Sunday, March 4, 2012

DODGER GREAT IS DEAD HEART ATTACK KILLS CAMPANELLA.(SPORTS)

Byline: Associated Press

LOS ANGELES -- Roy Campanella, the power-hitting Brooklyn Dodgers catcher whose Hall of Fame career was ended by an automobile accident after the 1957 season, died Saturday night at age 71 of a heart attack.

Campanella joined the Dodgers in 1948, a year after Jackie Robinson broke baseball's color barrier. In 1969, Campanella again followed Robinson, this time as the second black player elected to the Hall of Fame.

During a 10-year major league career with the Dodgers, Campanella was named the National League's Most Valuable Player in 1951, 1953 and 1955. He set major league records for catchers with 41 homers and 142 RBI in 1953.

Campanella died …

Vanity Fair: Murdoch asked son to take leave

LOS ANGELES (AP) — As the British phone hacking scandal unraveled this summer, News Corp. CEO Rupert Murdoch told his son James that he should take a leave, but he changed his mind after a sleepless night, according to a new article in Vanity Fair.

The article, in the December issue due out Thursday, says Murdoch's daughter Elisabeth pushed the suggestion. It also says the family has been undergoing psychological counseling over who will succeed 80-year-old Rupert Murdoch to run the media conglomerate.

The article on the family's struggle comes as James Murdoch, News Corp.'s 38-year-old deputy chief operating officer, faces increasing pressure over his handling of the affair. …

Secret hostage rescue played out as Obama spoke

WASHINGTON (AP) — The secret was still intact when President Barack Obama, entering the House chamber Tuesday evening to deliver his State of the Union speech, pointed at his Pentagon chief and said, "Good job tonight."

Unknown to a global television audience watching the annual Capitol Hill ritual, a bold U.S. raid was still playing out half a world away with an elite Navy SEAL team's rescue of two hostages in Somalia, one of them an American. It was the same unit that killed al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden, two U.S. officials said Wednesday.

Publicly, Obama did not tip his hand during his speech, though microphones picked up his congratulation to Defense Secretary Leon …

Computer training

SOUTHMEAD: Free computer training is available for people aged 19and over at Southmead Development Trust's training division …

Research from Huazhong Agricultural University provides new data about science.

"The precocious trifoliate orange (Poncirus trifoliata [L] Raf.), an early flowering mutant of P. trifoliata, has a short juvenile phase of about 14 months, significantly shorter than other citrus," researchers in Wuhan, People's Republic of China report.

"In this report, using the stems of precocious trifoliate orange seedlings as explants, an improved protocol mediated by Agrobacterium tumefaciens was developed to evaluate regeneration and transformation frequency," wrote Z. Tong and colleagues, Huazhong Agricultural University.

The researchers concluded: "The transformed plants continued to reveal the precocious trait of non-transgenic mature precocious …

Saturday, March 3, 2012

IRAQ: AIRSTRIKE CLAIMS CIVILIANS.(MAIN)

Byline: Associated Press

BAGHDAD, Iraq -- U.S. and British warplanes struck targets in southern Iraq Thursday, and Iraqi military said residential areas were hit, killing 14 civilians and injuring 19.

U.S. military confirmed the strikes but said the raids targeted Iraqi military and responded to anti-aircraft …

Firm to Embark on New Entertainment Venture in Thailand.

Byline: Sujintana Hemtasilpa

Nov. 21--RS Promotion Plc will embark on a new entertainment venture next year in a bid to raise its corporate revenue, its chief executive officer said yesterday.

Surachai Chetchotisak said the country's second largest entertainment company planned a major investment in a lucrative business, with details to be released in January. In addition, the company would reorganize and develop new distribution channels.

Pornpan Rungruengbangchan, assistant managing director, added that next year the company's music production business would be broken down into nine music labels under the RS umbrella.

For this reason, …

Colombia ex-prez makes waves, in and out of office

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) — Presidents typically quit the limelight when their terms end, ease into contemplative repose, perhaps pen a memoir, and stay out of their successors' hair.

Not Alvaro Uribe.

Thirteen months after leaving office, the feisty conservative barnstorms around Colombia like a candidate, picks fights in combative Twitter blasts and heaps criticism on his successor.

"It's not in me to simply live as an ex-president," Uribe, Washington's closest Latin America ally during his tenure, told The Associated Press in a recent interview. "I'm a street fighter."

There seems to be no middle ground; those who don't love him tend to despise him, while those who …

I'll have to live with my decision to keep quiet about drug arrest, says top official.

THE WESTERN Cape's chief director for social welfare services, Dave McNamara, spoke out last night about his drug arrest last June in the city centre.

McNamara said he was not caught with drugs when police stopped him at the Caltex garage in Orange Street early on June 28.

He disputed that he was arrested at or near the notorious Senator Park building on Long Street, which was known as a drug den.

McNamara, whose job description includes targeting substance abuse and related problems, was arrested in possession of an empty tik straw and lolly.

"I'm not a drug user, I've never been a drug user," said McNamara.

Yesterday he was placed on …

KNOW IT ALL.(MAIN)

Q: What is the full name of Joe Louis, ``the Brown Bomber''?

A: Joe Louis Barrow was born in Chambers County, Ala., on May 13, 1914. His father, Munroe, died when Joe was 4 years old. In the 1930s, amateur boxing was extremely popular and is said to have overshadowed many high school sports. Although Joe's mother, Lillie, objected to her son boxing, she gave him her blessing and told him to do the best he could. The story goes that when he filled out the forms for one of his first amateur fights, there wasn't enough room for his last name, so he fought as ``Joe Louis.'' Joe Louis Barrow died in 1981.

Q: Who was the first person to go over Niagara Falls in a …

BMW's new design head defends style shift; Van Hooydonk drew the controversial 7 series' exterior.(News)(Bayerische Motoren Werke AG)

Byline: Diana T. Kurylko

Adrian van Hooydonk, the 40-year-old Dutch native who has emerged as the real designer of BMW's much-criticized 7 series, makes no excuses for the break-the-mold look of the automaker's flagship sedan.

The 7-series redesign three years ago attracted a lot of criticism, and Chris Bangle, BMW's longtime senior designer, has been taking the criticism for it.

Billed by Bangle as the beginning of a necessary overhaul of BMW styling, the 7 series features a straight beltline that wraps around onto the trunk, creating a wedgelike protrusion.

Now BMW has started to point out that van Hooydonk, president of BMW's …

'Queer Eye's' Kressley to write book about style

NEW YORK -- Carson Kressley, fashion sage on "Queer Eye for theStraight Guy," will write a book on men's style to be published byDutton next fall.

The book, not yet titled, will feature Kressley's "inimitabletrademark wit and fashion wisdom," and "will cover the simplesartorial staples of style -- from ascots to zippers," Dutton said.

"From the 10 shoes every man …

KAYE PUSHES OVERHAUL OF COURTS.(CAPITAL REGION)

Byline: JOHN CAHER State editor

New York's chief judge is planning a full-court press to reorganize the state's byzantine court system.

``We have a completely senseless, fragmented system that we have the temerity to call the `unified court system,' '' Chief Judge Judith S. Kaye said Monday. ``Good grief! We have the most disunified court system anyone could possibly imagine. . . . It is high time we took a good, serious look at how our courts are organized.''

Kaye, speaking with reporters following the 150th anniversary celebration of the state's highest court, the Court of Appeals, said court reorganization is the top item on her administrative …

Friday, March 2, 2012

USPTO ISSUES TRADEMARK: INSITE FOR MODSYNC

ALEXANDRIA, Va., June 13 -- The trademark INSITE FOR MODSYNC (Reg. No. 3975678) was issued on June 7 by the USPTO.

