Sunday, March 4, 2012

PLAYER REPS OK NBA CONTRACT.(SPORTS)

Byline: Associated Press

CHICAGO The NBA is back in business. Well, almost.

Player representatives overwhelming approved a six-year contract Wednesday, then passed the ball to the owners, who are expected to give their approval later in the week. There may still be a few bumps, however.

The vote by player representatives was 25-2 in favor of the deal, with a three-quarters vote needed for approval. Boston and Sacramento cast the dissenting votes during a 35-minute meeting.

``We're all smiles today,'' said the Knicks' Charles Smith, a union vice president. ``It was a long, tedious process. A long, long time waiting to get the season …

Purdue University Food Expert: Benefits of Farmed Salmon Outweigh Risks.

Byline: Purdue University

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind., Jan. 8 (AScribe Newswire) -- The health benefits of eating salmon outweigh the risks named in a study published this week in the journal Science, says a Purdue University nutritionist and toxicologist.

Charles Santerre, associate professor of foods, nutrition and food science, has done extensive research on contaminants in fish. He says he agrees with the overall findings of the study, titled "Global Assessment of Organic Contaminants in Farmed Salmon" to be published in Friday's (Jan. 9) edition of "Science" and Thursday's (Jan. 8) "Science Express" on the World Wide Web. But the Purdue researcher says he …

ICC praises pace of renovations at Eden Gardens

NEW DELHI (AP) — The International Cricket Council praised the progress of construction work at Eden Gardens on Tuesday, saying the Calcutta venue is on target to host three matches at the World Cup.

The ICC said in a statement that a three-member inspection team was impressed after visiting the stadium Monday.

Eden Gardens has been stripped of the match between India and England on Feb. 27 because of the slow pace of renovation work.

But ICC chief executive Haroon Lorgat said …

Horoscope

TODAY'S FORECAST

eARIES (March 21-April 19). Romance requires a connection ofmind, body and lifestyle. The spiritual component is equallyimportant. You'll clarify your feelings about someone.

rTAURUS (April 20-May 20). You know better than to say anythingnegative about yourself. However, that self-depreciating humor ofyours may take the conversation down the wrong road.

tGEMINI (May 21-June 21). You'll be tempted to dilly-dally, taketoo many breaks or go soft on your demands of yourself. If you canresist that temptation, there is a big reward in it for you.

yCANCER (June 22-July 22). Relationships require attention inorder to stay healthy. Don't wait …

Investment boom, financial bust: the crisis in Korea.

From October to December of last year, Korea went from being the world's eleventh largest economy to one surviving on overnight loans from the international money markets. Between November 19, when Korea decided to approach the International Monetary Fund for a rescue, and December 24, the won fell more than 50 percent against the U.S. dollar, the stock price index tumbled from 498 to 350, and the short-term market rate of interest shot up to 40 percent a year.

Although the IMF made a huge rescue package available on December 3, Korean banks suddenly found themselves cut off from the international financial markets. During the last week of December, Korea was on the verge of defaulting on its foreign debts, a fate averted only by a last-minute emergency loan by the IMF and several G-7 countries.

Although Korean banks have been able to roll over some of their short-term debts and market sentiment seems once again to be turning in Korea's favor, Korea faces a long struggle in normalizing its ties to the international financial markets.

BUILDUP TO THE CRISIS: INVESTMENT BOOM

From 1995 to the beginning of 1997, Korea's economic growth averaged almost 8 percent a year, peaking in 1996 at nearly 9 percent. The growth was fueled by exports and also by high investment by Korean firms. And though investment seemed exactly the right prescription for an economy coming out of a mild 1992-93 contraction, in the end it contributed heavily to Korea's financial and foreign exchange crisis.

From late 1992 to mid-1995, the appreciation of the Japanese yen sharply increased the export earnings of Japan's East Asian trade competitors, especially Korea, and spurred investment throughout the region. In the third quarter of 1995, the yen began its long slide against the dollar, slowing not only Korea's exports but its economy as a whole. Korean policymakers made no substantial adjustments in the won-dollar exchange rate, and the real effective (trade-adjusted) exchange rate appreciated for more than a year and then remained relatively stable until the financial crisis broke out.

The investment boom, however, continued as foreign capital surged into Korea with the easing of capital controls as part of a general financial opening. With domestic interest rates more than twice those in world financial markets, net foreign capital inflows during 1994-96 reached $52.3 billion, more than triple those …

Saturday, March 3, 2012

DEADLINE URGED ON TRIBUNALS.(MAIN)

Byline: ELIZABETH NEUFFER Boston Globe

UNITED NATIONS -- The Bush administration Thursday urged two U.N. war crimes tribunals -- including the genocide trial of former Yugoslav leader Slobodan Milosevic -- to focus on their ``endgame'' and conclude work by 2008.

The U.S. ambassador for war crimes issues, Pierre Prosper, told members of Congress that the tribunals had at times suffered from mismanagement and inefficiency that often had challenged ``the integrity of the process.'' Despite progress in both tribunals, Prosper said the administration was pressuring countries to cooperate so the tribunals could deliver justice in a ``timely fashion.''

Inka Textile Devices Served as Business Ledgers; Computer Analysis Reveals Numerical, Other Patterns in Knotted Objects.

Byline: National Science Foundation

ARLINGTON, Va., Aug. 11 (AScribe Newswire) -- While most ancient cultures recorded civil matters and business transactions by inscribing characters on two-dimensional sheets, new evidence shows Peru's original inhabitants used a three-dimensional system of knotted strings to keep track of things.

In the Aug. 12 edition of the journal Science, Harvard University anthropologist Gary Urton and database developer Carrie Brezine say their computer analysis of 21 of the knotted objects, known as "khipu," revealed distinct patterns that help confirm the textile devices were used for record keeping and to communicate affairs of …

Clinton seeks revamp of State, USAID

WASHINGTON (AP) — Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton wants to reorganize the State Department and U.S. Agency for International Development to better respond to global threats and emergencies.

In a proposal presented to members of Congress on Wednesday, Clinton outlined plans to add several new offices to each agency and consolidate others under a revised leadership structure.

The plan would create bureaus for international energy affairs and crisis and conflict operations at State as well as offices for policy planning and science and technology at USAID.

