Sunday, March 4, 2012

CANDIDATE SIGHTINGS.(CAPITAL REGION)

Clinton: Met with the League of Conservation in Manhattan, visted Autumnwood Senior Center in Buffalo, spoke to the Long Beach Democratic Club in Atlantic Beach and attended Congressman Meeks' Annual Recognition Awards Dinner in Queens Village. She is scheduled today to talk to senior citizens in Rochester, attend a ``Rock-A-Thon for Breast Cancer'' in Cicero and a health screening fair in Syracuse.

Lazio: Visited Charles W. Baker High School in Baldwinsville and attended the Sons of Italy Antonio Meucci Lodge 86th Annual Columbus Dinner Dance New Rochelle and the Westchester Hispanic GOP Committee Annual Hispanic Fiesta in White Plains. He is scheduled today to attend …

Snapshot can help in early detection.

Byline: Cheryl Powell

There's an easy way to focus on the health of your skin and spot potentially deadly cancer at its earliest stages.

If you've got a camera, you've got everything you need to get started.

Simple snapshots by even the most novice photographer of his or her moles, lesions or other types of skin marks can serve as an important piece of the medical record, said Dr. Eliot Mostow, chief of dermatology at Akron (Ohio) General Medical Center.

Mostow is heading up an effort with Akron General and the Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine to encourage health-care consumers to take photos of their skin.

"Take something, file the date and save it," Mostow said. "Any picture is better than no picture."

The program, which started in September, is known as "Pictures In …

AIG Global Real Estate to sell fund management biz

AIG Global Real Estate, a real estate investment management unit for insurer American International Group Inc., said Monday it will sell its fund management business.

The fund management business operates 15 existing fund programs with more than $12.4 billion in assets under management and an additional $5.2 billion in equity capital commitments as of Sept. 30.

The business is a global asset adviser based in New York with regional operations in Europe, Japan, Latin America and Asia.

AIG is in the midst of selling many operating units as it looks to streamline its operations and help repay a $150 billion rescue package it received in November from …

WE'RE COOKING

ON THE FIRST NIGHT OF HANUKKAH, which this year falls on Sunday, December 21, we light a candle on the menorah - and potato latkes will likely be on the dinner table. Some latkes will be homemade, some store-bought, but all adhere to the ancient custom of serving foods cooked in oil.

Oil emphasizes the mira- cle of the cruse of oil found in the Temple, which burned for eight days although there was only enough for one day.Dairy foods recall the heroism of Judith.

Back in Eastern European shtetls, the crisp, golden potato fried in goose fat were the essential Hanukkah dish. Times were hard, but potatoes and onions were cheap and plentiful and geese slaughtered in Fall …

LEDs get cheaper, become an auto fashion statement.

Byline: David Sedgwick

LED lights are emerging as auto industry bling.

Once limited to the luxury segment, LEDs, or light-emitting diodes, now are cheap enough for mass-market models. The 2012 Kia Soul, for example, has LED daytime running lights and taillights.

Designers love them because the compact, bright lights give them freedom to convert plain-vanilla headlights and taillights into fashion statements.

By the 2016 model year, 29 percent of all vehicles produced in North America will have LED taillights, up from 19 percent in the 2011 model year, predicts L.E.K. Consulting of London.

The switch to LED headlights will be slower. Only 1 percent of North American-built vehicles will have LED …

Polish-Slavic group flourishes in Brooklyn. (Polish and Slavic Federal Credit Union, Brooklyn, New York)

BROOKLYN, N.Y - Polish and Slavic Federal Credit Union has profited by serving a group, many banks consider untouchable - Eastern European immigrants.

The credit union was a single teller station when it was organized in 1977 by a handful of Polish immigrants. Now, with $360 million in assets, three branches, and 37,000 members, it's the largest Polish-American financial institution in the country.

"We serve people who have problems with regular financial institutions because they don't speak English or they don't speak it fluently enough," said Marcin Sar, the institution's general manager since 1987. "Most of the time, new immigrants don't have a credit history. Someone has to make that first step to trust them."

Up to 90% of the credit union's members are immigrants, officials said.

Almost since its founding, Polish and Slavic's primary line of business has been putting members in homes. This was crucial in the beginning because many institutions avoided lending to the Brooklyn's Greenpoint neighborhood, where the institution and most of its members are located, Mr. Sar said.

"Analysts thought this area would go under," he said. They predicted "it would become a very, very bad area. Lending to this neighborhood was considered an unnecessary risk."

The credit union saw things differently.

"People knew each other. It's a …

Saturday, March 3, 2012

GABRIEL, GLOBE-TROTTING ARTISTS MAGNIFICENT IN WOMAD FEST.(ENTERTAINMENT)

Byline: GREG HAYMES - Staff writer

After dancing through the crowd on the sun-soaked lawn distributing fruit and flowers to the fans, vocalist Caroline -- one half of the Indian group, Shankar N Caroline -- proclaimed, "One world! One voice! One color!"

It was the debut North American tour of the WOMAD Festival (World Of Music, Arts and Dance), and Monday's nine-hour performance at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center was the first stop on the tour.

While unity was certainly a central theme of the music by the 15 acts that gathered from all around the world, the globe-trotting musicians also underscored the importance of celebrating our cultural …

Incumbent favorite in Slovak presidential race

Slovaks voted Saturday for a new president, a race in which the incumbent is considered the favorite for the largely ceremonial position.

