blankets or the high-tech equipment the stateside hospitals have," said Col. Paul Gourley, the 332nd EMDOS commander. "Our medical technicians were running around looking for coolers, while the third-country national dining facility workers were getting ice from wherever they could to cool this person."

Capt. Matthew Ockander, the 332nd EMDOS operation room anesthesiologist, who is deployed from Travis Air Force Base, Calif., performed the initial sedation and paralysis of the patient. This prevented the patient from shivering, which would inhibit the cooling process.

Army Maj. Robert Bejnarowicz, the 332nd EMDOS operation room neurosurgeon, who is deployed from Tripler Army Medical Center, Hawaii, then drilled a hole in the patient's head so a tool could be inserted to monitor his intracranial pressure for swelling of the brain.

Members pitched in wherever they could. Colonel Gourley, who is deployed from MacDill Air Force Base, Fla., took to blending ice so the medical staff could flush the patient's stomach and bladder with chilled fluids, while others filled baggies to pack around the body. Along with chilled intravenous fluids, the patient's core temperature was monitored with an intranasal thermometer. Senior Airman Casey Wilson, a 332nd EMDOS medical technician, who is deployed from Lackland Air Force Base, Texas, carried a 50-pound fan from the basement gym to the intensive care unit to assist the evaporative cooling process.

"By taking basically no actual resources to make this happen is a testament to the ingenuity of Airmen and the ability to adapt and overcome anything that was put in front of them," Colonel Gourley said. "There was easily more than 30 people involved to save one life."

CRITICAL CARE AIR TRANSPORT TEAM (13-18 HOURS)

After stabilizing the patient's condition, 12 hours had passed since he arrived at Balad. At that point, emergency medical staff determined the patient needed to be transferred to Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany.

The 332nd Operations Group critical care air transport team was activated. The CCATT's role is to transport critically ill or injured patients out of theater and to a higher level of care, as close to the time of injury as possible. They strive for 24 hours or less, and in this case, the patient was delivered in less than 18 hours.

The CCATT is deployed from Eglin Air Force Base, Fla., and is made up of, emergency medicine physician; Maj. Kirk Smith, critical care nurse and Master Sgt. Brandi French-Thomas, a respiratory therapist.

According to Capt. (Dr.) Jeff St. Amant, a CCATT emergency medical physician, transporting the patient presented some challenges. For one thing, the patient was transported with more than 500 pounds of life sustaining machines.

"He was on a ventilator, a cardiac monitor, invasive blood pressure monitoring, seven different continuous medication infusions and an intracranial pressure monitor," said Dr. St. Amant, who is deployed from Eglin Air Force Base, Fla.

The captain lauded the 332nd EMDG staff on using hypothermia to provide the patient the best chance of recovering and regaining normal function.

"This protocol is only used under very specific circumstances and he met the criteria," Dr. St. Amant said. "The Balad hospital did an outstanding job with this patient and had him cooled to 90 degrees Fahrenheit (normal body temperature is 98.6 Fahrenheit.)"

AIR POWER (13-18 HOURS)

To keep the patient's body temperature cooled, the CCATT used ice packs, refrigerated intravenous fluids and the help of the 729th Airlift Squadron C-17 Globemaster III loadmasters, who are deployed from March Air Reserve Base, Calif.

"We asked them to turn the heat off in the back of the aircraft to keep it cold," Dr. St. Amant said. "It made for a chilly flight, but all of the crew, passengers and other patients understood that it was necessary for the patient."

According to Lt. Col. Ben Hackworth, a 729th Airlift Squadron C-17 pilot, the longer a patient is in flight the more chances there are for complications. So when there are critical patients on board, it is not uncommon for them to operate at faster than normal airspeeds.

"Patients are prepped for the duration of the flight, but medical resources are limited," Colonel Hackworth said. "In this case, we were informed by medical personnel that any time saved would benefit the patient. So we expedited as best we could."

On a typical flight, pilots operate at speeds between Mach .74 (548 mph) and .76 (563 mph) which provide the greatest fuel savings when level at cruising altitude. On this particular mission, due to the expressed critical nature of the patient, the C-17 crew operated at Mach .80 or 593 mph, which saved about 30 minutes, Colonel Hackworth noted.

"We are permitted to request 'high speed' operations below 10,000 feet (mean sea level) in certain airspace," he said. "The German approach controllers approved high speed operations during the final phase of our arrival into Ramstein Air Base, Germany."

Marked with countless invisible barriers and international boundaries, pilots cannot fly in a straight line. With critical patients on board and to shave time, the C-17 crew continually pressed air traffic controllers for the most direct routing to Germany.

LANDSTUHL REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER, GERMANY (MARCH 30)

Once in Germany, the patient was handed over to the care of the Landstuhl medical team March 30.

Colonel Gourley's flight back to Iraq was delayed 24 hours, so he had the opportunity to witness the payoff of his medical team's efforts. The therapeutic hypothermia protocol required the patient to be cooled for a specific timeframe, then have his core temperature warmed up slowly.

"He was heavily sedated and not moving, but as they slowly brought his temperature up he started to wake up," Colonel Gourley said. "He even asked to use the 'commode.' When patients get ornery, that's a good thing."

The medical team at Landstuhl was ecstatic and considered this a great save, he noted.

"The fact that this guy was on death's door, looking horrible, to sitting up in bed and knowing his name ... therapeutic hypothermia has a lot of benefits," Colonel Gourley said.

HOMESTRETCH (APRIL 2)

As the patient's condition improved, he was transported to and released from Brooke Army Medical Center, Texas, to recover with family members.

According to Dr. Haggerty, the patient's favorable outcome and success story can be attributed to everyone involved in his care.

"His care required enormous teamwork across a continuum of care, and his survival is a testament to the training and dedication of the men and women in the U.

