среда, 29 февраля 2012 г.

NSW:Elderly man critical after house fire


AAP General News (Australia)
08-11-2011
NSW:Elderly man critical after house fire

An elderly man is in a critical condition after his home in Sydney's west caught fire.

A neighbour woke to the sound of an alarm about 11pm (AEST) yesterday, then saw smoke
coming from a ground floor window of the home in The Horsley Drive, Weatherill Park.

Fire crews forced their way into the two-storey home, where they found a 78-year-old
man in the hallway.

He was treated by paramedics for extensive burns, and is in a critical condition in
the intensive care unit of Concord Hospital.

The fire's believed to have been caused by an electrical fault and is not being considered
as suspicious.

AAP RTV bc/wjf/wf

KEYWORD: FIRE (SYDNEY)

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

NSW: Pair charged over thefts worth $500,000


AAP General News (Australia)
02-18-2006
NSW: Pair charged over thefts worth $500,000

SYDNEY, Feb 18 AAP - Two men have been charged over the alleged theft of approximately
$500,000 worth of goods, including trail bikes, computers and spa baths, from commercial
premises in rural NSW.

A 42-year-old man was arrested at a business in Campbelltown, in Sydney's south-west,
shortly before 9am (AEDT) and taken to Campbelltown Police Station, police said.

The man, from Hoxton Park, was charged with five counts of take and conveyance and
four counts of break, entering and stealing.

He was released on conditional bail and is due to face Campbelltown Local Court on March 15.

A 41-year-old was arrested at his Tahmoor home and taken to Camden Police Station.

He was charged with receiving stolen goods as well as break, entering and stealing.

He was granted conditional bail and is due to appear in Camden Local Court on April 12.

The charges relate to break-ins between November 2002 and December 2004 at premises
in Wollongong, Tuncurry, Mittagong, Unanderra and Wagga Wagga.

It's alleged the property, which includes trail bikes, computers and spa baths, was
taken using a stolen Pantech truck.

The charges follow Strike Force Marungul, which was set up in April 2005 to investigate
a string of linked commercial robberies throughout rural NSW and ACT over the past four
years.

AAP af/arb

KEYWORD: THEFT

2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

NSW:Cakes too good to eat at show


AAP General News (Australia)
04-14-2011
NSW:Cakes too good to eat at show

The first of many blue .. red and white ribbons have been awarded at Sydney's Royal
Easter Show .. but the cakes look too good to eat.

Thousands have flocked to the first day of this year's show at Olympic Park.

A story book cake featuring Red Riding Hood and a wolf has taken out first prize for
the most creative miniature cake .. while a cake in honour of The Lion the Witch and the
Wardrobe has won third prize in the Creative Sugar art section.

About 900-thousand people are expected to walk through the gates of the show between
now and the final day .. on April 27.

AAP RTV bc/tr/tm

KEYWORD: SHOW (SYDNEY)

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

NSW:More flooding woes for NSW regions


AAP General News (Australia)
12-27-2010
NSW:More flooding woes for NSW regions

Residents of Eugowra and Canowindra .. in regional New South Wales .. are facing possible
evacuations today .. following heavy rainfalls across the state.

The central west and northeast regions copped downpours of 61 millimetres over the
weekend .. prompting authorities to issue flood warnings for the two towns.

The SES expected the Mandagery Creek in Eugowra to peak around midnight (AEDT) and
likely bursts it banks .. warning residents in low-lying areas they may be asked to evacuate.

At Canowindra .. several roads and bridges were being closed .. and low-lying properties
were likely to be inundated after the Belubula River reached five-and-a-half metres around
five o'clock last night.



The SES was also on standby to help in the state's northeast .. warning of possible
flooding on the Tweed .. Richmond and Wilson river valleys.