Clinton also wants to add a special State Department coordinator to oversee illicit finance and sanctions …

SoMA-Area MUSEUMS.(Brief Article)

San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

151 Third St. * (415) 357-4000

Permanent collection includes more than 18,000 works, including art by Pollack, O'Keeffe, Warhol, Matisse and Picasso. It was the first museum on the West Coast devoted to 20th century art and remains the most comprehensive resource for modern and contemporary art on the West Coast. …

D'ANDREA TO SPEAK AT CHAMBER MEAL.(Local)

State Assemblyman Bobby D'Andrea will be the featured speaker this week at the Greater Saratoga Chamber of Commerce's monthly Third Thursday breakfast.

D'Andrea, R-Saratoga Springs, will give an update on issues before the state Legislature that will …

Asarco and union face off over mining contract.

Byline: Richard Ducote

Jul. 3--Arizona's copper industry and its union work force have both declined dramatically in influence over the last two decades.

But passions still flare when contracts come due in the mining towns. So it is with Asarco and its union coalition representing about 1,500 hourly workers.

The two sides are facing off for what could be the last great struggle of organized copper labor in the state. Consolidation has left only two major producers in the state and only Asarco has union workers. Phelps Dodge unions in Arizona evaporated after the violent 1983 strike.

Asarco workers see high copper prices now and ask for more …

Old World comes to life at Mirabell

MIRABELL (STAR) (STAR) 3454 W. Addison Cuisine: German. Phone:(773) 463-1962. Hours: Lunch 11-3 everyday; dinner 5-10 p.m.Monday-Thursday, 5 p.m.-11 p.m. Friday and Saturday; closed Sundayexcept for Mothers Day. Dinner prices: soup and salads, $2-$8.95;appetizers $3.95-$16.95; entrees, $10.95-$17.25; desserts,$2.50-$4.50; Ambience: Intimate, cozy, Old World. Dress code: Nicecasual. Credit cards: All major. Reservations: Necessary for six ormore or on weekends. Smoking: Separate non-smoking dining room.Parking: Street and in shopping center parking lot across the street.Wheelchair accessible? Yes, with separate bathroom. Good for kids?Yes, cuisine is child-friendly, smaller …

EARLY INTERVENTION A MUST FOR AUTISTIC CHILDREN.(MAIN)

Byline: MAUREEN TRICOZZI Clifton Park MmTricozzi@aol.com

I am writing in response to Thomas Sowell's Aug. 18 column on autism. Although I am not familiar with the specifics of Nebraska's ``intensive'' early intervention of children identified as autistic, I don't believe that any early intervention program should be criticized. Early intervention is absolutely necessary to give children the best possible start when a problem exists. My child is a perfect example.

At age 3, my son was diagnosed with an autistic spectrum disorder and began what Mr. Sowell might call intensive therapy. It was about 25 hours per week, 12 months a year and it consisted of in-home …

Friday, March 2, 2012

USPTO ISSUES TRADEMARK: MARKETDASH

ALEXANDRIA, Va., July 1 -- The trademark MARKETDASH (Reg. No. 3987288) was issued on June 28 by the USPTO.

Owner: Yahoo! Inc. CORPORATION DELAWARE 701 First Ave. Sunnyvale CALIFORNIA 94089.

The trademark application serial number 85151042 was filed on Oct. 12, 2010 and was registered on June 28.

Goods and Services: Providing financial information by means of cellular communication, wireless communication, the Internet, electronic communications networks, and computer networks. FIRST USE: 20110222. FIRST USE IN COMMERCE: 20110222

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

Can the mouse be a tool of revolution in India?

Do you consider yourself a 'slacktivist'?" Vikram Sengupta considers the question for a couple of seconds, and then excuses himself. "I'll call you back. I'm in the middle of something right now," he says, and hangs up. Being called a 'slacktivist' is probably not very flattering, first thing in the morning or at any other time of the day. But this writer has been at the receiving end of endless mails from him, mails which sought to impose a burning moral imperative to sign up instantly and save the grand Canadian Musk Ox or the Mexican Dumpy Frog. The question, therefore, is not unjustified.

Activists vs slacktivists

The slick application of the word 'slacktivist' is the work of eminent scholar and author of The Net Delusion, Evgeny Morozov. Rather stinging in its import, it refers to people who, while campaigning for social causes, limit their action to the click of a mouse. In an earlier interview with DNA Sunday, Morozov was quick to clarify that he had nothing against online activism (activism through social-networking sites, websites, blogs and online petitions), "but I'd rather see the people signing (petitions) also join some offline political movements and campaign for change in the real world as much as they do in the virtual world," he had said.

Sengupta does call back. And when the question is put to him again, he says, "People can call me a 'slacktivist' if they want. Look, I don't have a lot of time to devote to activism and I don't even know if signing petitions actually works. But when I see that a simple click of mine might possibly help save a rainforest or rid the world of its nuclear arsenal, I can't just cynically turn away. I don't know... I feel uncomfortable doing it."

The phenomenon of 'slacktivism' elicits quite strong responses from the Indian activist community. People who grapple with the hard-knock realities of activism are not amused by the casual, momentary concern of the 'slacktivist'.

Ashley Tellis is a freelance journalist, academic and gay rights activist. "The central limitation here is that one-click activism [slacktivism] becomes a substitute for sustained campaigns and engagement with persistent inequalities. The Indian middle-class, notorious for its apolitical and consumerist selfishness, can now feel smug and assuage its rotten conscience by thinking it has taken action on the net," says Tellis, with some emotion.

While Tellis castigates, in no uncertain terms, the seeming apathy of the middle-class, he also acknowledges its prodigious influence on the Indian socio-political mind space. "The middle-class is an important segment. It has power, it has English, and it has the ability to be heard," he admits.

Middle class audience

While this helps when it is mobilised for a good cause, many find it problematic that so much influence is concentrated in the hands of a single segment of society. In fact, if you take online activism, the number of people who can be reached through the internet is staggeringly low.

In a country of approximately 120 crore people, only about 5 crore [as per Indiastats.com] have access to the internet. Compare this to Tunisia, where the figure is an impressive 27%, or Egypt, where internet penetration is 16% [World Bank figures]. Given this lack of net access, more than 95% of Indians are taken out of consideration, in one fell swoop, when it comes to internet-specific activism strategies.

Anja Kovacs, a fellow at the Centre for Internet and Society says, "Most of these online campaigns are aligned to the profile of its audience." She argues, in her essay 'Inquilab 2.0?' that if the audience is mostly urban and middle-class, it stands to reason that a majority of online campaigns would deal with issues that are relevant to this particular segment.