Owner: FULTON MANAGEMENT SERVICES, INC. CORPORATION NEW YORK 972 CENTERVILLE ROAD PULASKI NEW YORK 13142.

The trademark application serial number 85001921 was filed on March 30, 2010 and was registered on June 7.

Goods and Services: Remote monitoring interface in the nature of a computer network interface device for network connection of devices used to monitor, operate and maximize efficiencies of a configuration of multiple boiler, water heaters, and thermal fluid heaters; hardware network connection gateway in the nature of a computer network bridge between boiler systems and the Internet or other networks for sending and receiving information to centralized servers at regular and continuous intervals. FIRST USE: 20110406. FIRST USE IN COMMERCE: 20110406

For any query with respect to this article or any other content requirement, please contact Editor at htsyndication@hindustantimes.com

Executive Order 13563-Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review

January 18, 2011

By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, and in order to improve regulation and regulatory review, it is hereby ordered as follows:

Section 1. General Principles of Regulation. (a) Our regulatory system must protect public health, welfare, safety, and our environment while promoting economic growth, innovation, competitiveness, and job creation. It must be based on the best available science. It must allow for public participation and an open exchange of ideas. It must promote predictability and reduce uncertainty. It must identify and use the best, most innovative, and least burdensome tools for achieving regulatory ends. It must take into account benefits and costs, both quantitative and qualitative. It must ensure that regulations are accessible, consistent, written in plain language, and easy to understand. It must measure, and seek to improve, the actual results of regulatory requirements.

(b) This order is supplemental to and reaffirms the principles, structures, and definitions governing contemporary regulatory review that were established in Executive Order 12866 of September 30, 1993. As stated in that Executive Order and to the extent permitted by law, each agency must, among other things: (1) propose or adopt a regulation only upon a reasoned determination that its benefits justify its costs (recognizing that some benefits and costs are difficult to quantify); (2) tailor its regulations to impose the least burden on society, consistent with obtaining regulatory objectives, taking into account, among other things, and to the extent practicable, the costs of cumulative regulations; (3) select, in choosing among alternative regulatory approaches, those approaches that maximize net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public health and safety, and other advantages; distributive impacts; and equity); (4) to the extent feasible, specify performance objectives, rather than specifying the behavior or manner of compliance that regulated entities must adopt; and (5) identify and assess available alternatives to direct regulation, including providing economic incentives to encourage the desired behavior, such as user fees or marketable permits, or providing information upon which choices can be made by the public.

(c) In applying these principles, each agency is directed to use the best available techniques to quantify anticipated present and future benefits and costs as accurately as possible. Where appropriate and permitted by law, each agency may consider (and discuss qualitatively) values that are difficult or impossible to quantify, including equity, human dignity, fairness, and distributive impacts.

Sec. 2. Public Participation. (a) Regulations shall be adopted through a process that involves public participation. To that end, regulations shall be based, to the extent feasible and consistent with law, on the open exchange of information and perspectives among State, local, and tribal officials, experts in relevant disciplines, affected stakeholders in the private sector, and the public as a whole.

(b) To promote that open exchange, each agency, consistent with Executive Order 12866 and other applicable legal requirements, shall endeavor to provide the public with an opportunity to participate in the regulatory process. To the extent feasible and permitted by law, each agency shall afford the public a meaningful opportunity to comment through the

Internet on any proposed regulation, with a comment period that should generally be at least 60 days. To the extent feasible and permitted by law, each agency shall also provide, for both proposed and final rules, timely online access to the rulemaking docket on regulations.gov, including relevant scientific and technical findings, in an open format that can be easily searched and downloaded. For proposed rules, such access shall include, to the extent feasible and permitted by law, an opportunity for public comment on all pertinent parts of the rulemaking docket, including relevant scientific and technical findings.

(c) Before issuing a notice of proposed rulemaking, each agency, where feasible and appropriate, shall seek the views of those who are likely to be affected, including those who are likely to benefit from and those who are potentially subject to such rulemaking.

Sec. 3. Integration and Innovation. Some sectors and industries face a significant number of regulatory requirements, some of which may be redundant, inconsistent, or overlapping. Greater coordination across agencies could reduce these requirements, thus reducing costs and simplifying and harmonizing rules. In developing regulatory actions and identifying appropriate approaches, each agency shall attempt to promote such coordination, simplification, and harmonization. Each agency shall also seek to identify, as appropriate, means to achieve regulatory goals that are designed to promote innovation.

Sec. 4. Flexible Approaches. Where relevant, feasible, and consistent with regulatory objectives, and to the extent permitted by law, each agency shall identify and consider regulatory approaches that reduce burdens and maintain flexibility and freedom of choice for the public. These approaches include warnings, appropriate default rules, and disclosure requirements as well as provision of information to the public in a form that is clear and intelligible.

Sec. 5. Science. Consistent with the President's Memorandum for the Heads of Executive Departments and Agencies, "Scientific Integrity" (March 9, 2009), and its implementing guidance, each agency shall ensure the objectivity of any scientific and technological information and processes used to support the agency's regulatory actions.

Sec. 6. Retrospective Analyses of Existing Rules. (a) To facilitate the periodic review of existing significant regulations, agencies shall consider how best to promote retrospective analysis of rules that may be outmoded, ineffective, insufficient, or excessively burdensome, and to modify, streamline, expand, or repeal them in accordance with what has been learned. Such retrospective analyses, including supporting data, should be released online whenever possible.

(b) Within 120 days of the date of this order, each agency shall develop and submit to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs a preliminary plan, consistent with law and its resources and regulatory priorities, under which the agency will periodically review its existing significant regulations to determine whether any such regulations should be modified, streamlined, expanded, or repealed so as to make the agency's regulatory program more effective or less burdensome in achieving the regulatory objectives.

Sec. 7. General Provisions. (a) For purposes of this order, "agency" shall have the meaning set forth in section 3(b) of Executive Order 12866.

(b) Nothing in this order shall be construed to impair or otherwise affect:

(i) authority granted by law to a department or agency, or the head thereof; or

(ii) functions of the Director of the Office of Management and Budget relating to budgetary, administrative, or legislative proposals.

(c) This order shall be implemented consistent with applicable law and subject to the availability of appropriations.

(d) This order is not intended to, and does not, create any right or benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law or in equity by any party against the United States, its departments, agencies, or entities, its officers, employees, or agents, or any other person.

BARACK OBAMA

The White House,

January 18, 2011.

[Filed with the Office of the Federal Register, 8:45 a.m., January 20, 2011]

NOTE: This Executive order was published in the Federal Register on January 21.

Categories: Executive Orders : Regulation and regulatory review, improvement.

Subjects: Government organization and employees : Accountability and transparency, strengthening efforts; Government organization and employees : Federal regulations, review.

DCPD Number: DCPD201100031.

FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF LAW ENFORCEMENT ARRESTS MAN ON CHILD PORNOGRAPHY CHARGES

The Florida Department of Law Enforcement issued the following news release:

The Florida Department of Law Enforcement has arrested a Tallahassee man on child pornography charges. Jason Robert West, 20, was arrested Tuesday at his Hayden Road apartment.

In November, FDLE was contacted by an investigator with the Florida Atttorney General's Child Protection Cyber Crime Unit who was working to identify persons trafficking child pornography over the Internet. Further investigation developed evidence that pointed to West as one who was receiving and distributing child pornography. On Tuesday a search warrant was served on West's apartment by agents with FDLE's Tallahassee Regional Operations Center, FDLE's Florida Computer Crimes Center (FC3) and the Tallahassee Police Department. A search of West's computer produced additional evidence.