President Ivan Gasparovic, seeking a new five-year term, has led all the pre-election polls.

But with a field of seven candidates, analysts predict that a two-candidate runoff _ scheduled for April 4 _ will be needed because no one is expected to receive the necessary majority to win directly in the first round.

The president has the power to pick the prime minister and to appoint Constitutional Court judges, as well as the power to veto laws. But parliament can override the veto with a simple majority.

Illini's Thomas fractures wrist in pickup game

Illinois center Deon Thomas is expected to have his wrist in acast for about three months after suffering a fracture while playingbasketball.

"He said he injured it as he went in for a basket at the IMPEBuilding," Illinois coach Lou Henson said.

The injury, at the sports complex for UI students and staff,occurred Monday. Thomas, a 6-9, 200-pound sophomore, averaged 15.1points and 6.8 rebounds a game last season, his first with theIllini. BORG WIFE TRIES SUICIDE: Bjorn Borg, one day after being badlybeaten in his comeback attempt, received another jolt when his wifewas hospitalized in Italy after an apparent suicide attempt.Loredana Berte, a 39-year-old rock …

Loyalty card a consumer hit.(News)(CVS Caremark Corp.)(Brief article)

WOONSOCKET, R.I. -- ExtraCare is the largest consumer rewards program in the nation, according to a CVS Caremark Corp. spokesman, with more than 55 million cardholders.

Cardholders receive 2% of all purchases back quarterly, delivered in the form of free "CVS money" called Extra Bucks. Members receive benefits such as instant targeted offers on register receipts.

More than 10 million ExtraCare members are enrolled in CVS' e-mail alerts program, which sends coupons and information about health and …

MICHAEL T. FERA.(CAPITAL REGION)

TROY Michael T. Fera died Sunday at St. Mary's Hospital.

Mr. Fera was born and educated in Troy.

He served in the Navy in World War II.

Mr. Fera retired last year as a machine technician for the Rensselaer County Board of Elections.

He was a communicant of St. Anthony's Church.

Survivors include his wife, Mary Smith Fera; five brothers, James V. Fera of Watervliet, Rocco Fera …

South Korea, Arab states agree to launch group to enhance ties

South Korea and a group of governments from the Middle East and Africa agreed to launch a cooperative organization Monday aimed at enhancing political, cultural and economic ties, officials said.

The Korea-Arab Society will group South Korea with governments, corporations and organizations from 22 countries and authorities in the Arab world. Participants at a conference in Seoul approved its establishment, said Lee Key-cheol, an official at South Korea's Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade.

President Omar al-Bashir of Sudan and President Ismael Omar Guelleh of Djibouti delivered speeches at the opening ceremony of the conference.

South Korea …

Integration of four-dimensional computer-aided design modeling and three-dimensional animation of operations simulation for visualizing construction of the main stadium for the Beijing 2008 Olympic games.(Report)

Introduction

Communication of design details and construction plans is critical to the successful delivery of modern construction projects, which feature bold, unconventional architectural designs, tight schedules, congested site space, and the involvement of multiple stakeholders. Nevertheless, interacting with and making sense of huge amounts of relevant project data would be tedious and overwhelming, if not impossible. This has presented a distinct challenge for engineers and managers to attain cost efficiency in executing large-scale, complex construction projects.

Three-dimensional computer-aided design (3D CAD) technology became available as the predominant means of designing and drafting to the Architecture--Engineering--Construction (AEC) industry in the 1980s. The combination of computer graphics, animation, and 3D computer modeling lends effective visual aid to engineers from conceptual design to construction process (Morad and Beliveau 1994). As a matter of fact, by making better use of human spatial memory, visualization in 3D computer models brings the full power of the human visual system to bear on processing information in tackling highly convoluted problems (Sheridan 2008). 3D CAD can enable architects and engineers to explain structural design and construction operation more effectively than traditional methods (Kang et al. 2007). With the 3D CAD technology, many complicated construction problems can be identified and addressed before they would actually materialize on site, thus avoiding potential design errors, operation delays, and added costs of revisions in construction (Danso-Amoako et al. 2003).

[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]

[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]

The established construction planning methodology of critical path method (CPM) builds on the definition of a work breakdown structure of a project that subdivides the project into component activities; each activity is a well-defined scope of work that usually terminates in a deliverable product (Halpin and Woodhead 1998). It is noteworthy that CPM relies on bar charts and project network diagrams for visualizing activity status and sequence. Recent developments have attempted to turn drab visual aids of CPM into vivid 3D computer graphics by linking CPM with the building design data defined in 3D CAD models, resulting in a four-dimensional (4D) view of a CPM plan (Koo and Fischer 2000).

With the objective of reducing resource idling time and boosting site productivity, operations simulation provides an effective methodology for modeling construction processes and addressing time conflicts in allocating the utilization of resources. Over the past three decades of research, construction simulation tools have evolved from the original activity cycle diagram based CYCLONE (short for "CYCLic Operation NEtwork") (Halpin 1977) to the full-fledged STROBOSCOPE (short for "STate and ResOurce Based Simulation Of COnstruction ProcessEs") boasting flexible programmability and extensibility (Martinez 1996). In addition, visualization of simulated operations in 3D significantly adds to the credibility of simulation models and provides valuable insight into the subtleties of construction operations that are otherwise difficult to quantify or present (Kamat and Martinez 2001).