Kamayani Bali Mahabal, a lawyer and human rights activist, disagrees with this assessment. "Okay, the audience may be middle class, but the issues aren't all middle class at all," she counters indignantly. "Look at the 'Say No to UID' campaign - there is no debate or dialogue that has been initiated by Nandan Nilekani, the chairperson of UIDAI [Unique ID Authority of India], and this online campaign has created a platform where people's issues and concerns can be clarified. Many believe that the UID will have a negative impact on the poor and the migrants; this campaign has gotten people to come together to discuss, debate and strategise as well," she says.

But Kovacs insists, "The fact remains that it is people from the middle-class who represent the voices of a largely silent majority. I find this model of activism questionable." The accuracy of how the voiceless are being represented is a cause of concern for her, as is the very idea of a platform that denies a large section of a vibrant social democracy the chance to express themselves directly. The whole situation, Kovacs seems to indicate, is like Chinese whispers, where information might get altered in the retelling. "There are some innovative enterprises like CGNet Swara that tackle this problem. It's a citizen journalism service, where ordinary citizens can both call in to record news as well as listen to the recorded messages. And they do put some selected messages online, but such enterprises are few and far between." she says ruefully.

An aid to offline activism

So as things stand, the internet is an indispensable tool to reach out to the influential Indian middle-class. Yet, given India's socio-economic reality, it's also a problematic and, in some cases, ineffective medium. Bali Mahabal, when asked how she reconciles these contradictions, says, "I am an offline as well as an online activist. These are not mutually exclusive roles. I straddle both worlds and I can multi-task!"

In fact, this is a strategy that a lot of offline activists are warming up to now. In 2010, Himanshu Kumar put up a video in which he said, "To the people in the cities, I want to say that... you write something on the internet, it doesn't make any difference to the government. Neither do people read the internet, nor does the government." Coming from one of the leading advocates of tribal rights in the Chhattisgarh area, this video was a scathing indictment of online activists.

Kumar, however, seems to have softened his stance on the issue since then. He still maintains that online activism by itself is not sufficient to bring about substantial change, but he speaks of how the internet helped him in his campaign in Dantewada. "When we were in Dantewada, it was almost like a different planet. We had no connection to the outside world except through the internet. It annoyed the police quite a bit because they knew that if they tried anything untoward, we could get the word out. So the internet is definitely a value addition to on-the-ground activism, but by itself, it has its limitations."

It is clear that the internet as a platform for social activism is here to stay. As access to the net increases among Indians, so will its effectiveness. Kovacs, in her essay writes of a person who says, rather movingly, "I believe that... ordinary people can use this medium [internet] to actually make a difference, you know...to change the world." But if activists want to live up to this unnamed person's lofty expectations, they also need to be fully conscious of the limitations of the internet as a medium for social change.

Credit:Rito Paul

serving the public by serving flash video

Washington's TVW made the switch to the Wowza Media Server to deliver interactive, accessible public affairs content.

the state of Washington's public affairs broadcast network, TVW, reaches more than 3.8 million households with live coverage of federal, state, and municipal news and events as well as an archive of more than 60,000 hours of programming. Launched in 1993 and streaming over the internet since 1995, TVW has maintained a forward-looking vision of how accessible streaming technology can advance the public good.

Because the political process at its best is a real-time dialogue between the opposing sides of an issue, TVW envisioned a streaming solution that would allow it to reach the broadest possible audience with the least resistance. TVW needed to stream 24/7 live coverage of news and events, as well as provide a suitable platform to allow citizens to easily access TVW's vast programming library. Identifying Flash as the best technology to meet its reach goal, TVW needed a reliable, high-performance streaming server solution that would address its technical needs, its long-term vision, and the ever-present budgetary constraints.

TVW has been at the vanguard of Washington political coverage since 1993. A nonprofit corporation with a mandate to bring "the public's business before the public," TVW reports on the issues as they happen, on the federal, state, and municipal levels. At a time when local and state news coverage is shrinking, TVW has not only served a public need but it has done so while always embracing the forward-looking possibilities of technology to engage citizens in the political process. In 1995, it was the first state broadcaster to offer streaming content in Real format. And in 1996, it topped itself once again by being the first to offer live streaming.

TVW is one of the founders and leading lights of the National Association of Public Affairs Networks (NAPAN), which has been conceived in all 50 states to help establish and expand noncommercial television networks devoted to providing citizens with fair, balanced, and unfiltered access to their state governments. In support of this mission, TVW strives to increase real-time coverage to its audience of more than 3.8 million. It is undertaking a total Flash conversion of its library of 60,000-plus hours of programming.

"The explosion in popularity of online video, as both entertainment medium and political tool, has reaffirmed our commitment to streaming content, which we began in the very early days of the technology," says Scott Freeman, director of IT for TVW. "It is our goal that we continue to serve the citizens of Washington with excellent and engaging programming while meeting the dynamic changes in how people get information."

To deliver this Flash content, TVW chose Wowza Media Server Pro for several reasons:

* Wowza Pro provides TVW with the reliable performance it needs to deliver uninterrupted live political coverage at all times of the day; 365 days at year.

* It lets TVW to expand its online reach with low-fr�ction Flash streaming at 75% lower total cost of ownership than competing solutions.

* Wowza Pro extensibility and interactive capabilities enable TVW to integrate it with voice indexing and vital features of TVW operations.

* Integral scalability features provide a solid pia tform for fu ture expansion as TVW converts its archive of more than 60,000 hours of programming to Flash.

* Wowza Pro protects the integrity of TVW's live and archived content through its anti-ripping secureToken technology.

Flash Democracy

TVW has worked hard to remain on the cutting edge of internet technology. In 2000, it upgraded its online offerings from Real to Windows Media. While Windows Media streaming served its purpose, it also exposed accessibility issues. Because the Windows Player is not natively in the browser it requires a download. TVW felt this obstacle denied many less technical viewers the benefit of TVW's content. In 2006, TVW began to experiment with Flash, starting with progressive download for on-demand content, with the goal of democratizing the accessibility to its programming through this consumer-friendly, browser-based technology.

While progressive download got TVW part of the way to its goal, content security issues and the absence of live streaming support prompted the search for a better solution.