West was taken to the Leon County Jail charged with one count each of possession of child pornography and distribution of child pornography, both third-degree felonies.Contact: Phil Kiracofe, 850/410-7506.

Phil Kiracofe, 850/410-7506.

Remember Valley troops' sacrifice in hunt for bin Laden

This editorial appears in the May 4, 2011, Yakima Herald-Republic.

What timing: On the day that our nation processed the news ofOsama bin Laden's death, the body of White Swan Marine Joe Jacksonarrived in Yakima. Bin Laden was tracked down in Pakistan, LanceCpl. Jackson was killed in action in neighboring Afghanistan; it wasthe deadly 2001 action of the former that eventually led to the 2011death of the latter.

Bin Laden, we all know, masterminded the Sept. 11 attacks on theWorld Trade Center and the Pentagon from his then-haven inAfghanistan. That brought the U.S.-led overthrow of the Talibanregime in Afghanistan and controversial elections that put PresidentHamid Karzai into power. But with a shaky Afghan leadership andwhat critics deemed a distractive American military campaign inIraq, Afghanistan remained in flux and bin Laden remained at large.

We're still learning about bin Laden's "hiding in plain sight"existence in the Pakistani city of Abbottabad, how the al-Qaidaleader hadn't reverted to caveman austerity but instead lived in agated compound. And, of course, many questions remain about what thePakistani government knew and what it may have enabled.

By all accounts, America's decade-long pressure has disrupted al-Qaida's operations. Some observers say with bin Laden's cellphoneand Internet communications limited, his effectiveness as al-Qaidaleader was vastly compromised. Our military and intelligenceofficials no doubt will find value in the hard drives and documentsfound in the Abbottabad compound.

Bin Laden's bloody conspiracy rendered this Afghanistan campaignnecessary, but this is a perpetual war that may never be over.Declaring victory with his death risks another premature "MissionAccomplished," a la Iraq in 2003. America already has blundered onceon the end game in Afghanistan after it aided the mujahadeen'ssuccessful resistance to the 1979 Soviet invasion, only to abandonthat country and allow the emergence of the Taliban.

From here, it's up to President Barack Obama to develop andarticulate a vision for Afghanistan and Pakistan in the era afterbin Laden. And even a stable Afghanistan and Pakistan won't assuresecurity, as al-Qaida has scattered to other nooks and crannies inthe Muslim world.

Reactions to bin Laden's death range from relief to revelry to asense of closure. Some temper their emotions by noting America'saction took a human life. But bin Laden over the years initiatedattacks that callously rendered the deaths of thousands ofcivilians, including many Muslims. He had declared war on the UnitedStates of America. Given the circumstances of bin Laden's murderousrampages, it's difficult to see how America's campaign against himcould have culminated differently.

Don't forget that bin Laden's death toll includes American troopswho have sacrificed all in Afghanistan, a collateral war from theSept. 11 attacks. Lance Cpl. Jackson is the latest Yakima Valleycasualty in Afghanistan, joining three Army soldiers who died in2010: Pfc. James Miller of Yakima, Master Sgt. Mark Coleman ofGoldendale and Pfc. Robert Near of Granger.

Our country and our Valley can best honor their memories bymaintaining our vigilance and ensuring our enemies, wherever theyhide, can never endanger American lives again.

Members of the Yakima Herald-Republic editorial board are SharonJ. Prill, Bob Crider, Frank Purdy and Karen Troianello.

STUDENT FILMMAKERS BUSINESS ARTS FEE HELPS SCHOOL CREATE UNIQUE MEDIA CENTER

Andrew Fogel floated above his Carpenter Avenue ElementarySchool classroom floor in a lotus position Thursday.

He's no magician, though.

Rather, he's an eager 8-year-old Van Nuys student whose imagewas projected on a computer screen as the result of special effectscreated at the school's new CBS Media Arts Center.

"Every time you learn something, your brain gets a littlewrinkle," he said. "I plan to use the equipment until my brain haslots of wrinkles."

Inside the center, the Los Angeles Unified School Districtelementary students have access to a blend of fine arts andtechnology tools via a bank of 15 computers, a video camera, ascanner, printers and instruction kits.

The center, which received more than $100,000 from CBS StudioCenter and the Laurel Promenade Shopping Center, got its start fromMichael Klausman, CBS center president.

CBS wanted to expand nearly two years ago, but like otherbusinesses that have development projects exceeding $500,000, it hadto pay the city's Arts Development fee. In theory, there were threechoices: a special arts fund, artistic services or cultural amenitieslike exhibitions or performance space.

"After I learned about the arts fee and how it was to be used, Iwasn't that impressed with the options," Klausman said.

Searching for another option, Klausman asked members of Parentsfor Carpenter if they could design an arts program that would helpCBS fulfill its fee obligation.

"The parents were excited about the idea and I gave them somesuggestions for a program that would include video or film," he said."They took it from there."

The program has caught on with kindergartners to sixth-graderswho are developing stories and illustrating them with computergraphics and video, said Valerie Olenick, center coordinator andcurriculum designer.

Students will soon learn how to add voice, text and animation totheir storylines, she added.

"But the first thing they have to have is a story in mind.Technology is wonderful and interesting, but our brains is whereeverything begins," Olenick said. "Children always have stories totell. You just have to give them the freedom to expressthemselves."

Meanwhile, in another section of the room, students can testtheir filmmaking ability by shooting and editing videotape. Or theycan jump to another section of the room to be linked to the Internet.

The remaining computers will be hooked to the Internet by fall,along with computer video-conferencing. Students also will beadvised on how to develop story outlines and will learn about moldingmaterials to make figures for their projects, she said.

"This media center is designed to take our children into the21st century," said Joan Marks, principal. "The media center istotal arts, it's not just computers."

David Perkins, an 11-year-old Studio City resident, noted thebenefits of the center as he added another segment to his pictureoutline of his creation: an immortal creature that attacks citiesfrom Honolulu to Trenton, Ohio.

"I think this will help the younger kids with their writing andcomputer skills," he said.

Storytelling comes easy for Amanda Kast, a 9-year-old StudioCity resident. The tale of the "Mouse who Liked to Paint," rolledoff her lips as she explained the plot while pointing to the computergraphics she created.

"I like to tell stories," she said. "I can look at the treesand see, maybe, a dinosaur and imagine what he would do if he wasalive."

SA: Man killed in road crash


AAP General News (Australia)
08-26-2004
SA: Man killed in road crash

A 31-year-old man has died in a two car crash at Largs Bay in Adelaide's north-western suburbs.

Police say the crash occurred at the intersection of Jetty Road and Devon Street last night.

The accident has taken the South Australian road toll for to 94 for this year -- compared
to 99 at the same time last year.

AAP RTV tjd/tr/maur

KEYWORD: TOLL SA (ADELAIDE)

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

Vic: Microsurgeons work to reattach severed hand


AAP General News (Australia)
04-20-2004
Vic: Microsurgeons work to reattach severed hand

Doctors at a Melbourne hospital are working to reattach a woman's hand after it was
severed in a workplace accident.

The woman was working at a lattice factory in Dandenong when she severed her right
hand about 10 am (AEST) today.

Ambulance service spokesman JAMES HOWE says paramedics treated the woman at the scene
before she was taken to St Vincents hospital.

A hospital spokesman says a team of three microsurgeons, specialist anaesthetists and
theatre technicians are working to reattach the woman's hand.