S. military," Dr. Haggerty said. "This is definitely one of the most rewarding patient cases in my career, and is something I will never forget and feel privileged to have been a part of." For any query with respect to this article or any other content requirement, please contact Editor at htsyndication@hindustantimes.com

Iraq planning blocked, general says; Rumsfeld refused to let military study how to deal with invasion aftermath.(Main)

Byline: McClatchy-Tribune

FORT EUSTIS, Va. - Long before the United States invaded Iraq in 2003, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld forbade military strategists to develop plans for securing a post-war Iraq, the retiring commander of the Army Transportation Corps said Thursday.

In fact, said Brig. Gen. Mark Scheid, Rumsfeld said "he would fire the next person" who talked about the need for a post-war plan.

Rumsfeld did replace Gen. Eric Shinseki, the Army chief of staff in 2003, after Shinseki told Congress that hundreds of thousands of troops would be needed to secure post-war Iraq.

Scheid, who is also the commander of Fort Eustis in Newport News, retires in about three weeks.

Scheid's comments are further confirmation of the version of events reported in "Cobra II: The Inside Story of the Invasion and Occupation of Iraq," the book by New York Times reporter Michael R. Gordon and retired Marine Corps Lt. Gen. Bernard E. Trainor.

In 2001, Scheid was a colonel with the Central Command, the unit that oversees U.S. military operations in the Mideast.

On Sept. 10, 2001, he was selected to be the chief of logistics war plans.

On Sept. 11, he said, "life just went to hell."

That day, Gen. Tommy Franks, the commander of Central Command, told his planners, including Scheid, to "get ready to go to war."

A day or two later, Rumsfeld was "telling us we were going to war in Afghanistan and to start building the war plan. We were going to go fast.

"Then, just as we were barely into Afghanistan Rumsfeld came and told us to get ready for Iraq." Scheid said he remembers everyone thinking, "My gosh, we're in the middle of Afghanistan, how can we possibly be doing two at one time? How can we pull this off? It's just going to be too much."

Eventually other military agencies like the transportation and Army materiel commands had to get involved.

They couldn't just "keep planning this in the dark," Scheid said.

Scheid said the planners continued to try "to write what was called Phase 4."

CAPTION(S):

PHOTO

Rumsfeld

Outlook: Cable & Wireless

CAN IT really only be four months since Dick Brown walked out ofCable & Wireless? At the time, the general view was that the Texan'stwo-year tenure as chief executive had been a success. Now thepicture looks rather different. A 23-page lawsuit, filed by C&W in acourt in Delaware, places a huge question mark next to the USinternet business it bought from MCI Worldcom for $1.7bn lastSeptember. At the time Mr Brown, with his usual restraint, hailedthe deal as a "huge leap". It now appears he was sold a pup. SinceC&W took control revenue growth has slowed, service quality hasslumped, and customers have been leaving in droves.

C&W claims this is all MCI Worldcom's fault. The US group hasallegedly breached the terms of the agreement with C&W by nottransferring enough staff, attempting to poach customers, andgenerally making life difficult for the new owners. However, thisraises questions about Mr Brown's supposedly legendary deal-makingskills. Signing an agreement that relied so heavily on MCI - oncedescribed as a law firm with a satellite dish on the roof - wasperhaps asking for trouble.

All this means relatively little for Mr Brown, safely ensconced atEDS' headquarters back in Texas (although EDS shareholders may wantto take another look at the strategic alliance Mr Brown signed withMCI Worldcom, to great acclaim, back in January). For C&W, however,it further stretches the odds of it surviving as an independentcompany. Sure, C&W may win the case. But in the fast-forward worldof the internet C&W has already lost vital ground to its rivals. Noamount of damages will ever enable it to recover that ground.C&W shares lost less than 3 per cent of their value yesterday,reflecting the market's belief that they are trading at a discount tothe value of C&W's assets. Mr Wallace may have little choice but torealise that value by breaking up the company. If he doesn't do it,somebody else might.

OUTWOODS HOMES PLAN GETS A BIG 'NO!' ; MORE THAN 250 TURN OUT TO REGISTER THEIR FEELINGS OVER DEVELOPMENT CHURCH: Packed with disgruntled and passionate residents

HUNDREDS of residents descended upon a local church to fight tosave the Outwoods amid fears that it will be used as a building sitefor new homes.

Holywell Free Church, in Berkeley Road, was packed withdisgruntled and passionate residents who cast their votes to savewhat they called a precious piece of countryside.

Turn to page three

HUNDREDS of residents descended upon a local church to fight tosave the Outwoods amid fears that it will be used as a building sitefor new homes.

Holywell Free Church, in Berkeley Road, was packed withdisgruntled and passionate residents who cast their votes to savewhat they called a precious piece of countryside.

More than pounds 1m of taxpayers' money was spent on consultancyfees and consultation papers as part of the former Government'splans for new homes in the borough.

Outwoods was identified as a site by Smith Stuart Reynolds onbehalf of Fox Strategic Land and Property, that could accommodatehomes to meet the growing population, including 5,000 homes in theOutwoods and Woodthorpe.

It was included in the area's Local Development Framework planalong with other controversial sites such as Garendon Park.

But under the new Localism Bill, a new consultation process hasbeen put in place and this week's Area Forum was aimed at givingresidents the chance to cast their votes on green spaces they wishto protect.

More than 250 people arrived at the venue - with scores queuingat the door for a place.

Charnwood planning officer Richard Bennett, said the Office forNational Statistics had stated that to support the growingpopulation in Charnwood 15,000 new homes needed to be built before2028.

He told a jam-packed room "the need for housing is not actuallydropping but increasing."

However, residents made their feelings extremely vocal - witharound 30 people standing to have their say.

Roger Chapman, of Coniston Crescent, said: "All these things youare putting forward is old evidence."

He argued that the council should be looking at whether peoplecould afford new homes.