"Flash reaches the broadest possible audience," says Freeman. "We couldn't ignore that-it makes our coverage of the political process easily accessible to virtually anyone." Freeman envisioned a single solution that would let TVW deliver both on-demand and live content in Flash and bring the content interactivity that progressive download simply couldn't achieve.

TVW's streaming needs led the network to evaluate other streaming solutions. Its conclusion from a 15-day pilot was that many solutions were unduly expensive, and they fell short of expectations in performance and flexibility. After learning about Wowza Media Server Pro, the innovative Flash streaming server software that had already won several industry awards and racked up an impressive list of global customers, the TVW team was immediately impressed.

"Wowza Pro worked right out of the box. What was more impressive, it streamed live feeds uninterrupted in our 15-day pilot. Not a single hiccup," says Freeman.

Wowza Pro performed equally well in other tests, including a showcase of its integral Live Stream Repeater functionality that assures TVW of being able to meet demand for large-scale live political events that attract thousands of simultaneous viewers. Other benchmarks revealed Wowza's unique approach to on-demand navigation, which allows site visitors to skip to the content they're looking for with the same ease as pressing the fast-forward or rewind buttons on their DVD players.

Still another key deciding factor was Wowza's commitment to security. Wowza Pro's ready-to-deploy SecureToken anti-ripping technology offered a perfect solution for making sure that none of TVW's programming would end up as Youlube political parodies anytime soon.

A Model for Public Affairs Broadcasters

TVW's commitment to Wowza goes well beyond its immediate challenges of delivering real-time coverage of the 2008 election. "Wowza has given us a scalable platform that will serve us well into the future," says Freeman. "It also lets us make the past of the political process widely available. Along with new content, we also plan to stream archival materials from our library of [more than] 60,000 hours of programming, which will be converted to Flash." TVW expects to complete this full conversion of the archives sometime in 2009.

"Wowza has enabled us to deliver on our mandate like never before," he continued. "We know that with Wowza on our side we can engage the citizens with the immediacy we always dreamed of and let them look back, for example, to see how a particular candidate or elected official voted on an issue."

Other public affairs broadcasters face similar challenges, and Freeman believes that TVW's experience can prove valuable to other NAPAN members. "Our deployment will hopefully provide a case study on how technology can advance the public good," adds Freeman. "We are confident that we will achieve this goal, while continuing to faithfully and honorably serve the citizens of Washington state."

The hard work must come first

IN his first major speech to the Scottish Parliament since hiselection victory, First Minister Alex Salmond announced hisGovernment would "take Scotland forward" and "make Scotland better".They are the kind of phrases that sound good in the chamber,particularly delivered by a politician who has never been soconfident of his own talents. But they are also phrases - perhapsdeliberately - that are fiendishly hard to pin a meaning to.

What was much more significant than these cliches was the detailin Mr Salmond's speech, particularly on the two Bs he has promisedto tackle in this term: booze and bigotry. Mr Salmond has said hewill take action on both these problems and that is to be warmlywelcomed. The only other thing to say is: about time too.

To give credit where it is due, Mr Salmond demonstrated his willto do something about the first B, booze, in the last parliament,with a bill to introduce a minimum price for alcohol.

That reform was thwarted by some unpleasant posturing by theopposition parties, but it is expected that the idea will bereintroduced and - with police and medical opinion clearly on itsside - that is the right way forward.

On the second B - bigotry - the landscape and destination areless clear. Mr Salmond called the kind of hatred that exists on thefootball terraces, and on the streets and in internet forums, apointless curse pursued by the pitiless, and he's right. However,the Government's expected move to increase jail terms for sectarian-related disorder to a maximum of five years will only work if it ispart of a much wider effort at cultural change. At the start of aparliament, there is always the temptation for swift law-making, butthere will be no progress on ending sectarianism until there is areal prospect of fans being identified, caught and punished ratherthan tolerated and we are still a long way from that. Scotland'sfootball clubs have made some progress and, even though sectarianismis a problem that goes well beyond the stadiums, they must do more,and be seen to do more.

It is gratifying, however, to hear Mr Salmond state his intentionto deal with these issues and there was much else in the speech tobe welcomed. On the Scotland Bill, the First Minister reiterated hisdetermination to see more powers come north and on the whole thecase for this has been made, particularly on more borrowing powers.In among Mr Salmond's talk of a "social wage", it was also rightthat he reminded the parliament that public spending must berestrained and that it will be the private sector, not the public,that will be the key driver to new jobs.

And then of course there is the issue of independence. Despitesome guileless attempts to force an earlier poll, Mr Salmond hasinsisted a referendum will not happen until the second half of thissession and this it the right approach. A new poll may show thatmost Britons agree with Mr Salmond that independence is bound tohappen, but in the meantime there are more pressing matters to bedealt with - not only the two Bs, but also the big E: the economy,and he must concentrate his energies there.

There is a case for a referendum - and there is no question itwill happen - but before it does, there is work to be done. MrSalmond can be proud of forging a credible government before theelection, but that was then. Now, he must get on with living up tothe mandate this country has given him.

Computer call scam warning

Bogus computer technicians are targeting homes in south Kent,police have warned.

Fraudsters have called people in Folkestone and Deal to tell themtheir computers will be damaged beyond repair unless they hand overbank details for security software. They also pressurise victimsinto logging on to websites which give the crooks access to theirpersonal files.

Officers are investigating two calls in south Kent believed to bepart of a scam based in India.

Investigator Christopher Brawn said: "I urge computer users to bevigilant and ensure you have good online security.

"If you are suspicious about anyone claiming to be from Microsoftor your internet service provider, ask for their details and say youwill call them back.

"That will allow you to contact your ISP to find out if thecaller was genuine."

For more information about internet safety, visitgetsafeonline.org

Fed: Greens call for permanent closure of Ranger mine


AAP General News (Australia)
08-31-2004
Fed: Greens call for permanent closure of Ranger mine

The Greens have renewed their call for the permanent closure of the Northern Territory's
Ranger uranium mine.

In March this year, 28 mine workers were struck down with nausea, cramps and vomiting
after drinking and showering in water contaminated with 400 times the allowable limit
of uranium.

The mine has shut down for several days to tackle issues in a report by the supervising
scientist which says operator ERA has breached its licence conditions.

Greens Senator KERRY NETTLE says the scare is the latest in a list of 120 publicly
documented leaks, contaminations and operating breaches at Ranger since it opened in 1981.

She's called on federal Industry Minister IAN MACFARLANE to revoke the operating and
export license for the mine.