AAP RTV bzs/sw/psm/

KEYWORD: FLOODS NSW (RE-ISSUING)

� 2010 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

FED:Snapshot of campaign Tuesday, August 17


AAP General News (Australia)
08-17-2010
FED:Snapshot of campaign Tuesday, August 17

Daily snapshot of the 2010 election campaign, Tuesday, August 17



GILLARD:

Campaigned in northern and central Queensland, in the seats of Herbert, Dawson and
Flynn - hitting Townsville, Mackay and Emerald all before 2pm.

Promise: Spruiked the government's economic credentials and national broadband network.

Quote: "He's still running from a fair dinkum debate on the economy." - on Abbott.





ABBOTT:

Addressed the National Press Club, after joint press conference with his treasury and
finance spokesman Joe Hockey and Andrew Robb. Later flew to Narooma on the south coast
of NSW for campaigning in the bellwether seat of Eden-Monaro with candidate David Gazard.

Promise:

+ a scheme to fund infrastructure development through bonds rather than through government
borrowing.

+ Cash bonuses for those on welfare and aged under 30 if they get - and keep - a job,
plus more funding if they relocated for work.

Quote: "This is part of my big ambition for our country. My ambition is for us to make
the journey from welfare state to opportunity society."





OTHERS:

+ Debate over another leaders' debate continued, with Gillard wanting a one-hour head-to-head
debate and a one-hour, individual public forum on Wednesday night; Abbott wanting a half-hour
debate tonight, public forum tomorrow night.

+ Jessica Rudd's debut novel Campaign Ruby, featuring a prime minister who is rolled
by his female treasurer, launched in Brisbane. It was written before her father Kevin
was ousted by Ms Gillard.

+ A complaint made to police against the Liberal Party candidate for the marginal NSW
central coast seat of Robertson Darren Jameson has been withdrawn.





AAP jlw/was/dep

KEYWORD: POLL10 SNAPSHOT TUESDAY

� 2010 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Vic: Time for action on health reform now: Gillard


AAP General News (Australia)
04-09-2010
Vic: Time for action on health reform now: Gillard

Federal opposition leader TONY ABBOTT says Victorian Premier JOHN BRUMBY has done a
pretty good job running hospitals without Commonwealth interference.

The federal government's trying to get approval from the states to become the dominant
health funder by removing 30 per cent of GST revenues.

Mr ABBOTT's told the Nine Network it's understandable that Mr BRUMBY doesn't want the
Victorian system put at risk to try to address problems in NSW and Queensland.

AAP RTV ees/af

KEYWORD: HOSPITALS ABBOTT (MELBOURNE)

2010 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

NSW: Mother who killed kids depressed but not mentally ill


AAP General News (Australia)
08-26-2009
NSW: Mother who killed kids depressed but not mentally ill

By Adam Bennett

SYDNEY, Aug 26 AAP - A severely depressed Sydney woman who poisoned her children then
tried to kill herself knew what she was doing and can't claim the defence of mental illness,
a court has been told.

The woman administered rat poison and an unidentified pink liquid to her three-year-old
daughter and four-year-old son, before smothering them and trying to hang herself in the
family's Canley Heights home in February last year.

Her distraught husband, whom she had accused of having an affair, returned home to
find a trail of blood leading to his dead children.

The woman, who cannot be named for legal reasons, has pleaded not guilty in the NSW
Supreme Court to the two murders by reason of mental illness.

In evidence at the trial, which began on Monday, various forensic psychiatrists disagreed
over whether her depressive state was so severe she did not know what she was doing.

But in her closing address to the judge-only trial in Sydney, crown prosecutor Margaret
Cunneen said the woman's depression was not so extreme it made her incapable of distinguishing
right from wrong.

A suicide letter to her parents seeking forgiveness for the killings showed she was
still capable of "sophisticated reasoning" and was aware of the gravity of her actions,
Ms Cunneen argued.

"There was a clear intent ... to blame the unfaithful husband for the course of action
the accused took," she said.

"This is very clearly a case where the accused's ability to judge her actions was substantially
impaired.

"(But) she did not have such a defect of reasoning that she was incapable of reasoning at all."