She's aged in her mid 50s.

AAP RTV clm/dk/mj/rp

KEYWORD: HAND (MELBOURNE)

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

Fed: Black Hawks, a sturdy hot ship liked by pilots


AAP General News (Australia)
02-13-2004
Fed: Black Hawks, a sturdy hot ship liked by pilots

By Max Blenkin, Defence Correspondent

CANBERRA, Feb 13 AAP - The Black Hawk is a hot ship and its pilots, among them some
of the small number of Australia Defence Force female aviators, describe it as a joy to
fly.

But flying military helicopters low, fast, at night and with the prospect of being
shot at, remains a risky business.

Australia has had its share of Black Hawk mishaps, none worse than the disaster on
the night of June 12, 1996 when two collided during an anti-terrorist training exercise
outside Townsville, killing 15 Special Air Service (SAS) soldiers and three airmen.

The accident was attributed to pilot error, not to any Black Hawk failing, with the
military inquiry finding a range of systemic failings contributed.

The latest incident occurred this week when a Black Hawk with eight on board crashed
at Mt Walker, southwest of Brisbane. All survived.

Not many aircraft have a Hollywood movie named in their honour. Black Hawk Down - the
story of the calamitous US military operation in Mogadishu, Somalia, in 1993 - tells of
the downing of two Black Hawks by Somali gunmen.

In fact three were hit by rocket-propelled grenades, designed for knocking out armoured
vehicles, with one limping back to base.

There were survivors aboard both the others, an indication of the fundamental sturdiness
of the airframe.

The Black Hawk had to be good to replace the RAAF's ageing but venerable Iroquois,
which provided sterling service through the Vietnam conflict.

With twin General Electric turboshaft engines, multiple redundant systems and fly-by-wire
electric controls, the Black Hawk can fly harder, faster and longer.

At the start of the East Timor operation in September 1999, Black Hawks equipped with
long range tanks made the hop from Darwin to Dili.

However, the aircraft has had its share of controversy.

Shortly after the order was placed with the manufacturer Sikorsky back in May 1986,
a decision was made to transfer operation of battlefield helicopters from the RAAF to
the Army. The decision still rankles with the RAAF.

Two men died when one crashed near the Army aviation school at Oakey, Queensland in June 1992.

During the 1996 federal election campaign, a Black Hawk carrying then prime minister
Paul Keating narrowly avoided disaster when it clipped trees as it attempted to land in
the Daintree rainforest.

Until the 1996 tragedy, the biggest scandal affecting the Black Hawk fleet related
to a shortage of spare parts, with aircraft availability at times down to low single figures.

The spares problem, also experienced by US users, had several causes. Australian patterns
of Black Hawk use were different to the US, particularly the extensive use of long range
fuel tanks which created extra stresses.

Then there was the institutional failure, with defence failing to appreciate there
was a problem until it was too late for easy remediation.

Like the 1992 crash, the latest mishap also related to a training flight. Its cause
hasn't been determined. Fortunately no-one was killed but the army is down one Black Hawk,
leaving 35 still in service.

The S-70A Black Hawk first flew in October 1974 and was selected to replace Vietnam
era Hueys in US service in 1976. The US now operates some 1,000 of the type.

Australia initially adopted the maritime version, the S-70B Sea Hawk for Navy service,
and the Black Hawk was subsequently selected and a tender issued in 1984 worth $500 million.

The first of 39 was delivered in February 1988 with the majority assembled at the Hawker
de Havilland plant in Sydney.

They are used as a utility helicopter, carrying troops, cargo or acting as a gunship
and are operated by the army's Fifth Aviation Regiment at Townsville and the training
school at Oakey.

The Black Hawk carries a crew of two pilots and two crewman/gunners and up to 10 fully
equipped soldiers.

They can cruise at 120 knots for up to 220 kilometres and external fuel tanks significantly
extend that range.

AAP mb/jlw

KEYWORD: BLACKHAWK (AAP BACKGROUNDER) REPEAT

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

Fed: Bush phones Howard to tell him of Hussein capture = 3


AAP General News (Australia)
12-15-2003
Fed: Bush phones Howard to tell him of Hussein capture = 3

Mr Howard said Mr Bush was naturally pleased and relieved at Saddam's capture, but
not triumphant.

"I am so pleased for the American military as well and I congratulated the president," he said.

"He said he had General Sanchez (commander of US troops in Iraq) waiting on the other
line and that he would pass on those congratulations.

"They've carried the the burden and they've suffered a lot of casualties since the
war phase ended.

"And I feel as pleased for them as well as I do for the Iraqi people and they deserve
our congratulations."

Mr Howard said he did not regret for a moment sending Australian troops to Iraq, despite
the fact no weapons of mass destruction had been found.

"I think it was the right thing to have done and if the alternative advice had been
taken, Saddam Hussein would still be running Iraq," he said.

"He would still be murdering people."

And Mr Howard said the jury was still out on whether Iraq was developing weapons of
mass destruction.

"There is evidence of the existence of weapons programs and I think people who say
that there will never be any evidence discovered to match the very strong intelligence
we had some months ago, I think they are being altogether too premature in saying that."

Mr Howard said Saddam's capture was a great development for the people of Iraq, who
no longer had to live under the shadow of fear.

"Iraq has never really enjoyed full freedom and democracy and when you've had a dictator
brutalising and murdering the population over a 35 year period, until he is either killed
or taken into captivity, there was always the fear he would come back," he said.

"Even though his military had been defeated six or eight months earlier there was always
the worry that he would come back.

"I believe that this will lift an enormous psychological burden off the Iraqi people."

But Mr Howard warned fighting in Iraq would not automatically stop and there would
be no sudden end to terrorist attacks.

"But over time this is the single most decisive thing that can begin to further improve
the situation in Iraq and I know that the world will rejoice with the Iraqi people that
this loathsome man has finally been captured," he said.

AAP sm/sp

KEYWORD: IRAQ HOWARD LEAD 3 CANBERRA

2003 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Fed: Archbishop backs gay talks

00-00-0000
Fed: Archbishop backs gay talks

An Anglican leader in Australia says moves to allow gay clergy and same-sex marriagesare similar to the major church rethinks on slavery and the flat-earth theory.

Anglican Archbishop of Brisbane PHILLIP ASPINALL says church members need to reflecton a move in Canada to authorise a service to bless same-sex couples, and the electionof an openly gay bishop in the United States.

Dr ASPINALL that over time, the Holy Spirit has led the church more deeply into thetruth -- as JESUS promised would happen.

He says the church needs to recognise that it now knows more than the biblical authorsknew in their age about homosexuality.

Dr ASPINALL, whose view puts him at odds with Sydney Anglican Archbishop Dr PETER JENSEN,was writing in the latest edition of church newspaper Focus.

AAP RTV pjo/rt

KEYWORD: US EPISCOPAL ASPINALL (BRISBANE)

Thursday, March 1, 2012

Fed: Aircraft engineers ask CASA to come down on Virgin

00-00-0000
Fed: Aircraft engineers ask CASA to come down on Virgin

SYDNEY, Feb 27 AAP - Aircraft engineers are calling on the aviation watchdog to inspectand enforce safety standards at discount airline Virgin Blue.

The Australian Licensed Aircraft Engineers Association (ALAEA) has planned a seriesof industry-wide stopwork meetings from March 10 to protest against the use of pilotsfor pre-flight safety checks.

ALAEA said concerns over passenger safety came to the fore when budget carrier VirginBlue started using pilots instead of engineers to carry out pre-flight safety checks onnew aircraft.