The motivation of the present research is to develop innovative, cost-effective planning methods …

Queen Elizabeth praises forces in Afghanistan

Britain's Queen Elizabeth II paid tribute to the country's troops fighting in Afghanistan in her annual Christmas speech broadcast Friday, praising their work while expressing her sadness at the casualties.

The queen's message came at the end of a year in which 106 British soldiers were killed in the troubled Central Asian country. 2009 has been the bloodiest year for the British military since the war started nine years ago, and public support for the U.S.-led campaign has waned as the death toll mounts in the fight against Taliban militants.

"I am sure that we have all been affected by events in Afghanistan and saddened by the casualties suffered by …

Friday, March 2, 2012

Congress Eases Stem Cell Restrictions

WASHINGTON - Spoiling for a veto fight, Congress cleared legislation Thursday easing restrictions on federal funding for embryonic stem cell research.

The House vote to send the measure to President Bush was 247-176, 35 short of the level needed to override a second veto in as many years on the issue.

"For many, embryonic stem cell research is the most promising source of potential treatments and cures" for debilitating disease, said Rep. Diana DeGette, D-Colo., the bill's leading advocate.

"Unfortunately, because of the stubbornness of one man - President Bush - these people continue to suffer as they wait," she added.

The president was unpersuaded.

"If this bill were to become law, American taxpayers would for the first time in our history be compelled to support the deliberate destruction of human embryos," he said in a statement in Germany, where he was attending a summit of world leaders.

"Crossing that line would be a grave mistake. For that reason, I will veto the bill passed today," he added.

Bush's written statement echoed criticism leveled in an hour-long debate on the House floor, where opponents of the measure said the research requires the destruction of human embryos, and that alternatives have shown more promise.

"You're talking about spare embryos now but if it ever did work ... it would require the killing of millions of embryos," said Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J.

He also said a recent report by the U.S. Catholic Conference listed numerous breakthroughs involving research conducted on adult stem cells, cord blood and amniotic fluid, none of which involve the destruction of a human embryo.

The measure drew the support of 210 Democrats and 37 Republicans. Opponents included 16 Democrats and 160 Republicans.

Public opinion polls show widespread support for stem cell research, which supporters say could lead to treatment of diseases as diverse as Alzheimer's and juvenile diabetes. Democrats made the measure one of their top priorities when they took control of Congress in January - knowing full well that Bush stood ready to veto it.

The president made his position clear weeks ago when he said the legislation "crosses a moral line that I and many others find troubling."

Democratic aides said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada intended to stage a mid-afternoon ceremony to dramatize the passage of the bill.

They held a similar event earlier in the year when Congress approved another high-profile bill that faced a veto, a measure containing a timetable for a troop withdrawal from Iraq.

Bush vetoed that bill on May 1, and as expected, the House failed to override his veto.

The House approved an initial stem cell measure within days of convening on a 253-174 vote that was short of a veto-proof majority. The Senate passed a slightly different measure in April, 63-34. The House needed to vote on the bill again to send it to the president.

There was no federal money for embryonic stem cell research until Bush announced on Aug. 9, 2001, that his administration would make it available for lines of stem cells that already were in existence. Elected with the strong support of abortion foes and other conservatives, he said at the time his decision was designed to balance concerns about "protecting life and improving life."

He also limited the funds to cell lines derived from embryos that were surplus at fertility clinics, and that had been donated from adults who had given informed consent.

Advocates of the veto-threatened legislation argue that the number of stem cell lines available for research is smaller than needed, and that some of the material has become contaminated over time by mouse embryonic skin cells that typically are placed at the bottom of culture dishes used in the research.

The bill would permit funding for research on embryonic stem cells regardless of the date of their creation, as long as they were donated from in-vitro fertilization clinics, they would "otherwise be discarded" and donors gave their approval.

Separately, three teams of researchers reported Wednesday they had found a way to produce embryonic stem cells without destroying embryos - but in mice. They got ordinary skin cells to act like the embryonic cells, which can develop into all types of tissue.

In a prelude to the stem cell vote in Congress, House Republicans engineered the defeat of legislation to ban human reproductive cloning. The 213-204 vote against the measure was well short of the two-thirds majority needed for passage.

Critics said it would facilitate the creation of cloned human embryos to be used in research and then destroyed.

Azeri FM to visit Serbia and Montenegro.

Baku. May 02, 2011 (AzerTAc) -- Azerbaijan`s foreign minister Elmar Mammadyarov is kicking off a three-day official visit to Serbia and Montenegro tomorrow. In Serbia, Mammadyarov will meet with President Boris Tadic, Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremic, Minister of Labor and Social Policy Rasim Ljajic, First Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Internal Affairs Ivica Dacic, Head of the National Assembly Slavica Dukic Dejanovic and Prime Minister …

US Patent Issued to Huron Project Management on April 5 for "System and Method for Accessing Information of the Web" (Canadian Inventor)

ALEXANDRIA, Va., April 7 -- United States Patent no. 7,918,400, issued on April 5, was assigned to Huron Project Management Inc. (Montreal).

"System and Method for Accessing Information of the Web" was invented by Edmund George Baltuch (Westmount, Canada).

According to the abstract released by the U.