Suicide letters written by the woman have raised questions about her lucidity at the
time of killings.

In a note to her husband, the woman blamed his affair for her actions, and claimed
to be protecting her son and daughter by taking their lives.

"I have to go away because I don't want to witness the situation in which my husband
betrayed me," she wrote.

"I don't want to take away (my children's) lives ... however ... living without love,
to me life is just only selfishness and betrayal."

Earlier on Wednesday, forensic psychologist Dr Olav Nielssen told the court the mother's
severe depression could be considered "psychotic", though he admitted using the term in
a colloquial sense.

"Through her view of the world in a seriously depressed state she saw her life as over,
and her actions in taking her childrens' lives therefore right ... because she didn't
want them to suffer," Dr Nielssen said.

The woman's lawyer Richard Pontello disputed crown arguments that revenge against her
husband was a motive for the killings.

The children's father, whom Ms Cunneen described as a "living victim" of the killings,
had bought flowers for a female friend days before the killings.

"There is definitely no assertion of revenge (in the letters)," Mr Pontello said in
his closing statement.

"Anger and revenge are very different things.

"In her defence, the accused believed what she was doing was in the best interests
of her children."

Justice Clifton Hoeben reserved his decision to a later date, ordering the accused
be kept in custody.

AAP ab/evt/jl/de

KEYWORD: POISON WRAP

2009 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Fed: Aust urged to use carrot not stick on Fiji


AAP General News (Australia)
04-17-2009
Fed: Aust urged to use carrot not stick on Fiji

By Sandra O'Malley, Diplomatic Correspondent

CANBERRA, April 17 AAP - When it comes to Fiji, Australia appears to be heeding the
old adage: you catch more flies with honey than with vinegar.

Despite uproar over the recent turn of events that saw the military leadership of Commodore
Frank Bainimarama further entrenched in Fiji, Australia is committed to a softly, softly
approach.

Since the coup of 2006 that put Bainimarama into power, Australia has been calling
long and loudly for Fiji to return to democracy.

Instead, Bainimarama assumed greater powers, just days after the Court of Appeal ruled
his government was illegal.

In the wash-up from the court ruling, President Josefa Iloilo scrapped the constitution,
sacked the judiciary and reappointed Bainimarama until 2014.

Australia admits Fiji is effectively a "military dictatorship" but remains reluctant
to take a stick to the island nation, fearful it will harm ordinary Fijians who are already
dealing with a deteriorating economy.

"Our objective is to try and bring the regime to account, not to hurt the people of
Fiji," says Foreign Minister Stephen Smith.

Unlike Europe, which is now hedging on offers of aid for Fiji's ailing sugar industry,
Canberra has spurned calls for trade or sporting sanctions.

It has resisted suggestions that it should deter Australians from holidaying in Fiji,
where tourism is one of the nation's biggest money spinners.

Its approach, rather, has been to target sanctions at Bainimarama, his regime and their
families, as well as the military, who are banned from travelling to Australia.

Military cooperation is suspended, as well as parts of Australia's aid program to Fiji.

But, by and large, business continues as usual.

Threats to expel Fiji from the Pacific Islands Forum (PIF) and the Commonwealth have
had little impact.

Like Zimbabwe before it, Bainimarama and his cronies have thumbed their noses at the
punitive force of being removed from such organisations.

This time, however, there is a multilateral forum whose opprobrium Fiji might fear
- mainly because it could hit the hip pocket nerve.

Australia has been talking to the United Nations about how to deal with Fiji, and there
are reports that along with New Zealand it is asking Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon and
his team to stop Fiji taking part in lucrative UN peacekeeping operations in the future.

According to the UN, Fiji has 223 peacekeepers in five different operations, including
troops, police and military observers.

New Zealand Prime Minister John Key has discussed Fiji with the secretary-general in
recent days, but the UN is remaining circumspect about how it will handle the issue.

"Our position stands that we would review any future contributions of Fiji to UN peacekeeping
on a case-by-case basis," a UN spokesperson said on Thursday.