His comments were met with applause as were comments aboutflooding issues and looking at brownfield sites to build homesrather than open countryside.

Ron Lockwood, chairman of South West Action Group, said: "TheOutwoods are heavily used by walkers and runners, by the permanentpopulation and students."

He added that Olympic medal winner Seb Coe and world championPaula Ratcliffe had trained there. "It is valued for thetranquillity and calm that it brings to people from their dailystress."

Concerns were raised about the future of Loughborough by MatthewFrost of Valley Road if every development in the town was turneddown.

He said: "If all you say is no, no, no, this community willwither. No-one will bring industry here, because they cannot affordto live here."

When asked by council representatives, how many people wereagainst building on the Outwoods, the whole room raised their hands,as well as a handful of students led by president of the Students'Union Lucy Hopkins. - For those who were unable to make their viewsknown at the meeting, residents can log onto http://www.lsr-online.org/greenspaces/Residents without access to the internetshould can contact the Better Places Team at Leicestershire CountyCouncil, for more information.

Hundreds turn out to give Outwoods plan a big 'no'

Big fish have something to fear as Atlantic Telecom snaps up the minnows

ATLANTIC Telecom is a relative tiddler in the communicationsocean. But it appears to be focusing well on the niches where it cando maximum damage to the big fish.

The possibly belated decision that it would targetsmall andmedium sized businesses, probably with up to about 10 or so phonelines, rather than residential or big business, narrows that focusfurther.

At present, BT still has about 80-85 per cent of SME accounts,and many other larger competitors, such as the cable companies,Kingston Communications, Thus, or Cable & Wireless, are focused moreon big business in focused areas.

This is partly because of the cost of providing direct telecomsand internet connections - to run cables past business premises orhomes can cost pounds 500,000 for every 1,000 reached, for example.

But Atlantic has the advantage of using high-speed radio linksinstead, which can be installed at a tenth of the cost, or GBP50,000 per 1,000 customers, making it much more viable to go for thesmaller customer in further-flung locations.

So far, the group only has licences to use radio links in the UK,but it may apply to do so in France, although Germany has sold allits licences for the time being.

Analysts calculate it needs only 5 or 6 per cent penetration inthe SME market of any specific geographical area in which itoperates to break even, and Atlantic is currently ahead of scheduleat about 4.7 per cent. Moreover, its average revenues per SMEcustomer were up 4.3 per cent last year, to GBP 86.95 per month.

Similarly, the technology Atlantic is applying to its new high-speed wireless internet and voice package, launched in April, shouldalso give it an advantage over the competitors, at least for awhile.

Its service, giving unlimited internet and voice call use tohomes for GBP 49 a month and to businesses from GBP 100 a month, canoperate at 2.4 megabytes a second.

In layman's language, that's greased lightning compared to the 56kilobytes at which the average modem operates on a normal BT lineand means internet pages can be downloaded virtually instantaneouslyinstead of the minute or so wait normally needed. It is also muchfaster than the ADSL alternatives coming through.

Atlantic's shares have underperformed the telecoms sector byabout 24 per cent so far in 2000 (although they have outperformed by158 per cent since January 1999).

With a fortress-strong balance sheet laden with cash, theexecutive chairman, Graham Duncan, is entitled to feel the gapshould close quickly.

Vic: The main stories in today's Melbourne newspapers =2


AAP General News (Australia)
08-13-2004
Vic: The main stories in today's Melbourne newspapers =2

THE AGE

Page 1 - History and high hope will be on the same team as Athens receives the Olympic
baton from Sydney; Australian authorities would have issued tougher travel warnings on
Bali before the bombings there had the United States passed on key intelligence; Delta
Goodrem in hospital after party to launch Games campaign.

Page 2 - Convicted murderer Peter Dupas should receive a second life sentence for the
depraved killing of sex worker Margaret Maher, a court heard.

Page 3 - The Bracks government has bowed to union pressure and removed an ALP-linked
consultant it hired for $495,000 from a senior public service role; Feared flu epidemic
fails to show up in Victoria.

World - Indonesian prosecutors have again failed in their attempt to convict soldiers
accused of gross human rights abuses; A long-awaited report on the abuse of Iraqi detainees
at Abu Ghraib prison will recommend that more than two dozen soldiers be disciplined.

Business - Telstra shareholders will receive the first instalment of the promised three-year
$4.5 billion capital return through an off-market share buyback and a special 6c dividend;
Voracious consumers help put Coles Myer sales over the moon.

Sport - Rodney Eade may have missed out on the Adelaide coaching job but is firming
in favouritism for the Hawthorn post; Exciting Hawthorn mid-fielder Luke Hodge yesterday
announced he had re-signed with the club for the next three years.

AAP bw/cmc

KEYWORD: FRONTERS VIC 2 MELBOURNE

2004 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

AAP National News Wire Round-Up for Breakfast, April 3


AAP General News (Australia)
04-03-2004
AAP National News Wire Round-Up for Breakfast, April 3
Breakfast Round-Up: HIGHLIGHTS OF THE AAP RTV FILE AT 0430

Spain Train (MOCEJON)

Spain's sending in the army to guard its railways after finding a bomb on a high-speed
track that may contain the same explosives used in last month's Madrid train bombings.

Interior Minister ANGEL ACEBES says police will check the 350 kph Madrid-Seville line
on which the bomb was found kilometre by kilometre.

They'll then use helicopters and army vehicles to guard key tracks.

The 12-kilograms of dynamite packed in a bag was found near the central city of Toledo
and defused safely.

But the scare disrupted travel as millions of Spaniards prepared to leave cities for
the Easter week holidays and came as a new session of parliament opened after last month's
elections.

There's a possibility the explosives, although not uncommon, could be of the same type
used in the pre-election bombings of four Madrid commuter trains which killed 191 people
on March 11.



Spain Release (MADRID)

A Spanish judge, meanwhile, has freed three men arrested over the Madrid train bombings.