S. Patent & Trademark Office: "A system and a method for acquiring information on a product, comprising an Internet unit and a communication device, interacting with the Internet unit; wherein the communication device comprises a bar code symbol reader, the bar code symbol reader reading digital code symbologies on the product, the communication device requests information to the Internet unit using the digital code symbologies, and the communication device makes available information returned in response by the Internet unit."

The patent was filed on Feb. 15, 2007, under Application No. 11/675,344.

For further information please visit: http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?

Sect1=PTO2&Sect2=HITOFF&p=1&u=%2Fnetahtml%2FPTO%2Fsearch-bool.html&r=1&f=G&l=50&co1=AND&d=PTXT&s1=7918400&OS=7918400&RS=7918400

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

WOMEN ASSAY WORLD RIGHTS.(MAIN)

Byline: ELLEN GOODMAN

NEW YORK -- The good news is that there wasn't much bad news. The brakes were kept on the backsliders. The leash was yanked on the backtrackers. Even the backlash was kept in its holster.

United Nations conference for women brought 4,500 delegates and grass-roots organizers here for a five-year checkup on the Platform for Action approved at the global meeting for women in Beijing in 1995. It was a 150-page plan that covered issues from violence to economic development.

This time, at the meeting named ``Beijing Plus Five,'' there was fear the plan would be watered down with diplomatic phrases. So the results were greeted with relief if not celebration. But now as the women head home, do we assess this half-decade of international women's rights as half-full or half-empty?

Half-full? The idea that women's rights are human rights has finally solidified. Some 20 years ago, it was a radical thought. Today, it's an international cliche. Honor killings, bride burnings, female genital mutilation are no longer regarded as ``cultural'' matters but human rights abuses. Sexual trafficking in women, which Secretary of State Madeleine Albright condemned here, isn't another global economy spinoff but an international scandal.

``Governments are being held accountable for what they said they were doing for women,'' says Charlotte Bunch of the Center for Women's Global Leadership.

Half-empty? The world has barely begun to implement commitments made in Beijing. Many countries thought a token signature on a token document would get them off the hook. Others from the Vatican to Libya remain adamantly opposed to parts of the platform, especially reproductive rights.

Also, many countries have failed to meet the Beijing timetable for repealing laws that discriminate against women, such as inheritance and custody laws. And five years out, the path to progress is neither straight nor sure. Consider Kuwait. Five years ago, Kuwait was the only country where men could vote and women could not. It still is.

Fatima Al-Abdali, an engineer and activist, her hair covered in the traditional black scarf, intensely explained the tangled struggle for women's suffrage in Kuwait. This is a country where more than half the college graduates are women, but still can't vote or hold office.

During the 1991 invasion when women worked and fought beside men, Al-Abdali says, ``women were called the sisters of men of Kuwait. That means we were equal.'' When the war was over, ``we thought the vote would come automatically.'' A year later, they were sorely disappointed. One year after the next, the Parliament turned down the women's vote. Even when the emir -- in a political end run -- supported suffrage, it lost.

This year, Al-Abdali, whose daughter is studying architecture in Oklahoma, became one of five women to challenge the election law as unconstitutional; one case is now headed for the constitutional court. ``The thing that is bothering us is that the government is now saying women are not ready enough, not aware enough, not political enough. So many `not enoughs.' ''

When are there enough ``not enoughs''? In many places, like Kuwait, the reality and the fear of a fundamentalist backlash are inhibiting the progress governments promised when they signed the plan. Today, women's rights are sometimes put on hold or bargained away to keep the fundamentalists at bay.

As Charlotte Bunch looks ahead to the next half-decade -- half-full or half-empty? -- she wonders not just about the out-and-out political battles with reactionaries but this ``undertow'' of resistance that may actually get worse with globalization. ``In places where people feel threatened by globalization of the economy or the culture, people try to hang on to what they can control,'' she worries. ``They identify women and family with traditional areas to control.''

So in the half-full half-decade, there is the emerging international movement toward equality. A grass-roots connection has been made by women and their male allies across the world who find support and nourishment with each other. In the half-empty half-decade? A resistance to women's independence, especially for sexual and reproductive rights, remains strong. At this checkup, women shored up a platform to stand on. But they don't want to stand still. Ellen Goodman's e-mail address is ellengoodman@globe.com