What's clear is that regional powers like Australia and New Zealand desperately need
to find a strategy that will work on Fiji.

Jenny Hayward-Jones, program director for the Myer Foundation Melanesia Program at
the Lowy Institute for International Policy, warns political and economic trouble in Fiji
could mean bad news for the whole region.

"Fiji's political crisis is indeed grave, but the economic crisis already hurting Fiji
citizens also has serious implications for the Pacific Islands region and therefore Australia,"

she says in a policy brief.

Fiji's regional importance in areas like transport, trade and education services means
many countries in the region will be unable to suspend relations for any length of time.

And Ms Hayward-Jones believes the political crisis has the potential to impact a myriad
of ongoing regional initiatives, such as PACER Plus trade negotiations and PIF bulk oil
purchasing initiatives.

She warns unless Australia handles the Fiji situation appropriately, it has the potential
to undermine Canberra's reputation in the region.

It may be costly too if Fiji follows the route of the Solomon Islands, where the situation
deteriorated so badly that Australia and others had to step in to restore peace and stability.

While some think Australia has been too soft on Fiji, Hayward-Jones recommends it does
even more to bolster the island economy, including greater financial assistance.

Rather than trying to pull Fiji from UN operations, Anthony Bergin, from the Australian
Strategic Policy Institute, proposes Australia should be working to create more opportunities
for Fiji - if it moves towards a political solution.

With Fiji's sugar industry in decline, observers obviously see even more "honey" as the answer.

AAP so/kms/jl

KEYWORD: FIJI AUST (AAP BACKGROUNDER)

2009 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Fed: Regional universities consider merger


AAP General News (Australia)
12-12-2008
Fed: Regional universities consider merger

CANBERRA, Dec 12 AAP - The planned merger of two regional universities may not be the
last, if the federal government accepts the reported recommendations of a major review.

The reforms, which are understood to be contained in a 200-page report by former University
of South Australia vice-chancellor Denise Bradley, would consolidate the prestige metropolitan
universities while leaving the future of several outer suburban, regional and remote campuses
in doubt, it has been reported.

The Bradley review, commissioned in March, also recommends a national voucher system
and incentives given to enrol students from low socio-economic backgrounds, The Australian
said.

Ahead of the review's release Charles Sturt University and Southern Cross University,
have announced they will consider merging to form a new national university based in regional
Australia.

The merger had a number of potential benefits, Southern Cross vice-chancellor Professor
Paul Clark said, adding more competitive and deregulated environment was making it tough
for small universities.

It would enable the two universities to access a wider academic profile, and offer
more courses to students.

"For instance Charles Sturt offers dentistry and pharmacy. We offer law and forestry
so there are good matches of extensions through there."

Both institutions had significant numbers of students enrolled in distance education programs.

Professor Clark said federal Education Minister Julia Gillard had invited the two universities
to proceed with a merger.

"She has already invited us to seek funding for the feasibility study," he said.

AAP mb/rl/wf

KEYWORD: UNIVERSITY

2008 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

SA: The main stories in the 1200 ABC SA news


AAP General News (Australia)
08-08-2008
SA: The main stories in the 1200 ABC SA news

ADELAIDE, Aug 8 AAP - The main stories in the 1200 ABC SA news:

- The Murray-Darling Basin Commission rejects a Conservation Foundation plan to save
the lower lakes of the River Murray in South Australia, saying most of the water it wants
released wouldn't make it to the lakes.

- Federal police arrest 17 people over the largest ever seizure of ecstasy.

- Police say a shooting in suburban Adelaide last night is not related to a similar
incident in the same suburb at the weekend.

- Australian shares down in morning trade after another sell-off on Wall Street.

- Sydney researchers says they've made an important discovery in the treatment of breast cancer.

- Actor Morgan Freeman checks out of a hospital in Memphis after surgery for injuries
suffered in a car crash.