After overnight consultations, Judge JUAN DEL OLMO ordered the release of Syrian detainees
WALID ALTARAKI and MOHAMAD BADR DDIN AKKAD; and Moroccan FOUAD ALMORABIT.

Sixteen people are in custody in connection with the March 11 attacks, 15 of whom have
been charged.



Terror alQaeda (WASHINGTON)

A televised report says an alleged al-Qaeda planning memo lists specific nationalities
and occupations to be targeted, including Australians, Americans and British citizens.

The document, shown on NBC's Today program in the US, was described as a planning memo
from al-Qaeda that lists who terrorists should target.

The report says it ranks nationalities to target by importance, starting with Americans
and British, followed by Spanish, Australians, Canadians and Italians.



Budget (SYDNEY)

A pre-Budget spending splurge by the Federal Government will start next week with a
$100 million early childhood package.

The Sydney Morning Herald reports that the splurge will be followed soon after by research
and innovation measures costing $1 billion a year.

And there's also a major program to upgrade the Pacific and Hume highways to be announced.

New funding for extra nursing home places, additional child-care places, income tax
cuts and maternity payments are expected in the May 11 budget, which is seen as the beginning
of an election campaign.



Tax (SYDNEY)

Meanwhile, The Weekend Australian reports a plan for several years of big tax cuts
will spearhead the Howard Government's election campaign.

The cuts would start with a downpayment using an estimated $7 billion budget surplus next year.

The report says the tax cuts will be unveiled in the budget next month and will be a priority.

The paper says quotes senior ministers as saying the campaign will be presented as
a choice between the government's tax cuts and Labor's extra spending on services.

They say Labor's plan will be funded on higher taxes.



Indon Bashir (JAKARTA)

Indonesian police will bring suspected Jemaah Islamiah spiritual leader ABU BAKAR BASHIR
in for questioning next week.

The move comes as officials continue to look at mounting a fresh terrorism trial against him.

Police tried to question BASHIR at Salemba prison last night and asked for him to be
shifted to police headquarters in central Jakarta.

But the cleric refused and will now be moved on Wednesday morning.

The fiery Islamic cleric is due to be released from his Jakarta jail on April the 30th
after an appeal to Indonesia's highest court last month.



Iraq (FALLUJA)

Iraqis in Falluja have condemned the mutilation of four Americans by people in their
town, but warned today more bloodshed will follow if US forces respond too harshly.

A jubilant crowd in Falluja, known for its hardline resistance to the US-led occupation,
burned and kicked the corpses of the contractors, dragging them through the streets.

Two Iraqis have meanwhile been killed after a suicide bomber blew himself up in the
municipal council building in the northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk.



Terror Guantanamo (WASHINGTON)

The Pentagon says fifteen more people have been transferred from a detention centre
for suspected al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters at a US naval base in Guantanamo Bay in Cuba.

It says they've been freed in their home countries.

The Pentagon says the detainees were from Afghanistan, Turkey, Tajikistan, Sudan, Iraq,
Jordan and Yemen.



Mideast (JERUSALEM)

Israeli Prime Minister ARIEL SHARON has turned up the heat on arch-foe YASSER ARAFAT,
warning the Palestinian leader's not immune from assassination.

But SHARON's comment has earned a strong rebuff from Washington.

At least 20 Palestinians have meanwhile been wounded in clashes with Israeli police,
who stormed one of Islam's holiest sites to tackle stone-throwing demonstrators.



Cyprus (ATHENS)

Greece says the fate of Cyprus now rests squarely with the island's two ethnic communities,
but suggests it sees little to recommend a UN-backed reunification plan they'll vote on
this month.

Greek Prime Minister COSTAS KARAMANLIS says he'd tried hard to forge a compromise at
talks this week with Turkey and Turkish Cypriots.

But the UN blueprint that's emerged has differed little from drafts rejected by Greek
Cyprus and Athens.

Greece's main objections focus on the plan's provisions for Turkish and Greek troops
to remain on the island at least until 2018.



AND BRIEFLY IN NEWS . . . . .




Former Ansett staff could get a further $85 million from the sale of the airline's assets.




Shell says a fire which broke out at its refinery in Sydney's west last night isn't
expected to affect production and is being investigated.




Taiwan's High Court has deferred ruling on an opposition demand to annul President
CHEN SHUI-BIAN'S narrow election victory and hold fresh polls.




A Singapore man has been sentenced to 42 years in prison after pleading guilty to cheating
four banks out of $A91 million to fund his high-stakes gambling habit.




The adult entertainment industry has rejected a bid by Australia's strippers' union
to create an award for striptease artists, exotic dancers and topless bar staff.




New York City public schools will allow students to wear clothes with political slogans
after settling a lawsuit with a girl who was suspended for wearing a Barbie-is-a-Lesbian
T-shirt.




HERMAN -- the world's first genetically modified bull -- has been put down in the Netherlands
aged 13, due to arthritis.



AND IN SPORT . . . . .



SWIM AUST (SYDNEY)

LINDA MACKENZIE has become the first Australian woman in 20 years to win the 200 metres,
400 metres and 800 metres freestyle at the one national swimming championships.

The Mackay marvel completed the treble with victory in the 800 metres in Sydney last
night after MICHAEL KLIM failed in his quest to gain an individual berth at the Athens
Olympics.

The dual Olympic gold medallist was seventh in the final of the 50 metres freestyle
tonight with BRETT HAWKE and ASHLEY CALLUS finishing one-two.

GEOFF HUEGILL and ADAM PINE locked up Olympic spots in the 100 metres butterfly final
while South Aussies MELISSA MORGAN and FRANCES ADCOCK will fly to Greece for the 200 metres
backstroke.