The association's federal president Michael O'Rance said …

Fed: Centrelink to text message job seekers

00-00-0000
Fed: Centrelink to text message job seekers

MELBOURNE, Dec 27 AAP - Dole bludgers watch out.

In its latest innovative scheme to get you out of bed and gainfully employed, Centrelinkis now text messaging your mobile to remind you to show up at interviews.

Apparently a three month pilot of this SMS nagging in Adelaide, Canberra and Bathurstwas so successful, Centrelink is now extending the trial to Southport, Queensland.

Federal Family and Community Services Minister Amanda Vanstone said 90 per cent ofthe 300 people involved in the initial pilot said they had not been late or missed anappointment since the trial started.

"This is fantastic news considering 78 per cent of participants indicated that theyhad been late for an appointment or interview ... prior to receiving SMS text messagesfrom Centrelink," Senator Vanstone said in a statement.

She said the number of participants who said they had not experienced any problemswith receiving payments on time had also increased from 41 per cent to 93 per cent.

The trial will be evaluated to determine whether it will be introduced nationally toCentrelink's 500,000 young job seekers.

AAP jt/cjh

KEYWORD: CENTRELINK

Qld: Unions want better deals for casuals

00-00-0000
Qld: Unions want better deals for casuals

The Queensland Council of Unions wants a better deal for long-term casuals and workersin small business facing redundancy or change.

The QCU will start giving evidence in a test case in the Queensland Industrial RelationsCommission tomorrow to improve the workers' termination, change and redundancy entitlements.

QCU general secretary GRACE GRACE says it's the first action of its kind in 15 years.

She says the move follows the collapse of hundreds of corporations in Queensland overthe past year.

She says no worker wants to be made redundant, but if it does occur the council needsto ensure that worker entitlements are fair.

AAP RTV jfs/jmt

KEYWORD: CASUALS (BRISBANE)

Vic: Media advertised and encouraged chroming, inquiry told

00-00-0000
Vic: Media advertised and encouraged chroming, inquiry told

A parliamentary committee has been told the media's reporting of Melbourne's chromingproblem has been dangerous and irresponsible.

Youth workers have told the Drugs and Crime Prevention Committee that media coverageof chroming earlier this year promoted solvent abuse.

They say the media reports advertised the practice and told young people how to startsniffing solvents.

JANET JUKES from the Youth Affairs Council of Victoria says the media could adopt theguidelines for reporting suicide when reporting on substance abuse.

She says they don't report details of suicides because that's been shown to encourageimitators, and they could do the same for substance abuse.

AAP RTV ra/szp/clr/wjf/rp

KEYWORD: SOLVENTS (MELBOURNE)

WA: University calls for extra funding

00-00-0000
WA: University calls for extra funding

PERTH, Jan 16 AAP - Top students are being denied access to university courses of theirchoice because of government funding restrictions, University of Western Australia (UWA)vice-chancellor Alan Robson said today.

Professor Robson said an estimated 250 students who wanted to attend UWA this yearwould be unable to do so because of increasing demand for places which had pushed up thetertiary entrance mark required.

However, the federal government had not allocated …

SWIM: Australia thrashes USA in Goodwill swim


AAP General News (Australia)
08-29-2001
SWIM: Australia thrashes USA in Goodwill swim

The Australian men's swimming team has thrashed the United States in their round robin
clash on the first day of the Goodwill Games in Brisbane.

In the points format, Australia outscored the Americans 93.5 to 55.5, winning 11 of
the 17 events.

GRANT HACKETT claimed Australia's first gold medal with a predictable win in the 1500
metres freestyle, even though he was almost 30 seconds outside the world record he set
in Japan last month.

IAN THORPE figured in two relay wins while also claiming the 200 metres freestyle.

The European All-Stars and the World All-Stars meet in tonight's final round robin,
with two more days of swimming before Monday's finals program.

AAP RTV mc/sp

KEYWORD: GOOD SWIM AUST (BRISBANE)

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

Fed


AAP General News (Australia)
04-12-2001
Fed:: Call for donations for landmine removal

World Vision is urging Australians to help raise $800,000 to help remove landmines from Cambodia.

Olympic gold medallist LAUREN BURNS has called for Australians to do their part for
the World Vision Destroy-A-Mine campaign by taking part in the 40-Hour Famine on May 18.

The Federal Government has pledged $1 for every $2 raised during the fundraiser for
landmine removal and education.

Ms BURNS -- who won gold in taekwondo at the Sydney Olympics -- visited Cambodia last
month, seeing the effects of an estimated five million mines on the country.

She says the main thing that struck her was seeing how close people live to minefields
or on minefields.

Ms BURNS and landmine survivor SOKHEURM (SOKHEURM) MAN, 18, whose right lower leg was
blown off five years ago, helped students pop 167 balloons.

Each balloon represented a person killed by mines in Cambodia last year.

SOKHEURM says his injury and the death of a friend prompted him to speak out.

AAP RTV ac/gfr/jtb/mjm

KEYWORD: LANDMINES (MELBOURNE)

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

Qld: Hanson in race for registration


AAP General News (Australia)
01-21-2001
Qld: Hanson in race for registration

By Paul Osborne

BRISBANE, Jan 21 AAP - One Nation leader Pauline Hanson says the Electoral Commission
will have to give good reasons for delays in re-registering her party if it is not done
in time for the looming Queensland state election.

Speculation is growing that Premier Peter Beattie will on Tuesday call a poll for February 17.

Ms Hanson said today she had received indications from the Queensland Electoral Commission
that she would have a decision on the re-registration of her party by mid-week.

But she said if the commission did not make …

NSW: Bayeh appears in court charged with shooting


AAP General News (Australia)
08-31-2000
NSW: Bayeh appears in court charged with shooting

Sydney identity LOUIS BAYEH has appeared in court in a wheelchair, charged over a
shooting outside a suburban restaurant in the south of the city earlier this year.

BAYEH is facing three counts of shooting causing grievous bodily harm.

He was refused bail at Sydney's Central Local Court.

In refusing bail, Magistrate ALAN MOORE says he couldn't even begin to suggest Mr BAYEH
wouldn't continue to involve himself in criminal actions.

BAYEH'S solicitor JOHN HAJJE says BAYEH is suffering from three gunshot wounds following
the July incident and is unable even to urinate by himself.

Mr HAJJE says BAYEH requires round the clock medical supervision.

The hearing is continuing.

AAP RTV dmc/ah/et/jn

KEYWORD: BAYEH (SYDNEY)

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

NSW: Man killed by blast through front door court told


AAP General News (Australia)
04-17-2000
NSW: Man killed by blast through front door court told

SYDNEY, April 17 AAP - A man was blasted to death through the front door of his home
several days after a car accident in his driveway, a court was told today.

Ahmed Homsi, 51, was shot in the throat as he walked to the door, after an initial
shot was fired through a front window while he was watching television in the back of
the house, prosecutor Bruce Smith said.

Lloyd Anthony Murrell, 29, has pleaded not guilty in the New South Wales Supreme Court
to murdering Mr Homsi at his Lakemba home, in Sydney's west, about midnight on November
10, 1997.

Mr Smith told a jury of 10 women and two men that Murrell had gone to Mr Homsi's house
five days before the shooting after a female friend rang asking for his help when she
lost control of her car and smashed into a car parked in Mr Homsi's driveway.

He said Murrell argued with the owner of the parked car, a friend of Mr Homsi's, when
he learned that police had been called about the accident.