- Festive atmosphere in Beijing ahead of the Olympic Games opening ceremony.

- World leaders continue to arrive in Beijing ahead of the Olympics.

- Australia still facing a tough task of advancing to the knock-out stage of the Olympic
Games soccer tournament after a 1-1 draw with Serbia.

- Gary Ablett to return from injury for the Geelong Cats this weekend.

AAP tjd

KEYWORD: MONITOR 1200 ABC SA NEWS

2008 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Vic: Victoria leads country in jobs growth


AAP General News (Australia)
02-14-2008
Vic: Victoria leads country in jobs growth

Victoria's riding high on a jobs bonanza .. with more new jobs created in the past
year than any other state.

Bureau of Stats figures show Victorian employment grew by 3.5 per cent last year ..

eclipsing the national average of 2.7 per cent.

Only resource rich Western Australia out-performed Victoria on a percentage basis.

Treasurer JOHN LENDERS says seven-thousand-500 extra jobs were created in January ..

taking the total number of new jobs for the last 12 months to 90-thousand-400.

That's the largest increase of any state.

At the same time .. unemployment dropped from 4.9 per cent a year ago .. to 4.5 per cent.

Mr LENDERS says Victoria's participation rate was consistently high .. recording 65.4
per cent for January.

AAP RTV cmb/ce/jec/wf

KEYWORD: JOBS VIC (MELBOURNE)

2008 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Qld: Sunshine Coast clean-up expected to be finished today


AAP General News (Australia)
08-28-2007
Qld: Sunshine Coast clean-up expected to be finished today

Clean-up operations on Queensland's flood-hit Sunshine Coast are expected to be finished
as early as today.

Noosa mayor BOB ABBOT says all roads in his shire were due to be reopened by last night
.. with the exception of David Low Way .. where an underpass collapsed in last week's
floods.

He says the general clean-up should be completed today .. while road repairs are expected
to take several weeks.

Heavy rain battered much of south-east Queensland last week .. causing flooding in
the Mary River .. Tinana Creek and Noosa River.

AAP RTV ews/pjo/wf/bart/af/psm/

KEYWORD: RAIN QLD (BRISBANE)

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

Fed: Aust troops set to target Taliban leadership


AAP General News (Australia)
04-13-2007
Fed: Aust troops set to target Taliban leadership

By Max Blenkin, Defence Correspondent

CANBERRA, April 13 AAP - On Easter Sunday, a Canadian armoured vehicle patrolling in
southern Afghanistan steered between two ancient water wells and detonated a large makeshift
landmine, instantly killing six soldiers.

They were in the same type of Light Armoured Vehicle (LAV) used by Australian troops
in both Iraq and Afghanistan and in an area - Kandahar Province - not far from where Australian
troops now operate and will do so in increasing numbers from mid-year.

The attack underscored what Prime Minister John Howard warned of when announcing Australia's
boosted commitment to Afghanistan this week - it will carry substantial risk.

"There is the distinct possibility of casualties and that should be understood and
prepared for by the Australian public," Mr Howard said.

The government's announcement was no surprise. It's been long predicted and followed
consultations with the US and Afghan governments and the sending of a defence fact-finding
team to Afghanistan to assess the security situation.

Mr Howard said the mission was occurring amid a deterioration in the security situation
in southern Afghanistan.

"It's in Australia's national interest to prevent Afghanistan, as indeed it is in our
national interest to prevent Iraq, becoming a safe haven for terrorism," he said.

Labor agreed.

Opposition leader Kevin Rudd said Afghanistan was where the 2002 Bali bombers trained,
where terror mastermind Osama bin Laden and his retinue were hiding out and where much
heroin bound for Australia originated.

"And for those reasons it's a military campaign which we need to prosecute to the end," he said.

A 400-strong Australian engineering group currently operates from Tarin Khowt in Oruzgan
Province. They perform useful reconstruction work in a bid to convince local people that
life is improving under the Kabul government of President Hamid Karzai.