MOTOR V8 (EASTERN CREEK, SYDNEY)

Ford driver RUSSELL INGALL has held off a rejuvenated MARK SKAIFE to set the fastest
time in practice for round two of the V8 Supercar series at Eastern Creek.

INGALL'S one minute, 32.5459 seconds was nearly four-tenths of a second quicker than
SKAIFE'S Holden.



SOCCER ENGLISH RANIERI (LONDON)

Chelsea's under-fire coach CLAUDIO RANIERI has been named the English Premier League's
manager of the month for March.

Despite being under pressure to retain his job at Stamford Bridge, RANIERI has presided
over a run of three Premiership wins which have put the club into second place in the
league behind Arsenal as well as a place in the quarter-finals of the Champions League.


ENDS BULLETIN

AAP RTV as

KEYWORD: BREAKFAST ROUND-UP

2004 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

NSW: Sydney mayors racking up large credit card bills


AAP General News (Australia)
01-18-2004
NSW: Sydney mayors racking up large credit card bills

SYDNEY, Jan 19 AAP - Council chiefs were racking up extravagant credit card bills to
buy overseas plane tickets and jewellery, the Daily Telegraph reported today.

An investigation by the Sydney paper under Freedom of Information revealed the mayors
and general managers of 13 councils had annual credit card bills of up to $40,000 dollars.

The most lavish spending was by former South Sydney Mayor John …

IBM, GE to sell building and computer security package

BRIAN BERGSTEIN, AP Technology Writer
AP Worldstream
09-19-2003
Dateline: NEW YORK
Companies will be able to tighten their security by linking their computer networks with their building monitoring systems as part of a new service coming from IBM Corp. and General Electric Co.

The service, which IBM and GE planned to announce Friday and begin selling this fall, would let companies impose security measures that might seem like common sense, but are hard or even impossible if computer networks and physical monitoring systems are separate.

By connecting those systems, a computer network could know that once an employee had gone home for the day _ because, say, he swiped a badge past an electronic reader that let him into the parking garage _ no one should use his name and password to log on to a computer in the building.

Or once another employee arrived in the morning, the network would know not to grant access to someone trying to log in from her home computer.

Similarly, an office security system could refuse to let an employee into one building if the computer network registered that she was using her computer in another building at the moment.

IBM and GE believe their service will help companies better guard against theft of passwords and electronic ID badges and prevent unauthorized access by employees.

"It gives both systems visibility of what's going on in the other world," said Ray Blair, a vice president for business development for IBM Global Services. "That would alert you to infractions you wouldn't see before."

The service will combine IBM's computer network management technology with security equipment and software made by GE's Interlogix subsidiary. The companies will share revenue generated by the project.

Bruce Schneier, founder of Counterpane Internet Security Inc. and author of "Beyond Fear: Thinking Sensibly About Security in an Uncertain World," said some companies probably have jury-rigged their own combinations of online and physical security systems. But he said he was unaware of anyone making a linked network commercially available on a widespread basis.

Schneier strongly praised the idea, saying the service would be especially useful in investigations of malicious company insiders. He noted, however, that it might be too expensive for all but the most security-conscious companies, like banks and brokerages.

___

On the Net:

http://www.ge-interlogix.com

http://www.ibm.com/services

Copyright 2003, AP News All Rights Reserved

Thursday, March 1, 2012

Qld: Police search for video store bandits

00-00-0000
Qld: Police search for video store bandits

BRISBANE, April 23 AAP - Police are searching for two machete-wielding bandits whoheld up a video store in Brisbane's west last night.

The men, both wearing masks, entered the Redbank Plains Video Ezy store at about 8.35pm(AEST) and threatened a male attendant.

A police spokesman said the men forced the employee to hand over the money before fleeingthe Shannon Street store.

Both offenders were described as Caucasian and wearing long-sleeved sweat shirts and track pants.

Anyone with information should contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 33 000.

AAP ved/mg/br

KEYWORD: VIDEO

Fed: Govt under fire over bulk-billing rates =2

00-00-0000
Fed: Govt under fire over bulk-billing rates =2

Senator Patterson told ABC Radio: "I said it's disappointing, we're looking at theissue of access and affordability."

"It's no good just hiding behind and building up bulk-billing rates which you can doand get them back up to levels when we first came in and last year and the year before,"

she said.

"But what that did was hide inequalities.

She said it hid the fact people in areas with fewer doctors were not being bulk-billedwhile the service was freely available in the cities.

Senator Patterson denied there was a deliberate policy to run down bulk-billing tosupport a scrapping of Medicare.

"What I want to do is make sure we have fairness, we have equity and we have reasonableaccess," she said.

The minister said she was not advised of the declining rates of bulk-billing in December2001 and made moves to boost the number of doctors in rural and regional areas once shelearned of the figures.

"I was concerned when I got the first figures, I've been looking at it, I'm working on it.

"I'll work on the way that increases access and equity ... these things always taketime and of course they have to fit into budgetary cycles."

Mr Smith said Prime Minister John Howard was again trying to run down Medicare havingfailed while in opposition.

"John Howard couldn't destroy Medicare and bulk-billing through the front door in the1980s when he was opposition leader because he couldn't get public support," he said.

"Now he's happy by process of stealth and attrition to see that occur through the backdoorand that's what these documents prove."

AAP sal/pw

KEYWORD: MEDICARE 2 CANBERRA

What Australian newspapers say Tuesday, Dec 10

00-00-0000
What Australian newspapers say Tuesday, Dec 10

EDS: corrects date in headline

SYDNEY, Dec 10 AAP - The commonwealth's additional $368 million drought package hasthe important critical aims of helping farmers survive the ordeal and get back to workwhen it ends, The Daily Telegraph says in its editorial today.

The government hopes to address the problem of facing farmers restarting productivework through the cheap, low-interest loans it will subsidise.

Banks should show a flexibility equal to that of the government by tailoring loansto suit these special circumstances, with farmers bled dry, it says.