Breakfast Briefing // Chicago

Markets plan short day on Friday Most financial markets, includingstock markets, will conduct a half day of trading Friday, closing atnoon Chicago time. The Chicago Sun-Times will publish daily stock andmutual fund prices on Saturday. Yearly stock and mutual fund priceswill be published Sunday. Court halts slowdown at airline AmericanAirlines said it received a temporary restraining order to end a workslowdown by its maintenance workers at two airports. American, theworld's No. 2 carrier, said the work slowdown began Monday at O'HareAirport and Dallas/Fort Worth Airport. The slowdown caused 90 flightsto be canceled because of mechanical reasons Wednesday morning,almost four times the normal rate, said Tim Kincaid, an Americanspokesman. Bank to open downtown branch Manufacturers Bank, based at1200 N. Ashland, said Wednesday that it will open its first downtownoffice in early April. The office, at 2 N. La Salle, will containcommercial real estate lending and private banking divisions. MBFinancial Inc. is the holding company for Manufacturers. VASCOexpects rapid growth VASCO Data Security International of OakbrookTerrace said it expects rapid growth for its Internet security, userauthentication and access control services. The company said it hasrevised its organization to meet demand in the near future. Wells-Gardner anticipates loss Wells-Gardner Electronics Corp., Chicago,expects to lose between $1.2 million and $1.4 million, or 27 centsand 31 cents a share, in the fourth quarter. Wells-Gardner earned$142,000, or 3 cents a share, in the same quarter last year. Thevideo products company said sales should be between $9 million and$9.2 million, down from $10.7 million in the fourth quarter lastyear. The loss stems from a series of one-time programs to reduceinventory and a reduction in sales volume, the company said. Groupincreases stake in USG An investment group with ties to J.R. Simplotraised its stake in USG Corp. to 12.6 percent from 11.4 percent ofcommon shares outstanding. A trust controlled by Simplot bought559,000 shares Dec. 16 at $44.87 apiece, according to a Schedule 13Dfiled with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The trust alsopurchased 585,800 common shares at $50.39 to $51.98 each between Nov.17 and Nov. 23, and now holds about 6.1 million shares in USG, theChicago-based manufacturer of gypsum wallboard. USG shares rose 68 3/4 cents to $46.68 3/4. Prime Capital agrees to sell unit PrimeCapital Corp. said Wednesday that it agreed to sell its CapitalAlliance Financial Services unit as well as a $70 million portfolioof specialty vehicle leases. Financial terms of the sale weren'tdisclosed. The buyer also wasn't disclosed. Prime Capital, aprovider of capital and specialty finance services based in Rosemont,said the buyer has supplied initial funding of $25 million for theleases and should complete the rest of the acquisition by mid-January. Prime Capital said selling Capital Alliance allows it tofocus on communications and information technology vendor finance.Shares of Prime Capital closed Wednesday at 93 3/4 cents, up 12 1/2cents, on the Nasdaq Stock Market. Akorn increases line of creditAkorn Inc., the Buffalo Grove-based maker of sterile specialtypharmaceuticals, said it had increased its revolving line of creditarrangement with the Northern Trust Co. Bank of America has joinedwith Northern Trust and National City Bank to provide the increase,to $45 million from $25 million.

Architect of National Broadband Plan Says Changes Needed to Expand Broadband Access in Poor and Rural Communities

WASHINGTON, March 3, 2011 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Nearly ayear after the issuance of the National Broadband Plan (NBP), theplan's lead architect told a policy gathering on Wednesday that theFederal Communications Commission did not take the right approach toincreasing broadband adoption among low-income households, and thatit should be changed.

Blair Levin, who was Executive Director of the Omnibus BroadbandInitiative at the FCC during the NBP's formulation and now serves asSociety Fellow at the Aspen Institute, said that the plan should nothave counted on transitioning the Universal Service Fund (USF) asits core strategy for expanding broadband access in for poor andrural households in underserved areas. The USF currently providessubsidies to support basic monthly telephone service and initialinstallation or activation fees through the Lifeline/Link-upprograms.

"Having wrestled with this problem for another year, I nowbelieve the best thing we can do to enable more low-incomehouseholds to get connected to broadband is not to expand theexisting Lifeline/Link-up program, but rather to phase it out andbuild a broadband program on a different foundation," Levin said.

Levin made his comments at a Washington forum, "The NationalBroadband Plan and the Underserved - One Year Later," sponsored bythe Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, a think tankthat focuses on issues concerning people of color. Edward Lazarus,Chief of Staff to Chairman Julius Genachowski at the FederalCommunications Commission also delivered opening remarks.

The event included a panel of media and technology experts whodiscussed the nation's progress on expanding broadband services tounderserved communities.

Mandated by Congress under the American Recovery and ReinvestmentAct, the National Broadband Plan received widespread praise as thenation's first large-scale strategy for achieving affordability andmaximizing use of broadband across all segments of society.

In reflecting on the broadband plan's success, Lazarus noted thePresident's State of the Union address included several referencesto high-speed Internet as essential to America's economic growth andcompetitiveness. Further, the President's budget endorsed three ofthe National Broadband Plan's "most important initiatives" includingincentive auctions to repurpose spectrum, reforming the UniversalService Program, and funding an interoperability public safetybroadband network.

Despite these signs of progress, one-third of Americans still donot have broadband access, and African Americans and other people ofcolor continue to lag behind the nation at large in getting online.Broadband adoption rates among low-income, rural, and disabledAmericans also indicate more innovative strategies are needed toclose the digital divide.

Panelists noted a number of challenges to adoption, includingaffordability, the need for computer training, and lack of relevantcontent for minorities. Some said spectrum reform is also criticalto expanding access especially given the high rates of Internetaccess via mobile devices by African Americans and Hispanics.

Panelists offered a number of recommendations to increase accessand move the broadband plan forward. These included free publiceducation online, targeted outreach and education to minoritycommunities, and public information portals that aggregate contentfor African American and other communities of color. Panelistsagreed that creative solutions are needed to prevent non-adoptersfrom falling behind in the digital age.

"As you prepare for any career, you have to be able toparticipate in the digital world. Increasingly, it is necessary forfull participation in our democratic society," said Ralph B.Everett, President and CEO of the Joint Center. "What would yourprospect in life be if you did not have access to the Internet ordid not know how to use it?"

To read Blair Levin's speech in its entirety and to hear audio ofthe event, visit www.jointcenter.org.

The Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies is one of thenation's leading research and public policy institutions and theonly one whose work focuses primarily on issues of particularconcern to African Americans and other people of color. To learnmore, please visit www.jointcenter.org.

SOURCE Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies

PC Demand Expected to Grow in First Quarter LOS ANGELES, March 7

Unit volume in the worldwide PC market in the first quarter of2000 is expected to grow 20 percent year over year, according toforecast data released Tuesday by U.S. market research firmInternational Data Corporation (IDC). But with the traditionallyslower first quarter in full swing, IDC said, PC shipments areexpected to decline 9 percent from the fourth quarter 1999. "WithY2K fears largely over and the introduction of Microsoft Windows2000," IDC said, "businesses will start picking up the pace ofupgrades." The research firm expects the commercial marketto showmore robust growth this year than last, starting with a pickup indemand this quarter. Asia-Pacific and Japan will lead the way inPC sales for the quarter with 32 percent growth each over the firstquarter last year, according to IDC's forecast. Both Asia-Pacificand Japan will continue to benefit from strong consumer demand asprice points decline and interest in new desktop designs increase;consumer growth will top 68 percent and 45 percent in the regionrespectively. In the United States, IDC expects first quartergrowth to reach20 percent. Western Europe's growth is pegged at 10.9percent. According to IDC, the key to vendor growth this quarteris related to the strategic alignment with growing consumer andsmallbusiness segments. In addition, positioning in the U.S. andAsia-Pacific markets will be especially important. Finally, IDCfound solid Internet strategies and the ability to deliver portablePCs in volume will also be keys to growth. There were a total of113 million PC shipments worldwide in 1999, according to IDC data.Compaq and Dell were on top of all vendors, respectively capturing13.9 percent and 10.5 percent worldwide market share.

Fed: Turnbull just a candidate, says Downer


AAP General News (Australia)
08-11-2004
Fed: Turnbull just a candidate, says Downer

CANBERRA, Aug 11 AAP - Foreign Minister Alexander Downer today said he was not concerned
about comments by Liberal candidate Malcolm Turnbull about the the Iraq war, because Mr
Turnbull was not a member of the government.

Mr Turnbull, who is running for the safe Liberal seat of Wentworth in Sydney, told
a public meeting this week that history may judge US President George W Bush's decision
to invade Iraq as an error.

Mr Turnbull later said his remarks at the meeting had been misquoted by Labor MP Tanya
Plibersek and he supported the government's decision to join the war.

Mr Downer today said he had not heard Mr Turnbull's comments, but said Mr Turnbull
was "just a candidate".

"The point is what the government's position is," he told reporters.

"He isn't a member of the government.

"Regardless of what anybody may or may not have said at a meeting in Bondi, the bottom
line is that what the government did was right.

"We were right to get rid of Saddam Hussein's vicious regime and we were right to support
our allies in doing so.

"And we have not a moment's regret about what as a government we have done, and that's
the principal issue."

AAP pj/sw/tma/jlw

KEYWORD: IRAQ TURNBULL DOWNER

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

WA: Fremantle Dockers star Jeff Farmer in court today


AAP General News (Australia)
04-01-2004
WA: Fremantle Dockers star Jeff Farmer in court today

By Tim Clarke

PERTH, April 1 AAP - AFL star Jeff Farmer will face a Perth court today charged with
assaulting his long-time girlfriend.

The 26-year-old Fremantle Dockers' player is due to appear in Perth Court of Petty
Sessions on one count of common assault arising out of an incident in suburban Osborne
Park on Tuesday.

A statement from Dockers' chief executive Cameron Schwab yesterday said Farmer intended
to deny the charge, which carries a maximum penalty of 18 months jail or a $6,000 fine.

The club also said Farmer, who is signed with the Dockers until the end of 2007, would
train with the team today and remain available for selection for the game against the
Sydney Swans in Sydney on Sunday.

The criminal charge is the latest in a string of off-field setbacks for the mercurial
goal-kicker, who was barely seen at Fremantle Oval during the build-up to the season.

Farmer's uncle died on the eve of the club's first Wizard Cup game, and then a teenage
cousin died in a road accident near his home town of Tambellup in WA' south.

AAP tc/hn/tma/br

KEYWORD: AFL FARMER

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

MID:Israeli rabbis meeting Pope, hope to search for artifacts


AAP General News (Australia)
01-16-2004
MID:Israeli rabbis meeting Pope, hope to search for artifacts

Israel's chief rabbis say they hope the pope will grant them permission to search Vatican
storerooms for artifacts, like the huge golden candelabra that stood in the Jewish Temple
in Jerusalem 2,000 years ago.

The two rabbis will meet the pope tomorrow.

When the Romans sacked …

NSW: The main stories in today's Sydney newspapers

00-00-0000
NSW: The main stories in today's Sydney newspapers

THE WEEKEND AUSTRALIAN

Page 1: Commonwealth, states, agree to water reforms to save ailing river systems;Jana Pittman wins world 400-metre hurdles title.

Page 2: Extended coverage of Jana Pittman's victory at world athletic championships.

Page 3: Political scandal threatens to engulf South Australian Premier Mike Rann assenior adviser faces charges.

World: Talks to end North Korean nuclear crisis stall; Death of British soldier marksnew intensification of guerrilla war in Iraq; 70,000 dead in Peruvian civil war, key commissionfinds.

Business: AMP spurns National Australia Bank overtures; Telstra seeks to cut $800 millionfrom cost base over next two to three years.