"During the course of the argument the accused threatened (the owner) and said he knew
where he lived," Mr Smith said.

He said when police arrived Murrell was arguing with a group of people outside Mr Homsi's house.

It was alleged that days later Murrell and a friend went back to Mr Homsi's house and
that the friend fired the shotgun.

Mr Smith said Murrell was guilty of murder because he went with his friend with the
intention of either killing Mr Homsi or causing grievous bodily harm.

He said it was alleged that Murrell made some "very damning admissions" about his involvement
in the shooting during a taped conversation with a friend after seeing a televised re-enactment
of the murder on Australia's Most Wanted on June 16, 1998.

Murrell allegedly described the shooting of Mr Homsi telling the friend of seeing his
shadow approaching the front door and then saying to his companion: "Through the door".

"More particularly, the crown says when he said `through the door' he was giving instructions
to shoot through the door," Mr Smith said.

He said during an interview with police Murrell denied arguing with people outside
Mr Homsi's house, describing it more as "he had had words".

Murrell also denied threatening anyone or that he had any knowledge of the murder.

The trial before Justice Timothy Studdert is continuing.

AAP gl/sb/hu/bwl

KEYWORD: MURRELL

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

Dealing with Antarctica s rubbish tips


AAP General News (Australia)
02-01-2000
Dealing with Antarctica s rubbish tips

Exactly 100 years after Norwegian CARSTEN BORCHGREVINK established the first winter
base on pristine Antarctica, the frozen continent is littered with contaminated rubbish
tips.

An international conference in Hobart has been told that some of the worst tips are
Australian, which are leaking metals and petroleum hydrocarbons into the sea and harming
marine life.

However, Australia is now leading the way in research as it looks for ways to clean
up the sins of the past.

The symposium on cold region development has heard that most of the Australian remediation
work is being done around Casey and the abandoned Wilkes station.

The problem is getting rid of the old mess.

And Dr MARTIN RIDDLE says that without care, removal could make things worse.

Scientists are now looking for biological and smart engineering solutions.

AAP RTV dw/dmc/jn

KEYWORD: ANTARCTICA (HOBART)

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

Public invited to join Puebloan explorations


Indian Country Today (Lakota Times)
02-22-1999
Public invited to join Puebloan explorations: Mesa Verde programs range from overnight to week-long efforts

Crow Crayon Archaeological Center near Mesa Verde National Park has invited adults of all ages and students from around the country to join professional archaeologists to search for understanding in the prehistoric past.

The canyon country of the Mesa Verde region is dotted with abandoned villages of the Puebloan people who inhabited the beautiful but rugged landscape for nearly a thousand years. Over the centuries, entire communities sprang up, flourished for a time and eventually disappeared, leaving only traces of their homes, pottery and tools as clues for the archaeologists who followed. For more than 100 years the area has been the subject of intensive archaeological research.

Crow Canyon Archaeological Center (formed as a nonprofit organization in 1983) is committed to long-term research on the 10th to 13th-century occupation by the ancestral Puebloans (Anasazi) of the mesa Verde Region. Programs are designed in consultation with American Indian advisors and led by an outstanding staff of professional archaeologists and educators. High-quality, experience-based learning programs incorporate the center's research findings and involve participants in the research process.

Crow Canyon programs have gained national recognition throughout the years, sponsored in part by grants from the National Science Foundation, National Geographic Society, National Endowment for the Humanities and the Colorado Historical Society. Books and articles about research results have been published in magazines and covered by television. Data and education programs are available on the Internet.

Public participation in Crow Canyon programs is vital to continued success. Participants experience the excitement of learning and the satisfaction of taking part in innovative archaeological research.

Each year some 3,500 students and adults participate in one of the programs. Students groups come from around the country. Programs range in from overnight to week-long endeavors that allow students to excavate with Crow Canyon's research archaeologists. Students are involved in simulated digs, ecology hikes and guided tours of Mesa Verde National Park.

Adult participants can choose from a wide variety of research and educational programs, most of which last one week. They join in the excavation of Shields Pueblo, repeatedly occupied between A.D. 600 and A.D. 1300. In addition to field excavation, participants analyze and interpret materials recovered from the site.

This intensive course in Southwestern archaeology also includes an introduction to the local ecology, hands-on experiences with ancestral Puebloan lifestyles, and a tour of spectacular Mesa Verde National Park.

The wide variety of adult programs led by research archaeologists, American Indians and other scholars focus on archaeology, American Indian culture, and traditional crafts.

Family members can work and learn together in either an excavation program or an exploration of the Southwest that includes visits to Canyon de Chelly and Hopi Mesas.

Crow Canyon offers several workshops for educators who want to understand the human past in the American Southwest, use the multi-disciplinary science of archaeology in their classrooms and learn more about American Indian culture.

Shared accommodations are provided in Navajo-style long hogans on a pinon-and-juniper covered hillside or in the Crow Canyon Lodge.

Crow Canyon is four miles northwest of Cortez, Colo., 15 miles west of the entrance of Mesa Verde National Park and 400 miles southwest of Denver.

For more information, contact Lynn Thompson Baca at 800-422-8975, ext. 137 or email: Itbaca@crowcanyon.org.

Article copyright Indian Country Today. ********************************************************

Ethnic NewsWatch SoftLine Information, Inc., Stamford, CT

SA: Lawyer hired for historian jailed in Germany


AAP General News (Australia)
04-12-1999
SA: Lawyer hired for historian jailed in Germany

ADELAIDE, April 12 AAP - The Adelaide Institute has hired a German lawyer to represent its
director, Fredrick Toben, who has been arrested in Germany for disputing the severity of the
Holocaust.

Institute assistant director Geoff Muirden said he had arranged for a lawyer from Mannheim
to represent Dr Toben, who he said had been detained for four days on a charge of "defaming
the memory of the dead".

Supporters of Dr Toben, including well-known British historian David Irving, say the
Adelaide man has been held at Mannheim Prison after being arrested for challenging widely
accepted details about the Holocaust on his website.

But neither the Australian government nor Mr Muirden had full details of Dr Toben's
situation.

"We unfortunately don't have any firsthand information," Mr Muirden told AAP.

"He (the lawyer) is the man who is going to give us information. Hopefully he will be able
to get into prison to see what Dr Toben's condition is and to clarify the charges."

Mr Muirden said the Adelaide Institute had received messages of support from all over the
world for Dr Toben, who is expected to appear in court in Mannheim today.

But a spokesman for the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade said the German authorities
had been unable to confirm that Dr Toben had been arrested or charged.

"We asked the German authorities there, the prison authorities and so forth, whether there
was any record and there wasn't," he said.

"It's something of a mystery but we will continue to ask the German authorities if they do
have this information."

AAP sn/bm/br

KEYWORD: GERMANY TOBEN (CARRIED EARLIER)

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

WA: Archbishops Christmas wish for peace


AAP General News (Australia)
12-25-1998
WA: Archbishops Christmas wish for peace

PERTH, Dec 25 AAP - Perth's archbishops pleaded for world peace today as their Christmas
sermons turned to the recent conflict in Iraq.

Catholic Archbishop Barry Hickey described this century as the worst of all for violence
and conflict and asked people to love and forgive one another.

"It is quite unrealistic to think that world peace will ever be achieved through military
action and killing," Archbishop Hickey told his congregation.

"The cessation of hostilities is all that can be achieved until the resentments surface
again in violence.

"International respect and cooperation are necessary prerequisites for peace on a world
scale, just as genuine love, respect and forgiveness are necessary conditions for peace in
families and among friends."