The centrepiece of the Australian effort is a well-regarded trade school designed to
teach construction skills to local men who can then go out and find work.

Under the plan announced this week, Australian troop numbers will be substantially
expanded, reaching around 950 by mid-year and peaking at 1,000 personnel in mid-2008.

That's more Australian boots on the ground in Afghanistan than in Iraq.

The centrepiece will be a 300-member special operations task group comprising members
of the Perth-based Special Air Service Regiment (SASR) and Sydney-based Commando Battalion
and Incident Response regiment.

Australian special forces have operated in Afghanistan twice before - for a year from
November 2001 across southern Afghanistan (150 soldiers) and again for another year from
September 2005 in Oruzgan Province (200 soldiers).

The last mission saw some of the most intense fighting since Vietnam and 30 soldiers
were injured in a series of battles.

But so far just one Australian soldier has died in Afghanistan. Special Air Service
Regiment (SASR) Sergeant Andrew Russell was killed in a mine blast in southern Afghanistan
on February 16, 2002.

This time the force is bigger and they'll stay longer. And the gloves are coming off
with Defence Minister Brendan Nelson clearly signalling their mission is to take out Taliban
leaders.

Dr Nelson said it was vital to engage not only the hearts and minds of Afghans through
the activities of the engineering task group, but also to take the fight to the Taliban.

"We are not interested in engaging the poor sons of farmers and those who are refugees
that have been paid to basically fight with the Taliban," he said.

"Our people will very effectively target the Taliban leadership."

A lesson learned last time was that the Taliban have an abundance of foot soldiers,
many ill-trained village youths, but a relatively small leadership cadre which, if eliminated,
could severely diminish its fighting capability.

The annual cycle of violence in Afghanistan is driven by the climate, rising as snows
melt from mountain passes, allowing militants to move more freely around the countryside.

Warmer weather also allows movement of men and supplies from havens in Pakistan's lawless
tribal territories.

But this year is tipped to be different.

Emboldened by the success of insurgents in Iraq, the Taliban - a catch-all description
which takes in conservative Pashtun tribesmen, al-Qaeda and foreign jihadists as well
as local warlords, bandits and drug dealers - have enthusiastically adopted their tactics.

These include a growing use of suicide bombers and roadside bombs, which in Iraq have
claimed more US lives than any other cause, as well as the internet to publicise attacks
and the killing of hostages.

One characteristic of fighting last year was the vastly disproportionate casualty rates,
with battles typically resulting in dozens and even hundreds of Taliban dead, mostly because
of coalition air strikes.

Defence commentator John Hunter Farrell, publisher of ANZ Defender magazine, who visited
Oruzgan last month, said that had noticeably calmed the province, long regarded as Taliban
heartland.

He said there had been a number of attacks on Dutch and Afghan police positions around
Tarin Khowt, but nothing like what was experienced in 2006 when Australian special forces
engaged in regular and intense combat.

But he said the Taliban appeared to be improving their performance.

"US special forces operators said that local militias had become considerably more
tactically adept in their ambushes since last year, usually choosing choke points in roads
through valleys north of Tarin Khowt," he said.

"The Taliban employed weapons in depth and developed a simple but effective tactic
of using runners to resupply ammunition to frontline fighters and have improved their
ability to withdraw from ambushes."

Australian troops will be operating under the control of the NATO-run International
Security Assistance Force (ISAF). What continues to bug the Australian government is that
just eight of the 37 ISAF nations are actually willing to put their soldiers in parts
of Afghanistan where they might get shot at.

The other 29 impose various caveats including restrictive rules of engagement mainly
aimed at mollifying casualty-averse domestic constituencies.

Both Mr Howard and Foreign Minister Alexander Downer have grumbled about this practice,
with Mr Downer making his displeasure clear during a visit to Europe in February.

Germany is the prime example, with a force of 3,000 troops operating only in the Taliban-free
north.

Australia Defence Association executive director Neil James said there appeared to
be marked variations in willingness to fight across ISAF participants.