AAP RTV db/sw/tr/rp

KEYWORD: RANGER GREENS (CANBERRA)

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

Qld: Police charge man over Coast abduction attempts


AAP General News (Australia)
04-26-2004
Qld: Police charge man over Coast abduction attempts

Police have charged a man over two recent abduction attempts on the Gold Coast.

The 34-year-old Nerang man will appear in Southport Magistrates Court today charged
with two counts of kidnapping, two counts of grievous bodily harm and one count of stealing.

The charges relate to two separate incidents on the Gold Coast.

The most recent was on Saturday morning when a 20-year-old woman was grabbed in the
heart of Surfers Paradise and thrown into the back of a car.

She escaped when her screams alerted a nearby unit owner at around 3.15am (AEST) and
confronted the man, who escaped.

The second incident relates to the attempted kidnapping of a 22-year-old woman at Southport
on February 28.

She managed to escape as well.

Both women suffered bruises and abrasions.

Police say the 34-year-old accused man was arrested on the banks of the Nerang River
late yesterday.

AAP RTV jtl/jlw/rt

KEYWORD: ABDUCT CHARGE (BRISBANE)

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

Fed: Four-day week would put jobs at risk - Andrews


AAP General News (Australia)
12-19-2003
Fed: Four-day week would put jobs at risk - Andrews

Federal Workplace Relations Minister KEVIN ANDREWS says jobs will be put at risk if
the Electrical Trades Union's plan for a four-day week becomes a reality.

The union's Victorian secretary DEAN MIGHELL has raised the issue in his latest report
to members this week, saying it's time for greater work flexibility.

Mr MIGHELL says a 36-hour week has already created jobs in the power industry and it
makes sense to work them over four days, especially in the summer months.

But Mr ANDREWS says work hours should be negotiated at the workplace level instead
of being imposed across industries.

He's concerned that jobs could be at risk if a four-day week's imposed, and says the
Victorian Employers Chamber of Commerce and Industry predicts such a move would increase
employers' financial burden.

AAP RTV dep/sb/swe/rp

KEYWORD: WEEK (CANBERRA)

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

FED: Wrinkles need no longer be a headache

00-00-0000
FED: Wrinkles need no longer be a headache

By Judy Skatssoon, National Medical Writer

SYDNEY, Aug 13 AAP - It may be possible to cure migraine by surgically removing musclesfrom the forehead, face or back of the neck, a medical conference in Sydney was told.

US plastic surgeon Bahman Guyuron said he stumbled upon the discovery after performingbrow lifts on patients to get rid of their wrinkles.

During a brow lift, the skin of the forehead is cut open and the surgeon removes musclesand replaces them with fat harvested from the patient's cheekbones.

The procedure - a more radical alternative to Botox injections - is currently performedon several thousand Australians a year, local plastic surgeons estimate.

Dr Guyuron said his investigations began almost four years ago when brow lift patientswho also suffered from migraines told him their headaches had disappeared after surgery.

A study he published in 2002 reinforced evidence that the majority of migraine suffererswho underwent brow rejuvenation through Botox or surgery experienced a total eliminationor reduction of migraine pain.

At the same time other studies were linking Botox with migraine relief.

Dr Guyuron reasoned the common link was that both Botox and surgery acted on musclesthat appeared to be linked to migraine.

"What happens is when we frown these muscles contract along the nerves and it createsinflammation that travels along the nerve, reaching the brain membrane," he said.

"In migraines the muscles act like a trigger, it's like a domino effect.

"By removing the muscle we're removing the culprit and eliminating the potential formigraine headaches."

Dr Guyuron's explanation turns on its head other theories of migraine which suggestthe pain begins in the brain and travels outwards.

He is currently halfway through a five year-study involving 125 patients, including100 who had either botox or surgery and 25 receiving placebo injections.

The injections and surgery target muscles in the forehead, back of the neck and nose,which Dr Guyuron said were all linked to nerves that could cause migraine.

So far, of the 91 patients who had surgery 79 had reported a beneficial effect in termsof migraine, Dr Guyuron told the World Congress of Plastic Surgery in Sydney.

Dr Guyuron said while brow muscle removal had begun as a purely cosmetic procedureit was now being used to treat migraine.

Melbourne aesthetic plastic surgeon Bryan Mendelson said Dr Bahman's evidence was "compelling"

and the procedure could easily be performed in Australia.

"In Australia plastic surgeons already do brow lifts," he said.

"These are tried and true surgical procedures, it's a matter of ... learning the particularnuances of what he's doing."

Dr Guyuron's studies offered "a whole different way of thinking about managing migraine,"

Dr Mendelson said.

"What he has done is found serendipitously that this really does work," he said.

AAP jjs/mg/de

KEYWORD: MIGRAINE

Thursday, March 1, 2012

SA: Car sales remain strong in March

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SA: Car sales remain strong in March

The sale of new cars and trucks in Australia jumped 12 per cent last month.

And analysts say the industry appears to be defying any impact from the war in Iraqor the lingering drought.

The Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries says 76,113 new vehicles were sold inMarch -- 12.2 per cent more than in March last year.

That took demand for the first quarter to 204,018 -- a 6.7 per cent improvement onthe same period last year and a record first quarter result.

Toyota was the top selling company last month with 17,180 vehicles sold, ahead of Holdenon 14,891 and Ford on 10,921.

Toyota was also leading the way on an annual basis on 42,453 -- about 2,500 vehiclesahead of Holden and more than 13,000 ahead of Ford.

AAP RTV tjd/rt/jas

KEYWORD: MOTOR SALES (ADELAIDE)

Fed: Detention centres a mental health crisis: Psychiatrists = 2

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Fed: Detention centres a mental health crisis: Psychiatrists = 2

The Immigration Department says the medical and psychiatric care of people in detentionis already reviewed by external bodies, making a further review by the College of Psychiatristsunnecessary.

A spokeswoman says these include the United Nations High Commission for Refugees, theHuman Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission, and a federal parliamentary …

Fed: New Democrats leader calls for reconicliation = 3

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Fed: New Democrats leader calls for reconicliation = 3

Senator GREIG says he's embarrassed by the party's internal disputes over the pastfew months which have made the Democrats look farcical.

He's told Melbourne Radio 3AW that the slump in the polls they've experienced is deserved.

Senator GREIG says he'll do everything in his power to stop the disputes.

He says the party looks like a rabble because they've been a rabble.