The Courier-Mail says the commonwealth relief package carries the promise that thosesuffering the worst of the drought will no longer have to put up with the added frustrationof bureaucratic inertia.

Initial reaction to the package has been mixed, with some saying loan subsidies areuseless for those primary producers who have seen the drought leave them with no cashat all to pay off their debts.

But overall, the newspaper says, the new package is welcome in that it recognises thisdrought as having a more acute impact than many that have gone before.

What all levels of government should do now is get serious about achieving policy reformin areas such as water management and tax to help ease the pain of the next drought.

Water property rights should be the foundation of a viable market for trading waterrights, The Australian Financial Review says.

This in turn is just one of a range of measures needed to secure the long-term futureof agriculture in this country, it says.

Sustainable agriculture should mean farms that are better able to cope with the ravagesof the drought. Not that ad hoc drought assistance measures such as the package unveiledyesterday would never be needed, just that smaller packages would be required less often.

The SA police force has no right to escape public scrutiny by censoring informationreleased to the media, says The Advertiser.

From today radio stations will not be able to warn the public about serious crimesand information will be kept secret to be possibly released well after the event.

"The police force exists to serve and protect the community. The desire of its rulingranks to censor details of violent crime ... should not over-ride this service value."

The change is an intolerable abuse of power and the police minister should intervene,the newspaper says.

The heavy income tax rates should be axed to give taxpayers a fair go, The Australian says.

High tax rates which were meant for the better-off are hitting close to 1 million ordinaryAustralians whose middling incomes are catapulting them into the 47 cent-in-the-dollarrange.

"Under this supposedly free enterprise government, the tax burden has reached record highs.

"Is it any wonder that high tax rates are sapping the motivation to work hard, anddriving increasing numbers of Australians overseas?"

Australia loses out as the high tax rates that cut in at low thresholds force manyhighly skilled expats to think twice about returning.

British American Tobacco is showing an absence of compassion by demanding million-dollarlegal fees from the family of former smoker Rolah McCabe, the Herald Sun says.

The company's demand that her family pay its legal costs arising from their failedattempt to sue the tobacco giant smacks of more than asking for legal rights, the newspapersays.

"It suggests a determination to intimidate anyone else tempted to point the fingerat its potentially lethal product," it

says.

NSW Labor has taken an encouraging first step in cleansing the party of branch stacking,stripping ALP membership from 57 Wollongong individuals, The Sydney Morning Herald says.

But this is a first step only and, measured against its extent across the state, amodest one, it says.

"Branch stacking is practised in all political parties but ALP sections made it a fearsomesword for personal or factional supremacy.

"Through the installation of people who care little or nothing for the organisation'score beliefs, it allows perpetrators to manipulate policies and offices, particularlyprized endorsements for parliamentary elections."

The rules have just got a lot tougher and Labor must impose them even-handedly, thenewspaper says.

Otherwise, it will fail not only its genuine members and committed voters but democraticprocesses themselves.

AAP rs

KEYWORD: EDITORIALS (REISSUING)

Box: Kane heads Australia's bid for triple gold

00-00-0000
Box: Kane heads Australia's bid for triple gold

By Paul Mulvey

MANCHESTER, Aug 1 AAP - Feisty bantamweight Justin Kane leads Australia's charge towardits best boxing performance in Commonwealth Games history with typical fightin' talk.

"I've come here for gold and that's what I'm gettin'," the 20-year-old declared afterwinning today's semi-final against local boy Mark Moran and a vocal home crowd.

Joining Kane in the finals on Saturday are fellow Sydney Olympians Paul Miller andDaniel Geale as they bid to better Australia's 1962 Commonwealth performance of two goldand two bronze.

Kane has been Australia's most aggressive and consistent boxer in Manchester.

But he faces another of the standout fighters of the tournament in Canadian AndrewKooner in what should be one of the best fights of the Games.

He vowed to make up for his immature attitude and quarter final loss in Sydney withgold in Manchester and believed his semi was a tougher hurdle than the final simply becauseof the home crowd.

He admitted he was worried the judges were being influenced late in the fight as Moraninched his way back with the crowd cheering every punch he threw.

"The Canadian is looking good, but that was a harder fight tonight just because ofhome crowd decision," Kane said.

"It was harder to score points than it will be against the Canadian."

Even so, he won't be changing his charging, attacking approach which has so far earnedhim two early stoppages and tonight's 26-24 win.

"I won't change my fight plan, it's worked this far," the Maroochydore concreter said.

"I've got one of the strongest punches in the 54kg division, I try using my power andsome of my skills, it always seems to work."

Just as Kane did against Moran, middleweight Miller knows he must beat the crowd asmuch as England's Steven Birch on Saturday.

"The coach says whenever you fight someone in their backyard, you have to do more thanwin, you have to win well, so I've got it all against me," he said.

Miller snuck into the 75kg final after Canadian Michael Walchuk threw a desperate lastpunch with two seconds left to level their semi final at 25-25 after four rounds.

The 23-year-old Queenslander then had an excruciating wait in the referee's hands beforehe was given the decision 92-84 on countback.

Geale had the most convincing passage into the final when he extended his record overNew Zealander Daniel Codling to 3-0 with a 27-13 win.

But the mild mannered Launceston welterweight again took a couple of rounds to warmup before coming home strongly in the final two rounds, a habit he can't afford to continueon the final against South African Kwanele Zulu.

"I'm going to have to have a look at that," he said.

"But I've come home in the last couple of fights which is what I've needed to do andit's proved the fitness is there.

"In the next one, I might have to do four hard rounds instead of two or three. He'sa tough, hard strong boxer and very fit for the four rounds."

Light heavyweight Ben McEachran couldn't make it four Australian finalists when helost his semi today to pick up the bronze.