"This is a real acid test for NATO. They have been given a job by the UN of sorting
out Afghanistan. And yet a large number of NATO countries, whilst they are sending troops
to Afghanistan, aren't really willing to have them engage in combat," he said.

AAP mb/sb/sp

KEYWORD: AFGHAN AUST (AAP BACKGROUNDER - FILE PIX) RPT

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

Qld: Labor seeks to throw out former minister


AAP General News (Australia)
12-12-2006
Qld: Labor seeks to throw out former minister

Queensland ALP state secretary MILTON DICK says former minister GORDON NUTTALL will
get a fair hearing .. when the party considers throwing him out.

Mr NUTTALL .. a former BEATTIE government health minister .. is being investigated
by the Crime and Misconduct Commission over a 300 thousand dollar loan he received from
mining magnate KEN TALBOT.

The former Labor MP for the Brisbane bayside seat of Sandgate failed to declare the
loan on the parliamentary register of members' interests.

The Queensland ALP's administrative committee meets today to decide whether to follow
the premier's call to throw Mr NUTTALL out of the party.

Mr DICK says Mr NUTTALL will have a chance to present his case to the party's disputes
tribunal tomorrow.

AAP RTV pjo/jmt

KEYWORD: NUTTALL (BRISBANE)

2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

VIC: Main stories in today's Melbourne newspapers


AAP General News (Australia)
08-05-2006
VIC: Main stories in today's Melbourne newspapers

MELBOURNE, August 4 AAP - The main stories in today's Melbourne newspapers:



THE HERALD SUN

Page 1: Collingwood Football Club president Eddie McGuire has blasted critics over
a street brawl with key players.

Page 2: Home owners could face two more interest rate rises.

Page 3: Joe Korp vowed to haunt his lover, Tania Herman, after wishing to be reunited
with wife Maria after death.

World: Hillary Clinton has urged US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld to quit.

Finance: The Reserve Bank says global investors are being cautious over safe-haven
investments rather than uncertain markets.

Sport: Former Collingwood coach Tony Shaw has hit back at comments made by president
Eddie McGuire about the club's culture.

AAP jat/rs

KEYWORD: MONITOR FRONTERS VIC

) 2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

NSW: Joyrider charged with drink driving


AAP General News (Australia)
02-15-2006
NSW: Joyrider charged with drink driving

SYDNEY, Feb 15 AAP - A man more than four times over the alcohol limit stole a coach
and took it for a joyride in central Sydney.

Police said the coach driver stopped his vehicle outside Central railway station about
8.25pm (AEDT) yesterday and went to help another driver loading a coach.

He left the door open, the key in the ignition and the engine running.

A 38-year-old Rosehill man then allegedly got on the bus and drove off with the door still open.

He stopped 400m away, after the door hit a car at an intersection.

Police were called and the man was breath tested.

It allegedly revealed a reading of 0.210, more than four times the legal limit.

The man was charged with drink driving offences and was bailed to appear in Downing
Centre Local Court next month.

AAP af/mon

KEYWORD: JOYRIDE

2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

понедельник, 27 февраля 2012 г.

Fed: Sedition law won't curb freedom of speech - Ruddock


AAP General News (Australia)
12-01-2005
Fed: Sedition law won't curb freedom of speech - Ruddock

PHILIP RUDDOCK has again defended the government's decision to push ahead with a new
sedition law.

He says the measure won't hurt freedom of speech .. as there'll be enough checks to
protect media and political comment.

The attorney-general's told Sky News he hasn't seen cartoons urging violence against
groups of people.

He says it's highly unlikely media comment will be affected by the sedition laws.





After a meeting with coalition backbenchers last night .. JOHN HOWARD says the sedition
provisions of the counter-terrorism bill will remain .. although some technical changes
will be made.

Civil libertarians .. media organisations and a government-dominated Senate committee
have called for the sedition section of the bill to be removed.