AAP RTV svm/jlw/rcg

KEYWORD: DEMOCRATS GREIG 3 CANBERRA (REOPENS)

Fed: ACOSS warns government not to take from the poor

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Fed: ACOSS warns government not to take from the poor

CANBERRA, April 15 AAP - The federal government was planning to take from the poorand give to the rich, Australia's peak welfare body said today.

The Australian Council of Social Service (ACOSS) warned the federal government it wouldbe wrong to go ahead with mooted Budget cuts that would hurt people with disabilities,the unemployed and the chronically ill.

ACOSS president Andrew McCallum said more than $2 billion was wasted each year on whathe described as upper class welfare while the government was proposing to further disadvantageAustralians on low incomes.

He said possible Budget savings this year included cuts to the disability support pensionsthat could affect more than 600,000 people, reductions in employment assistance programsand cuts in funding for housing for people on low incomes.

Mr McCallum said a planned increase in charges for medicines would affect chronicallysick people as well as up to 1.7 million aged pensioners.

"Budget cuts that would hurt the most disadvantaged Australians are not necessary,especially while $2 billion is wasted through government handouts to high income earners,"

he said.

He said those handouts included a proposed reduction in the superannuation surchargefor people on incomes of more than $85,000, raising the tax free threshold for a retiredcouple to more than $32,000, and the 30 per cent health insurance rebate.

"Social programs for low income people should not be cut at all especially while upperclass welfare remains in place," Mr McCallum said.

The federal Budget will be handed down on May 14.

AAP sm/jmd/de

KEYWORD: ACOSS

Qld: British tourist first victim of deadly stinger

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Qld: British tourist first victim of deadly stinger

A British tourist has become the first person in the world to die after being stungby the tiny but extremely painful IRUKANDJI jellyfish.

The 58-year-old man brushed against the stinger while swimming off Hamilton Islandin north Queensland's Whitsundays on Wednesday.

Hamilton Island Resort spokeswoman SUSAN BOYD says the sting aggravated the man's pre-existingheart condition and blood pressure, leading to a cerebral haemorrhage.

However, James Cook University Zoologist JAMIE SEYMOUR urges swimmers not to panic.

He says that if a post-mortem examination proves the death to be the result of IRUKANDJIsyndrome, it will be the first such death anywhere in the world.

Almost nothing is known about the peanut-sized stinger, which until yesterday had claimedno lives.

Its intensely painful sting sent 79 people to Cairns Base Hospital in December and January.

The Irukandji is related to Australia's other deadly stinger, the highly poisonous box jellyfish.

AAP RTV jb/sc/dl/rt

KEYWORD: JELLYFISH (TOWNSVILLE)

NSW: Thousands still without power as school mourns loss


AAP General News (Australia)
12-04-2001
NSW: Thousands still without power as school mourns loss

SYDNEY, Dec 4 AAP - Thousands of homes remain without power this morning as a school
community comes to grips with with the loss of two of its students from a severe storm
that lashed Sydney.

Two 15-year-old girls from William Clarke College in Kellyville were killed when they
were crushed by a tree that snapped in half as the storm tore through Sydney yesterday
afternoon leaving a trail of destruction.

Two of their school friends were also injured when the tree came down at the Crosslands
Reserve near Hornsby Heights where the students were due to spend the night as part of
the Duke of Edinburgh award scheme.

State Emergency Service crews and energy suppliers worked through the night trying
to restore power to homes and clear trees and other debris from roads and homes.

The clean-up will continue today with dozens of volunteer crews.

At the peak of the storm 70,000 homes serviced by Energy Australia and 37,000 by Integral
Energy were left without power.

By late last night, Integral still had 14,000 homes without power while 35,000 homes
mainly in Hornsby, Berowra and Dee Why remained without electricity.

An Energy Australia spokeswoman said it would be some time before power would be restored
to all homes because of the number of fallen trees and damaged power lines.

The NSW government late yesterday declared much of metropolitan Sydney a natural disaster
area enabling residents and businesses to access financial assistance.

Emergency Services Minister Bob Debus last night inspected the damage in Sydney's north
and said it was one of the worst storms in terms of the human toll.

He described the death of the two school students as a tragedy and offered his condolences
to their families.

Meanwhile, 50 bushfires sparked by lightning strikes were still burning in the Hawkesbury,
Blue Mountains, Lithgow and Wollondilly districts with rural fire crews working to contain
the blazes.

AAP sal/pw/de

KEYWORD: STORM DAYLEAD

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

FED: Australian police attend Gallipoli service


AAP General News (Australia)
04-20-2001
FED: Australian police attend Gallipoli service

SYDNEY, April 20 AAP - Australian police who served in Cyprus will lay wreaths for
fallen colleagues when they attend next week's Anzac Day dawn service at Gallipoli.

A group of 39 police - including serving and retired officers from the federal, New
South Wales, Victorian, Queensland and South Australian police forces - will then travel
to the volatile island off the Turkish coast for a reunion.

Former Superintendent Merv Beck, 79, served in Cyprus with the United Nations during
the Turkish invasion in 1974.

"While we were there our duty was to take the Turkish people from the south to the
north," he told AAP.

"I wasn't frightened, but there were many occasions where there was a lot of tenseness."

During Mr Beck's time on the island a young police officer, Sergeant Ian Ward, was killed.

"He was escorting a young family," Mr Beck said.

"The previous day the road was clear but on this day there was a land mine."

Mr Beck will lay a wreath for Sergeant Ward and another police officer killed in Cyprus,
Sergeant Pat Hackett, during the service on Gallipoli Beach on Wednesday.

"I think it will be very sad," he said.

"I'm a retired airman from World War Two and there's many memories of the fellows killed
in the war."

The police will be part of the official ceremony, dressed in their uniforms and blue
berets, Mr Beck said.

Australian police were first sent to Cyprus following the outbreak of civil war in
1964 and there are still 15 Australian Federal Police officers on the island today.

AAP rk/nf/mk/las/de

KEYWORD: ANZAC POLICE

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

NSW: Maintenance staff impose snap strike at BHP


AAP General News (Australia)
02-06-2001
NSW: Maintenance staff impose snap strike at BHP

More than 250 maintenance workers at BHP steelworks in Port Kembla have voted for a
snap 24-hour strike over management plans to contract their work out.