AAP pmu/daw/nh

KEYWORD: GAMES BOX NIGHTLEAD

VIC: Truck driver faces court over fatal crash

00-00-0000
VIC: Truck driver faces court over fatal crash

MELBOURNE, Feb 21 AAP - A truck driver accused of speeding and running a red lightbefore being involved in a fatal collision in Melbourne's west appeared in court today.

Matthew Harold Kahir, 27, was allegedly driving a fully-articulated "B-double" semi-trailerladen with meat products and household cleaning equipment when he drove through a redlight on the Western Highway in Deer Park in April last year.

It is alleged that …

NSW: SMS messaging to soar over Christmas


AAP General News (Australia)
12-22-2001
NSW: SMS messaging to soar over Christmas
DONE



Mobile phone users are expected to rack up huge bills over the festive season, with
telcos predicting millions of text messages will be sent on Christmas Day alone.

Australia's largest telco Telstra expects more than three million SMS messages will
be transmitted through its mobile network alone on December the 25th.

That's a huge rise from just 20,000 sent three years ago.

Youngsters stuck at home with family are expected to be the biggest users, sending
messages to their friends.

AAP RTV stu/sal/tb/rt/dl/ge

KEYWORD: SMS (SYDNEY)

2001 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Qld: Mixed feelings in "Skaseville" -- aka Port Douglas


AAP General News (Australia)
08-10-2001
Qld: Mixed feelings in "Skaseville" -- aka Port Douglas

By Steve Connolly

BRISBANE, Aug 10 AAP - "Skaseville" has mixed feelings about the death of Australia's
most wanted corporate crook.

Christopher Skase may have been a hounded fugitive during his decade in Majorca, but
his previous life in Australia was marked by big business deals and lavish parties among
the old white shoe brigade in Queensland.

Skase left Melbourne for Queensland in 1985 and the Qintex chairman was a key figure
in the glitz and glamour that was a feature of those heady times of the late 1980s in
the Sunshine State.

Qintex built resorts from the Gold Coast to Port Douglas, and even became a major sponsor
of the then Brisbane Bears Australian Rules club.

More than a decade later following his death from stomach cancer at the age of 52,
there were differing views among Queenslanders about a man who made such a big impact
in a relatively short time.

Port Douglas Tourist Association chairman Angelo Marras said Skase's Sheraton Mirage
Hotel, Mirage Marina and Mirage Country Club had put the far north Queensland township
- once dubbed "Skaseville" - on the tourist map.

Mr Marras said: "There's a love-hate relationship in the town. Most people are pleased
with what he did but there are some who don't not agree with the way he did it."

There was even talk of a memorial for Skase, but this suggestion was dismissed by Douglas
Shire mayor Mike Berwick.

Cr Berwick said most residents of Port Douglas were struggling to decide whether Skase
was a crook or a local benefactor.

"I think because of what's left behind he will be remembered very fondly by Port Douglas,"

he said.

Former Queensland premier Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen, whose National Party was feted by
Skase, said the failed businessman did good things for Queensland "in the early days".

"Then he ended up in disaster," Sir Joh said.

Skase also had some sympathy from the Gold Coast, where former Australian Rules star
Warwick Capper remembered him as a down-to-earth guy driven to death by the Australian
government and the media.

"I think he's just a nice down-to-earth guy who had a good business brain but over-capitalised,"

Capper said.

The chief of two opulent Queensland resorts, built by Skase 15 years ago, also paid
tribute to his legacy.

"He had strong points and weaknesses. The weaknesses have been well documented. The
strong points are an ability to create something," said Mirage Resorts CEO Ric Cameron,
who runs the Sheraton Mirage hotels on the Gold Coast and at Port Douglas.

"At the end of the day you are left with two world class assets employing a thousand
Australians," he said. "No one could afford to build them now."

But Skase also had many enemies, particularly among creditors of the collapsed Qintex group.

His death this week sparked a flurry of letters to major newspapers, one of the most
scathing coming from Doug Wait, in the Brisbane Courier Mail, who wanted details of Skase's
burial so he could "book some dancing lessons and make the necessary travel arrangements".

AAP sc/ph/br

KEYWORD: NEWSCOPE QLD (NEWS ANALYSIS)

2001 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Fed: Pensioners get two per cent bonus, not a cut: Vanstone


AAP General News (Australia)
02-25-2001
We're sorry, but we were unable to retrieve some of the text for the requested document.
Please contact technical support by phone at …

NSW: Submarine designer lodges protest


AAP General News (Australia)
12-29-2000
NSW: Submarine designer lodges protest

SYDNEY, Dec 29 AAP - The Swedish designer of Australia's $5.1 billion Collins-class
submarines has lodged an official protest claiming the government improperly shared design
secrets with the United States, it was reported today.

Kockums AB has sought the verdict of an arbitrator in its complaint that the Navy sent
one of the submarine propellers to the US for testing, The Sydney Morning Herald reported.

Submarine propeller technology is a closely guarded secret because it has a major bearing
on submarine noise emission, the paper said.

It said Kockums was also understood to have lodged complaints about the unauthorised
use of a range of other intellectual property in the submarines.

AAP gl/hu

KEYWORD: COLLINS

2000 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

NSW: Long prison sentences to stay, says Carr


AAP General News (Australia)
02-28-2000
NSW: Long prison sentences to stay, says Carr

Prisoners are unlikely to get reductions to tough sentences imposed by New South Wales
courts, despite calls by jail chaplains to reduce time served by 10 per cent.

NSW Premier BOB CARR has dismissed claims by the chaplains that the current system
of punishment is fuelled by revenge and doesn't rehabilitate prisoners.

He says that's certainly not the case and that government will continue to use long
sentences to send a message to criminals, particularly drug dealers, that their behaviour
won't be tolerated.

He says recommendations yet to be …

NSW; Main stories in today s Sydney newspapers = 2


AAP General News (Australia)
12-27-1999
NSW; Main stories in today s Sydney newspapers = 2

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH:

Page 1 - Hijacker's threat to bomb Indian Airlines jet in Afghanistan; Seinfeld gets married.