Under the measure .. anyone convicted of urging a group to use force or violence against
another group could be jailed for up to seven years.

AAP RTV rp/sb/goc/jv

KEYWORD: TERROR RUDDOCK (CANBERRA)

2005 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

unit cell

unit cell The group of particles (atoms, ions, or molecules) in a crystal that is repeated in three dimensions in the crystal lattice. See also crystal system.

barrier reef

barrier reef A coral reef, stretching along a line parallel with the coastline but separated from it by a wide, deep lagoon, the most famous of which is the Great Barrier Reef off north‐west Australia. Also classified as barrier reefs are those coral reefs encircling islands, one of the best examples being the Turk group in the Caroline Islands. The coral on a barrier reef builds up to the level of low tides. See also coral reef.

воскресенье, 26 февраля 2012 г.

Darwin Alert: Latest Mutual Fund Mutations.(Brief Article)

The Internet is beginning to produce distinctive new mutual funds, ones you could not have imagined seeing a few years ago--or even a few days ago. Several of them lend new meaning to the word unique.

StockJungle.com Free S&P 500 Index could be dubbed the Amazon.com fund for its copycat business plan: Come up with an exotic name for a Web site, then offer a product at a ridiculously low price. As the name implies, this fund really is free of charges and sales fees. Its sponsors, like Amazon, will lose money on every sale. "It's a loss leader," says Jeff Lloyd, director of communications for StockJungle.com. "You don't make it up on volume." Of course, many non-Internet funds have waived expenses for a limited time to attract investor interest.

Though it encourages investors to make all their transactions on the Web site, the fund is no different from any other S&P index fund. A potential pitfall: Tracking the S&P 500 isn't as easy as it seems, and success requires more than a low expense ratio--or even no expense ratio at all. You're probably best off waiting to see how well this fund performs before investing.

StockJungle.com Community Intelligence attempts to bring the "shout it out loud" democracy of the Internet to fund investing. Visitors to the fund's Web site will be asked to submit stock tips, and the fund plans to select its portfolio based on those ideas. This fund and two others offered by StockJungle have 1% annual expense ratios. Unplugged investors can request information about any of them by calling 877-732-7696.

X.com at www.x.com has teamed up with Barclays Global Fund Advisors to offer low-cost funds online. The first three are X.com S&P 500, X.com U.S. Bond (which will track the Lehman Brothers Aggregate Bond index) and X.com Money Market. More funds will be launched early next year. The X.com funds will compete with low-cost funds managed in-house by online brokers E*Trade and Charles Schwab.

For disclosure, nothing outdiscloses Open Fund. You can check on the fund's latest stock trades at www.metamarkets.com, as well as comments on why they were made. "I'm betting we are near a bottom," co-manager Maurice Werdegar wrote after buying shares of the Gap.

Moreover, a camera records everything the fund managers do and sends snapshots to the Web site. If you click on the image, you can move the camera and make your own snapshots. Now, this truly is something new under the sun.

BRIEFS

Dow Chemical's proposed takeover of Union Carbide, which is in the Dow Jones industrial average, makes room for the possible inclusion of Intel or Microsoft in the index.... Ryan Jacob, formerly manager of Internet fund has, launched Jacob Internet (888-522-6239).... American Century has ended its policy of waiving fund minimums for investors willing to invest at least $50 monthly in any of 24 funds.... John Horseman is leaving GAM International. His replacement, Jean-Philippe Cremers, worked for Horseman for seven years.... Neuberger Berman (800-877-9700) has started Regency, which will invest in stocks of cheap, midsize companies, and has reopened GEnesis, which invests in stocks of small companies.

WWW

MORE BROKERAGES join the list of those providing free stock research on the Internet E*Offering (www.eoffering.com), the investment bank of E*Trade, and Wit Capital (www.witcapital.com), an online investment-banking firm, are two of the latest. You can also receive a weekly report by e-mail on Internet stocks from the BancBoston Robertson Stephens brokerage; visit www.internetstocks.com. tocks or fund