The strike, which affects two separate sections of the Port Kembla steelworks, south
of Sydney, follows a return-to-work by 4,000 maintenance workers after staging a 24-hour
strike yesterday.

Australian Workers Union Port Kembla organiser ANDREW WHILEY says the action is part
of the steelworkers' mass vote yesterday to …

Vic: Sixteen year sentence for brutal prison bashing


AAP General News (Australia)
12-05-2000
Vic: Sixteen year sentence for brutal prison bashing

A breakdown in the prison culture of silence has led to a prisoner being jailed for
16 years for a brutal attack on another inmate.

The attack, in a crowded holding cell beneath the Melbourne Magistrates Court, left
the victim brain damaged, paralysed and having to be fed through a tube.

The judge who sentenced ALI ALI, who stomped on the head of mentally ill 46-year-old
MICHAEL TULLY, said he regards the attack as one of the worst he had heard of.

County Court judge GRAHAM ANDERSON has ordered 28-year-old ALI, formerly of Keilor
Downs, to serve a minimum non-parole term of 13 years.

Judge ANDERSON said he believed a sentence close to the maximum of 20 years was justified
and appropriate.

The judge also said that out of the 10 other prisoners in the cell during the attack,
five prisoners identified ALI as the attacker.

He said in view of the generally prevailing prison culture their statements reflect
the horrific nature of the crime and the impression it left on ALI'S fellow prisoners.

AAP RTV sew/clr/wz/jn

KEYWORD: ALI (MELBOURNE)

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

NSW: Big crowds again at Sydney Easter Show


AAP General News (Australia)
04-23-2000
NSW: Big crowds again at Sydney Easter Show

Big crowds poured through the turnstiles at Sydney's Royal Easter Show again today,
taking the week's total attendance to more than 680,000.

Farm Sunday was a highlight of today's program, transforming the main arena into a
display of country life and featuring dog high-jumping, sheepdog trials, sheaf-tossing,
scarecrow-building, egg-painting and whip-cracking.

But the main attractions remained the showbag pavilion, carnival area and sideshow alley.

More than a million people are expected to visit the show over the two weeks it's open,
spending about $40 million.

AAP RTV sal/sub

KEYWORD: SHOW (SYDNEY)

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

NSW: End to teachers dispute in sight Aquilina


AAP General News (Australia)
02-07-2000
NSW: End to teachers dispute in sight Aquilina

SYDNEY, Feb 7 AAP - An end to the protracted New South Wales teachers' dispute was
one step away after today's meeting with the teachers' union, state Education Minister
John Aquilina said today.

"I'm confident that today we've moved a long way forward because the …

FED: Dementia sufferers discover artistic side


AAP General News (Australia)
12-06-1999
FED: Dementia sufferers discover artistic side

By Peter Allport

SYDNEY, Dec 6 AAP - They can't remember that trees have leaves but some dementia sufferers
become accomplished artists.

That is according to Bruce Miller, professor of neurology at the University of California,
who is in Sydney for a conference about geniuses and prodigies like pianist David Helfgott
and Dustin Hoffman's character in the movie Rainman.

He has discovered links between the onset of Semantic Dementia and increase artistic
ability, similar to the enhanced mathematical skills but diminished social skills of autistic
savants.

"They lose simplest knowledge of our world," Professor Miller said.

"They lose the words and simple information such as there being 52 weeks in a year
and that trees have leaves".

However the brain appeared to undergo a process of adaptation and absorbed the capacity
of some of the functions where it had become diseased or injured, he said.

Almost half of his patients became quite accomplished artists without ever previously
having any interest in the subject whatsoever, Professor Miller said.

The form of dementia Professor Miller is currently researching usually surfaces in
people aged in their 50s but often does not become apparent until their 60s.

"What happens is that these people who have never had an interest in these things start
working at it and most become good within a relatively short period of time," Professor
Miller said.

Professor Miller will address the "Geniuses, Prodigies and Savants" conference at Sydney
University tomorrow.

The conference, featuring experts from around the globe, includes a performance tonight
by one-time child prodigy and pianist David Helfgott.

His wife Gillian will also address delegates tonight.

AAP pwa/sb/rcg/de

KEYWORD: DEMENTIA

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

NSW: Warning light forces Qantas jet to turn back


AAP General News (Australia)
04-20-1999
NSW: Warning light forces Qantas jet to turn back

SYDNEY, April 20 AAP - A Qantas jet travelling between Sydney and Canberra was forced to
turn back today when a warning light came on.

The indicator light in the cockpit of the 737 300 Boeing aircraft came on about 20 minutes
into the flight, a Qantas spokeswoman said.

"Engineering staff are investigating," she said.

Passengers from QF 803, which left Sydney at 7.47am, were transferred to another aircraft,
which had since left for Canberra.

The spokeswoman could not say how many passengers were aboard the aircraft.

AAP shm/sb/maur

KEYWORD: QANTAS

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

QLD: Storm damage closes Ipswich dog track


AAP General News (Australia)
01-12-1999
QLD: Storm damage closes Ipswich dog track

BRISBANE, Jan 12 AAP - A wild storm which cut a swathe through Ipswich last night also hit
the local dog track, causing damage so bad it was unlikely to resume its normal meetings until
at least next week.

A spokeswoman for the Ipswich Greyhound Racing Club said its complex at the Ipswich
Showgrounds suffered serious structural damage and it was unsafe for patrons to come in until
the complex had been repaired.

"All the sliding doors and windows have been sucked in and the …

AAP National News Wire Round-Up for Midday, Dec 19


AAP General News (Australia)
12-19-2011
AAP National News Wire Round-Up for Midday, Dec 19
Midday Round-Up: HIGHLIGHTS OF THE AAP RTV FILE AT 1130


Indon Ship Wrap (CANBERRA/JAKARTA)

Federal police officers will assist Indonesian authorities investigating the people
smugglers whose vessel capsized off the Java coast with the loss of up to 200 lives.

An Australian navy patrol boat and a surveillance aircraft will also assist the ongoing
search-and-rescue operation when it resumes later today.

The overloaded vessel, carrying more than 200 people from Afghanistan and Iran, capsized
in high seas on Saturday, but Indonesian officials say only 33 people have been rescued
so far.

Rescuers have battled high waves as they search for the asylum seekers from Afghanistan,
Iraq, Iran and Turkey.



Qantas (SYDNEY)

The long-running dispute between Qantas and its engineers has ended, with the union
saying it's locked in job security for its members.