Sport: Jana Pittman wins world 400 metres hurdles title; Weekend football code preview;Injury woes strike Wallabies on rugby World Cup eve.

More pa/pw

KEYWORD: FRONTERS NSW 2 SYDNEY

Thursday, March 1, 2012

New online harassment involves provocative messages sent under guise of activists

00-00-0000
CGISTATUS=FAILURE. SYSTEM DOWN.

FED: Govt approves final troop deployments to Middle East

00-00-0000
FED: Govt approves final troop deployments to Middle East

CANBERRA, Feb 7 AAP - The federal government today approved the deployment of the lastof the Australian Defence Force troops on standby for involvement in any conflict withIraq.

Defence Minister Robert Hill said support teams for the special forces task group andnavy divers would be farewelled at a ceremony next week.

They would be deployed at later dates, he said.

Senator Hill said the deployment of Australian personnel to the Gulf was …

Qld: Gas leak sparks service station evacuation

00-00-0000
Qld: Gas leak sparks service station evacuation

Police say a service station on the Warrego Highway west of Brisbane has been evacuatedafter leaks were discovered in two large gas cylinders.

Staff at the Mobil service station at Amberley, on the outskirts of Ipswich, alertedpolice and firefighters after customers reported a strong smell of gas about 4.30pm (AEST).

Engineers and a gas examiner were called in to help fix the leak and the station wasre-opened about 5.30pm (AEST).

AAP RTV nr/smb

KEYWORD: STATION (BRISBANE)

Aths: Munro last in women's 100m hurdles final

00-00-0000
Aths: Munro last in women's 100m hurdles final

Australia's JACQUIE MUNRO has finished last in the women's 100 metres hurdles finalat the Commonwealth Games.

MUNRO, the national champion, was slow from the starting blocks and never recovered,clocking 13.31 seconds in the final at the City of Manchester Stadium.

Jamaica's LACENA GOLDING-CLARK won the gold medal in 12.77s with her compatriot VONETTEDIXON claiming silver and Nigerian ANGELA ATEDE winning bronze.

AAP sl/daw

KEYWORD: GAMES ATHS 100H (MANCHESTER)

Fed: Hollingworth should step down, says ethics expert

00-00-0000
Fed: Hollingworth should step down, says ethics expert

By Janelle Miles

BRISBANE, Feb 19 AAP - Governor-General Peter Hollingworth should step down after admittinghe "wasn't up to" dealing with child sexual abuse claims as a new Anglican archbishopin 1990, an ethics expert said today.

Dr Trevor Jordan, senior lecturer in applied ethics at the Queensland University ofTechnology, said Archbishop Hollingworth's performance on the ABC's Australian Story programraised serious questions about his ability to fulfil his duties as Governor-General.

Dr Hollingworth said that as a new archbishop in 1990 he was on a "steep learning curve"

and did not have his "finger on all of the schools", claiming these were reasons for notadequately responding to complaints of abuse at Toowoomba Preparatory School.

Dr Jordan said Dr Hollingworth's answers showed he should step down as Governor-General.

"He's almost admitting that he wasn't on top of things in a crucial role in the past,"

said Dr Jordan, who is also the chair of the Esther Trust, an organisation that providesadvocacy and support to victims of sexual abuse in faith communities.

"I don't think Australia can afford to have a Governor-General who might not be ontop of things at some important stage.

"When you're Governor-General, you're a leader, a figurehead of Australia.

"The citizens you're representing include a large body of people who are victims of sexual abuse.

"I don't think they'd be necessarily comfortable with his leadership in that area inthe past and have doubts about his ability to fulfil the role."

Dr Jordan said it was clear Dr Hollingworth, when he was archbishop, lacked insightand sensitivity in dealing with allegations of sexual abuse.

Dr Hollingworth's successor as Anglican Archbishop of Brisbane, Phillip Aspinall, hasscheduled a news conference for later today at which he is expected to address mountingclaims of inadequately addressed sexual allegations during the Hollingworth tenure.

Dr Hollingworth is also due to issue a detailed statement in Canberra today respondingto fresh allegations including that he had appointed a man already accused of abuse toa newly formed church committee charged with investigating reports of sexual impropriety.

AAP jhm/sc/cjh/sb

KEYWORD: HOLLINGWORTH ETHICS

AAP National News Wire Round-Up for Midday, Dec 20


AAP General News (Australia)
12-20-2001
AAP National News Wire Round-Up for Midday, Dec 20
Midday Round-Up: HIGHLIGHTS OF THE AAP RTV FILE AT 1130

Terror Aust (CANBERRA)

The federal government says two more Australians are believed to have been trained
by OSAMA BIN LADEN's al-Qaeda terrorist network.

It says the pair, one of whom has Australian Army training, are in Afghanistan, but
it's not known where.

Defence Minister ROBERT HILL and Attorney-General DARYL WILLIAMS say the men are Caucasian,
but are not as yet being identified.

The parents of the 25-year-old who had military training in Australia contacted the
Department of Foreign Affairs, concerned about his welfare.

He's believed to have entered Afghanistan from Iran in early August.

The second man, a 28-year-old, departed Australia in March, but it's not yet known
when he entered Afghanistan.

Meanwhile, Australia's captured al-Qaeda fighter DAVID HICKS is waiting on board the
USS Peleliu in the Arabian Sea to be interviewed by Australian investigators.