Anglican Archbishop Peter Carnley said not only the approach to Christmas but that
of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan had been shattered by the bombing of Baghdad.

He said all Australians had been implicated in the violence by the federal government's
support of the United States and British action.

"We can only hope and pray that the decision to bomb was wisely taken and absolutely
necessary given the longer term security interests in the Middle East," Archbishop Carnley
said.

"Whatever the outcome of the judgment on history in relation to these matters, our peace
this Christmas has been shattered."

He warned against thinking peace meant inactivity.

"Real peace is won by engagement not in silence. It is the outcome of grappling
responsibility with tension rather than shelving all responsibilities or backing away from
disturbing issues," Archbishop Carnley said.

"Peace is something that is achieved with the gracious help of God with us in the quest
for justice and equity, a fair share in the delivery of care and well being in the community."

AAP kbw/cfm/br

KEYWORD: XMAS CHURCHES WA

1998 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

QLD:Missing funds could exceed $16m: Bligh


AAP General News (Australia)
12-12-2011
QLD:Missing funds could exceed $16m: Bligh

Premier ANNA BLIGH concedes the amount of money missing from Queensland Health could
exceed 16 million dollars.

Public servant HOHEPA MOREHU-BARLOW, also known as JOEL BARLOW, has been taken into
custody this morning for questioning about the missing money.

He was caught after a four day search when he tried to enter his inner-Brisbane unit
at New Farm at about 3.30am today.

It's alleged he siphoned off 16 million dollars over three years including one payment
of 11 million dollars in the last two weeks.

Ms BLIGH has told ABC Radio she won't be giving a final figure on the amount stolen
until they've seen the outcome of a forensic audit of Queensland Health.

The premier also says there may also be questions raised about current police checks
of government employees after reports Mr MOREHU-BARLOW has a criminal history for fraud
in New Zealand.

AAP RTV dac/sw

KEYWORD: MILLIONS BLIGH (BRISBANE)

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

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

NSW: Prison officers stop work to protest privatisation plan


AAP General News (Australia)
02-04-2009
NSW: Prison officers stop work to protest privatisation plan

SYDNEY, Feb 4 AAP - More than 100 prison officers have walked off the job at Sydney's
Long Bay Jail calling for an end to plans to privatise NSW prisons.

At a rally in Sydney's east, NSW Public Service Association assistant secretary Steve
Turner said the state government was planning to sell off Parklea and Cessnock prisons,
but privatisation would not stop there.

"This is about attacking you, about attacking your wages, about attacking your conditions,
and most of all attacking your jobs," Mr Turner said.

"The people who will …

Nokia's Ovi Store Features NetQin Mobile Anti-virus


Wireless News
05-31-2011
Nokia's Ovi Store Features NetQin Mobile Anti-virus
Type: News

NetQin Mobile Anti-virus has been featured in Nokia's Ovi Store with a positive user rating of four stars out of five.

To date, the application has seen an approximately 700 percent increase in daily downloads ever since it was featured in the Ovi Store along side the mobile game, Angry Birds. NetQin Mobile Anti- virus is currently available for Symbian, Android, Blackberry and Windows Mobile devices. NetQin Mobile Anti-virus for Android also ranks among the Top 10 "hot applications" on AppBrain.com.
Based on Cloud-security technology, NetQin Mobile Anti-virus protects mobile devices against viruses and malware with accurate scan. NetQin Mobile Anti-virus has a set of select features for mobile device users, including:

-Anti-virus: With the original double-engine technology, NetQin Mobile Anti-virus completely deletes the latest viruses, Trojans, spyware and malicious fee-deduction software to protect mobile devices as well as users' privacy and property.

-Contacts backup/restore: A backup account allows users to backup and restore contacts seamlessly between different operating systems so that the contacts will never get lost.

-Real-time protection: Real-time protection detects all kinds of threats in time, such as viruses, malicious links, Trojans; protects accounts with QQ, MSN, etc.; and ensures the safety of mobile devices during file transmission, network connection and application installation.

-Anti-lost: Anti-lost with remote control feature provides worldwide protection for mobile devices and prevents financial losses and privacy leakage.

NetQin's services are now being used by approximately 85.97 million users in more than 100 countries and regions worldwide across multiple mobile operating systems.

NetQin Mobile Inc. is a provider of consumer-centric mobile Internet services focusing on security and productivity.

More Information:

www.netqin.com

((Comments on this story may be sent to newsdesk@closeupmedia.com))

Copyright 2011 Close-Up Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
n/a

FED:Retail trade up 0.2% in October


AAP General News (Australia)
12-01-2011
FED:Retail trade up 0.2% in October

SYDNEY, Dec 1 AAP - Retail spending rose 0.2 per cent in October, which was lower than
market expecations, according to official figures.

Retail trade rose in the month to a seasonally adjusted $20.951 billion, compared to
a downwardly revised $20.899 billion in September, the Australian Bureau of Statistics
said on Thursday.

Economists' forecasts had centred on a 0.4 per cent rise in retail sales in the month of October.

AAP ews/dlm/jlw

KEYWORD: RETAIL

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

Secret of iPad 2: It can't be too light or too thin


DAVID POGUE
International Herald Tribune
03-11-2011
Secret of iPad 2: It can't be too light or too thin
Byline: DAVID POGUE
Section: State Of The Art
Type: News

On paper, Apple didn't do much, making it thinner, lighter and twice as fast. But just that much improvement transforms the experience. And, at the same price as the old version, the device is a winner.

"An utter disappointment and abysmal failure" (Orange County Design Blog). "Consumers seem genuinely baffled by why they might need it" (Businessweek). "Nothing more than a luxury bauble that will appeal to a few gadget freaks" (Bloomberg). "Insanely great it is not" (MarketWatch). "My god, am I underwhelmed" (Gizmodo).
Good heavens! What a critical drubbing! Whatever it is, it must be a real turkey. What could it be?

Only the fastest-selling gadget in the history of electronics: the Apple iPad.

All right, let's not pile onto the technology critics. The thing is, they were right, at least from a rational standpoint. The iPad was superfluous. It filled no obvious need. If you already had a touch-screen phone and a laptop, why on earth would you need an iPad? It did seem like just a big iPod Touch.

But as it has turned out, the iPad's appeal is more emotional than rational. Once you get it in your hands, you get caught up in the fascination of manipulating on-screen objects by touching them. Apple sold 15 million iPads in nine months after release of the device last April, created a mammoth new product category and started an industry of copycats. Apparently, it does not pay to bet against Steve Jobs's gut instinct.

On Friday the iPad 2 goes on sale in the United States, for the same price as the old one (from $500 for the Wi-Fi-only model with 16 gigabytes of storage, to $830 with 64 gigabytes and both Wi-Fi and cellular Internet connections). The iPad2 will be available March 25 in Australia, Japan and New Zealand, as well as in Europe.

And if you thought there was an intellectual-emotional disconnect before, wait till you see this thing.

On paper, Apple did not do much. It just made the iPad one-third thinner, 15 percent lighter and twice as fast. There are no new features except two cameras and a gyroscope. I mean, yawn, right?

And then you start playing with it.

My friends, I'm telling you: just that much improvement in thinness, weight and speed transforms the experience. We are not talking about a laptop or a TV, where you do not notice its thickness while in use. This is a tablet. You are almost always holding it. Thin and light are unbelievably important for comfort and the overall delight. So are rounded edges, which the first iPad did not have.

The iPad 2 is now 0.34 inches, or 8.64 millimeters, thick. Next to it, the brand-new Motorola Xoom -- the best Android competitor so far -- looks obese. Yet somehow, the new iPad still gets 10 hours of battery life on a charge.