Almost two months after Qantas chief executive ALAN JOYCE grounded the entire fleet,
the airline and the engineers' union will present Fair Work Australia with an agreement
today to end the stand-off.

Australian Licensed Aircraft Engineers Association federal secretary STEVE PURVINAS
says the four-year deal secures a three per cent annual pay rise and protects the engineers'
existing work functions.

Mr PURVINAS says they'll be approaching Fair Work Australia this afternoon (2pm AEDT
in Sydney) and announcing that it's an agreed position between the two parties.



Naden (SYDNEY)

The search for alleged killer MALCOLM NADEN could be scaled down over Christmas.

Assistant Commissioner CARLENE YORK, who heads the operation for NADEN's capture, says
police will decide over the next few days whether to reduce the numbers of officers on
the ground.

Ms YORK says Christmas is a busy time for police, especially in the northern region,
but there will be resources she can call on if new information comes through.

NADEN is wanted over the death of 24-year-old mother-of-two KRISTY SCHOLES in 2005,
the indecent assault of a 15-year-old girl in Dubbo in 2004 and for questioning over the
disappearance of another 24-year-old woman in January 2005.



Meldrum (SYDNEY)

MOLLY MELDRUM's brother says he's staggered by the outpouring of concern and support
for the music legend, who remains in an induced coma in hospital.

The 65-year-old suffered serious head injuries after falling while putting up Christmas
decorations last Thursday.

MELDRUM's brother, BRIAN, says he's in a stable condition at The Alfred Hospital in
Melbourne, and doctors are cautiously optimistic about his recovery.

BRIAN says both he and his family have been comforted by the amount of support for
his brother, especially from strangers.



PNG (PORT MORESBY)

The government of PETER O'NEILL is expected to apply to the Papua New Guinea Supreme
Court today to stop rival Sir MICHAEL SOMARE from issuing instructions as prime minister.

The move comes as police commissioner TOM KULUNGA attempts to overthrow a restraining
order stopping him from arresting FRED YAKASA, the man chosen by Sir MICHAEL as police
commissioner.

Mr O'NEILL, who declared the crisis over yesterday and appears firmly in control of
government, has invited his political opponents - minus Sir MICHAEL - back into parliament
this week to debate a series of bills.



Poll Qld (BRISBANE)

Queensland Premier ANNA BLIGH's clawing back the Liberal National Party's winning position
heading into next year's election.

A Newspoll for The Australian newspaper shows Labor's vote has lifted to 44 per cent
to the LNP's 56 per cent on a two-party preferred basis, up from a near rock bottom 27
per cent to the LNP's 61 per cent in a July-September survey.

But the Newspoll shows Labor would still lose at least half of its 51 seats if the
election was held now.



Com18 (BRISBANE)

The Queensland opposition wants the government to explain a reported seven million
dollar hole in its Commonwealth Games budget.

A briefing note leaked to The Courier Mail newspaper shows the government only set
aside 10 million dollars for the 2018 Commonwealth Games, but the cost is 17 million dollars.

Opposition treasury spokesman TIM NICHOLLS says it raises doubts about the estimated
one billion dollar cost of the Games.

He says the LNP supports the games on the Gold Coast but believes Queenslanders need
to know how much the event is going to cost taxpayers and where the money is coming from.



Iraq US (IRAQ-KUWAIT BORDER)

The last US forces have left Iraq and entered Kuwait, nearly nine years after launching
a divisive war to oust SADDAM HUSSEIN.

The last of roughly 110 vehicles carrying 500-odd troops crossed the border yesterday,
leaving just 157 military trainers at the US embassy, in a country where there were once
nearly 170-thousand troops on 505 bases.



Czech Havel (PRAGUE)

Tributes have begun pouring in following the death of former Czech president VACLAV HAVEL.

The 75-year-old hero of the Velvet Revolution and one-time dissident, who steered his
country peacefully to independence from Soviet rule in 1989, died in his sleep at dawn
on Sunday in his weekend house northeast of Prague after a lengthy illness.

Current President VACLAV KLAUS says HAVEL had become a symbol of the modern Czech state
and US President BARACK OBAMA says HAVEL'S peaceful resistance shook the foundations of
an empire and proved that moral leadership is more powerful than any weapon.

British Prime Minister DAVID CAMERON says HAVEL devoted his life to the cause of human
freedom and led the Czech people out of tyranny.



Briefly in other news ..



Ponies (SYDNEY)

The bodies of 25 ponies have been dumped near a cliff in northern New South Wales,
but police say there are no obvious wounds and no obvious reason for the cause of death.



Driver (CANBERRA)

ACT Police have charged a Canberra man who was caught driving with more than four times
the legal alcohol limit while his five-year-old son was a passenger in the car.



US Jackson (BEVERLY HILLS)

The contents MICHAEL JACKSON'S home have sold for around one million dollars at auction.



US Beach Boys (LOS ANGELES)

Iconic 1960s Californian band the Beach Boys is reuniting to celebrate its 50th anniversary
with a new album and a 50-date world tour next year.



in Finance ..



Woolworths (SYDNEY)

Woolworths' hotel group has purchased another 31 hotels in New South Wales.

The ALH Group says it's signed long term leases for and acquired the businesses and
associated assets of 31 hotels and one detached bottle shop to add to the 27 hotels it
already operates in the state.




At 1127 AEDT, the benchmark S&P/ASX200 index was DOWN 87 points, or two per cent at
4,072.4, while the broader All Ordinaries Index was DOWN 91 points, OR two per cent at
4,128.

The Australian dollar was at 99.38 US cents, level DOWN from Friday's local close of 99.70 cents.

The price of spot gold in Sydney is $US1,598.45 per fine ounce, UP from yesterday's
local close of $US1,586.16 per ounce.



in Sport ..



Soc EPL (LONDON)

Manchester United have defeated Queens Park Rangers 2-0 with goals from WAYNE ROONEY
and MICHAEL CARRICK in a busy morning of English Premier League action.

Tottenham had a 1-0 win over Sunderland thanks to a ROMAN PAVLYUCHENKO goal while Liverpool
scored a 2-0 win away to Aston Villa with CRAIG BELLAMY and MARTIN SKRTEL scoring for
the Reds.



ENDS MIDDAY ROUND-UP

Broadcast Desk inquiries 24 hours: 02 9322 8714

AAP RTV crh

KEYWORD: MIDDAY ROUND-UP

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