Page 2 - 1,000 jobs to be axed at Mitsubishi Australia.

Page 3 - Failed music man Chris Marshall is back on TV selling pianos.

World - Hubble space telescope repaired and released by Shuttle crew; Jakarta military
lawyers fly to Dili.

Sport - India refuses to play under lights at MCG; Mini Magna mauls the mighty maxis
in Sydney-to-Hobart race.

MORE ao

KEYWORD: FRONTERS NSW 2 SYDNEY

1999 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

FED: Unemployment drops to lowest level since 1990


AAP General News (Australia)
08-13-1999
FED: Unemployment drops to lowest level since 1990

Prime Minister JOHN HOWARD has described the drop in Australia's unemployment rate as
magnificent, but says more reforms are still needed.

The jobless rate dropped two percentage points to a nine-year low of seven per cent in
July.

And employment rose by 17,800 -- meaning just under 8.8 million people are now in work.

But Mr HOWARD says more needs to be done, and has called on the Senate to pass laws to
entrench junior wages and to exempt small firms from unfair dismissal laws.

The participation rate dropped slightly to 63 per cent, but Employment Minister PETER REITH
says that doesn't mean the number of disillusioned job seekers is increasing.

Instead, he says, falls in official interest rates mean fewer women now have to join the
workforce.

The data helped spur the Australian dollar nearly half a US cent higher yesterday as the
market had expected unemployment to stay at the June level of 7.2 per cent.

AAP RTV rmm/mfh/shm/jn/jms/rt

KEYWORD: JOBS (CANBERRA)

1999 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

QLD: Police concern for missing woman = 2


AAP General News (Australia)
02-19-1999
QLD: Police concern for missing woman = 2

The spokeswoman said later Ms Tubaro had been found safe and well late tonight.

AAP jfs

KEYWORD: TUBARO 2 BRISBANE (REOPENS)

1999 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

NSW:Police issue warning for flood cleanup


AAP General News (Australia)
02-05-2012
NSW:Police issue warning for flood cleanup

SYDNEY, Feb 5 AAP - Flood victims in northern NSW have been urged to take extra care
during the big cleanup.

As floodwaters recede across the region, thousands of people are returning home after
spending nights in evacuation centres.

And many of them face a daunting task - some 300 homes at Moree alone have been waterlogged,
as well as a number of rural properties.

NSW police on Sunday issued a warning about floodwater contaminated with sewage and
the risk of bacteria, viruses and parasites.

The greatest danger is infection …

NSW:NSW firies battling bushfire in Blue Mtns


AAP General News (Australia)
02-05-2011
NSW:NSW firies battling bushfire in Blue Mtns

Fire crews are battling a bushfire in the New South Wales Blue Mountains.

The Rural Fire Service was alerted to the blaze at Megalong Valley at midday today.

Crews are now on the ground supported by aerial assistance.

RFS spokesman BRENDAN DOYLE says it's too early to say how big the bushfire is.

Meanwhile …

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

FED:Father of fake bomb girl is very relieved


AAP General News (Australia)
08-16-2011
FED:Father of fake bomb girl is very relieved

The father of Sydney bomb hoax victim MADELEINE PULVER says today's arrest in the United
States comes as a great relief.

BILL PULVER has told reporters it's been a baffling and frightening experience for
his family, and he's hoping it's now the beginning of the end of their traumatic ordeal.

An FBI SWAT team arrested 50-year-old Australian PAUL "DOUG" PETERS at his ex-wife's
Kentucky home early this morning Sydney time.

He's expected to face kidnapping, break and enter and other offences over the attack
on 18-year-old MADELEINE PULVER at her family's luxury Mosman home nearly two weeks ago.

The HSC student endured a terrifying 10 hours until police managed to detach a device
locked around her neck by a masked intruder - and found it did not contain explosives.

Mr PULVER says the family has been overwhelmed by the love and support they've received
from friends, neighbours, MADDIE's school and the local community.

He says the media too, has generally been professional and respectful, and has only
ever portrayed his daughter as the bright, happy young woman she is, who for reasons they
still don't understand has had her life turned upside down by a dreadful experience.

AAP RTV vpm/klm/jmt

KEYWORD: BOMB FATHER (SYDNEY)

� 2011 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

NSW: Ocean liners to pay historic visit to Sydney tomorrow


AAP General News (Australia)
02-19-2007
NSW: Ocean liners to pay historic visit to Sydney tomorrow

SYDNEY, Feb 19 AAP - History will be made tomorrow when the prestigious Queen Mary
2 enters Sydney Harbour.

Too long to berth at Circular Quay and too tall to sail under the Sydney Harbour Bridge,
the Cunard ocean liner is the biggest moving object ever to visit Australia, Cunard president
Carol Marlow said today.

The $1 billion Queen Mary 2 will enter Sydney Harbour at 5.45am (AEDT) tomorrow and
will dock at the Garden Island naval base.

Later in the day, it will be joined by little sister, Queen Elizabeth 2, with the occasion
celebrated with a fireworks display.

It is the first time the two ships have docked in Sydney together since World War II,
Ms Marlow said.

"Tomorrow, we are going to have a slightly more uplifting and celebratory occasion,"

Ms Marlow told reporters on Sydney Harbour.

"These two vessels will be back in Sydney Harbour again and we are absolutely delighted
to be here."

Ms Marlow estimates that the visit of the two ships will inject around $1 billion into
Sydney's economy.

The Queen Mary 2 will leave Sydney to continue her maiden world voyage at 11pm (AEDT)
tomorrow while the Queen Elizabeth 2 will continue on to Brisbane and Cairns.

AAP dmc/cj/hn/imc/cdh

KEYWORD: LINERS

2007 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.