Some of the iPad's new features play industry catch-up. There is a camera on the back (no flash) that can record high-definition video. If you have never used a tablet as a camera, you are in for a treat; the entire screen is your viewfinder. It is like using an 8- by-10 enlargement to compose the scene. Bafflingly, though, the stills are only 0.7 megapixels.

There is also a low-resolution front camera that is useful for video calls, like clear, sharp Wi-Fi calls to iPhone 4, Touch, iPad 2 and Mac owners using Apple's FaceTime software.

You can now connect the iPad to a high-definition television, thanks to a single HDMI adapter ($40) that carries both audio and high-definition video. What you see on the TV mirrors whatever is on the iPad, which makes it a great setup for teaching, slide shows, presentations, YouTube and movies. It works automatically and effortlessly.

The more expensive iPad 2 models can also go online using either AT&T's or Verizon's cellular networks in the United States, but figuring out the right pricing plan requires a graduate degree in forensic accounting.

On the bright side, both AT&T and Verizon let you sign up for cell service right from the iPad, only when you need it -- no two- year contract. You can turn service on only when you will be traveling, for example.

Now, about Apple's new iPad screen cover. Ordinarily, devoting time to a technology review of a screen cover would indicate that the columnist was a few sandwiches shy of a picnic. But Apple's new cover is a perfect symbol of its fondness for high-technology magic tricks.

You attach this single sheet by drawing it across the iPad's face as though you were making a bed. With a satisfying clicking sound, hidden magnets anchor the thing solidly.

"But Dad," my 6-year-old son pointed out, "you're supposed to keep magnets away from electronics!"

"I know," I replied sagely. "But this is Apple." And then I showed him how opening the cover turned the iPad on automatically and closing it again put the thing back to sleep.

This cover ($40 for polyurethane in five colors, or $70 for leather in five other colors) is not for protecting the screen, whose hardened glass does not need much help. It is for fashion, for cleaning (Apple says that the cover's microfibers mop away dust) and for propping up the iPad. Clever hinges in the cover's rigid panels prop up the iPad at two angles, so you can watch movies or freely use the on-screen keyboard with both hands.

There is a gyroscope in the iPad, too, just as in the iPhone 4. You notice it only when you play games that have been written to exploit it. For example, you can look behind you in the Nova 2 shoot- 'em-up environment by moving the iPad around you, or walk around the tower of wood blocks in Jenga.

Now, the coming months will bring a blizzard of tablets that are meant to compete with the iPad. And they will offer some juicy features that the iPad still lacks. On a tablet that runs on the Google Android operating system, you can speak to enter text into any box that accepts typing. You also get an outstanding turn-by- turn navigation app -- and GPS maps are a different experience on a 10-inch screen. It is like being guided to your destination by an Imax movie.

Furthermore, new Android tablets will be able to play Flash videos and animations on the Web, something that both Apple and Adobe, the maker of Flash, assure us will never come to the iPad (or iPhone). Flash on a tablet or phone can be balky and battery- hungry, but it is often better than nothing. Thousands of news and entertainment Web sites still rely on Flash, and the iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch simply cannot display them.

But you know what? The iPad will still dominate the market, because it dominates in all the most important criteria: thinness, weight, integration, beauty and apps.

Oh, yes, the apps: there are 65,000 apps already available for the iPad, not including the 290,000 iPhone apps that run at lower resolution on the iPad's screen. By contrast, Google's programming kit for tablets just came out, so there are very few apps written for larger Android screens.

The kicker, though, may be the price. Apple is at the top of its game these days and at the top of the industry. The rap, of course, is that you often pay extra for Apple elegance.

The shocker here, though, is that the iPad 2 actually costs less than its comparably equipped Android rivals, like the Xoom and the Samsung Galaxy Tab. That twist must have something to do with Apple's huge buying clout -- when you order five million of some component at a time, you can usually persuade the vendor to cut you a deal.

But that price detail may turn a lot of heads. It means that for the first time, your heart can succumb to the iPad mystique without your having to ignore the practical input from your brain.

Copyright International Herald Tribune Mar 11, 2011

VIC:Main stories on Nine News


AAP General News (Australia)
12-06-2010
VIC:Main stories on Nine News

MELBOURNE, Dec 6 AAP - Main stories in Nine News:

- Homicide detectives say a 10-month-old baby left with a babysitter may have been shaken.

- A victims of crime group says it is impressed with the new state government's stance
on law and order.

- The mother of a girl who swallowed a coin has lashed out at slow ambulance services
that forced her to wait an hour for help last week.

- State on high alert for flash flooding with the bureau predicting rainfall between
50 and 100 millimetres.

- More trouble for former AFL player Brendan Fevola after shattering a window accidentally
with a baseball.

- Mining magnate Andrew "Twiggy" Forrest has stepped in to break up a street fight.

- Coronial inquiry hears Scotch College cadet leader was not aware of the peanut allergy
anaphylaxis after a student died after eating a beef satay ration on a cadet camp.

- A young police officer whose father was killed by a drunk driver will head the Christmas
road toll television campaign.

- Melbourne is preparing to host talk show queen Oprah Winfrey's tour to Australia this week.

- A Melbourne couple who met on social networking site Twitter have made history after
becoming engaged.

AAP ees/apm

KEYWORD: MONITOR 1800 NINE

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

Vic: Main stories in Friday's Melbourne newspapers


AAP General News (Australia)
04-30-2010
Vic: Main stories in Friday's Melbourne newspapers

MELBOURNE, April 30 AAP - Main stories in Friday's Melbourne newspapers:

HERALD SUN

Page 1: One of the bloodiest chapters in Victoria's history will end today when gangland
killer Carl Williams is buried.

Page 2: Outer suburban commuters will still pay higher train fares after the government
dropped plans to introduce a single fare across Melbourne's train system.

Page 3: Twenty sickening episodes of violent and drunken behaviour at one strip joint
are exposed in a secret police dossier that could prompt the shutdown of notorious city
nightspots.

World: A New York truck driver who spent nearly 19 years behind bars for a 1988 killing
he didn't commit has been freed after DNA testing pointed to another prisoner.

Finance: The boss of a major Australian bank has labelled Europe a mess amid growing
fears Greece's sovereign debt issues are quickly spreading.

Sport: If Hawthorn coach Alastair Clarkson could have one wish before tomorrow night's
clash with Essendon, it would have to be the addition of Aaron Sandilands to his squad.

MORE jrd/sn/

KEYWORD: MONITOR FRONTERS VIC

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

WA: Victorian man jailed for giving woman HIV


AAP General News (Australia)
12-16-2009
WA: Victorian man jailed for giving woman HIV

An HIV-positive Victorian man who knowingly infected a Perth woman will spend at least
two years and three months behind bars.

44 year old WEPUKHULU ZEBTEK from Ivanhoe in Victoria has been sentenced in the West
Australian District Court today.

He pleaded guilty to grievous bodily harm in October after admitting to having sex
in 2007 with the woman who later tested positive to the virus.

Judge ALLAN FENBURY said ZEBTEK had displayed extremely selfish behaviour and his actions
were appalling and disgraceful.

He said ZEBTEK made the choice not to tell the woman he was HIV positive because he
thought she wouldn't have sex with him otherwise.

ZEBTEK was sentenced to four and a half years jail and will be eligible for parole
in two years and three months.

His lawyer says ZEBTEK will appeal.

AAP RTV ap/ah/crh

KEYWORD: ZEBTEK (PERTH)

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