Terror Force Aust (LONDON)

Britain will determine the extent and role of any Australian involvement in an Afghanistan
peacekeeping force.

British defence sources say Australia has offered to take part in a force of up to
5,000 troops, from at least 16 countries.

Defence sources would not reveal the nature of Australia's offer.

They say it could have changed after force commander General JOHN MCCOLL asked some
countries to alter their offers.



Terror (PESHAWAR)

Dozens of fighters loyal to OSAMA BIN LADEN, arrested as they crossed the border from
Afghanistan, have seized weapons and escaped their Pakistani guards.

Officials say seven al-Qaeda fighters and six police were killed.

After a brief and bloody gunbattle Pakistani tribal forces and army helicopter gunships
pursued the fugitives, capturing 21.

Officials say they were still searching for 20 more in the mountainous border region
eleven hours later.

The al-Qaeda fighters - mostly Arabs - were from among 156 arrested over the past two
days as they came across the border.



Terror WTC Fires (NEW YORK)

Officials say the fires that have burned beneath the ruins of the World Trade Centre
since September 11 are finally out.

For months, the fires sent acrid clouds of smoke that could be smelled at times several
kilometres away in Brooklyn and upper Manhattan.



Terror Iraq UN (UNITED NATIONS)

UN Secretary-General KOFI ANNAN has warned the US against expanding it war on terrorism to Iraq.

He says there is no evidence connecting Baghdad to the September 11 attacks, and any
attempt will further inflame Middle East tensions.

At the same time, ANNAN has urged Iraq to allow UN weapons inspectors to return to
the country -- a key demand of the US and other UN Security Council members.

With the last Taliban and al-Qaeda forces on the run in Afghanistan there's speculation
that Iraq, which is on the US list of nations sponsoring terrorism, might be the next
target.



Woomera (MELBOURNE)

Up to 60 asylum seekers have attempted to break out of the Woomera Detention Centre
early today in the third disturbance at the facility in as many days.

A Department of Immigration spokeswoman says between 50 and 60 detainees breached the
internal perimeter fence about midnight and attempted to breach the external fence.

She says water cannons were used by security staff to disperse detainees at the centre
in South Australia's remote north.

The spokeswoman says the protesters returned to the compound on the advice of their
representative committee members.

She says Australian Federal Police were on site during the disturbance.

The centre has been on red alert since the first riot on Monday night, in which 13
buildings were damaged by fire.

Yesterday, six security guards were injured and eight buildings damaged when asylum
seekers converted aerosol cans into flame throwers.



Ansett payouts (MELBOURNE)

All retrenched Ansett workers will be paid their entitlements before Christmas.

Ansett administrator Andersen says money went out last night to 384 staff who were
offered or applied for redundancy.

It follows the first payments to 4,000 staff on Tuesday night.

A spokesman for ANDERSEN says the remaining 400-odd staff will be paid before Christmas.

The payments come from the $195 million in government funds released by the Federal
Court last week.



Strachan (CANBERRA)

Investigators say media personality GRAEME SHIRLEY STRACHAN died when he lost control
of a helicopter after it was damaged in severe turbulence and crashed into a mountain.

Australian Transport Safety Bureau air safety deputy director ALAN STRAY says the extensive
damage to the helicopter led safety investigators to conclude the main rotor blade may
have contacted the tailboom inflight.

Mr STRACHAN was on a training navigation flight and had not been briefed on the weather
conditions by the flight training school before departure from Maroochydore on Queensland's
Sunshine Coast.

The former lead singer of 70s pop band Skyhooks and later a TV handyman, died on August
29 this year.



Hollingworth Johnston (CANBERRA)

A child protection advocate says the Governor-General's defence of his actions regarding
an alleged sex abuse cover-up is absurd.

Dr PETER HOLLINGWORTH, the former Anglican archbishop of Brisbane, broke his silence
on the matter yesterday.

He denies there was any cover-up over the sex abuse case at the Toowoomba Preparatory
School, near Brisbane.

Child protection advocate HETTY JOHNSTON rejects Dr HOLLINGWORTH's claim he was hamstrung
by diocese insurance obligations.

Ms JOHNSTON told Channel Nine that he at one stage said the priority was the insurance,
and at another stage said it was the children.



Trains (SYDNEY)

A half hour stopwork meeting by 20 train signallers over a worker's argument with management
has thrown Sydney's rail network into chaos.

Rail Tram and Bus Union secretary NICK LEWOCKI says the workers attended a stop work
meeting for 35 minutes this morning over an incident involving a signaller and management
personnel last night.

While he doesn't have details of the argument, he says workers are unhappy with the
way the signaller was treated.

The members have since returned to work.

CityRail and the union will appear in the Industrial Relations Commission shortly.



Italy Main (TRIESTE)

An Australian and a Briton have been jailed in Italy for trying to smuggle 40,000 ecstasy
pills into the United States.

A court in Trieste has sentenced Australian SIMON MAIN, 31, to eight years and Briton
ALEX BRUELL, 27, to four-and-a-half years.

MAIN'S lawyer, FRANCESCO GRIMALDI says the court gave BRUELL a lighter sentence because
he collaborated with authorities.




BRIEFLY......




The Argentine government declared a state of siege today, giving it special powers
to stop an outbreak of looting and riots sparked by austerity measures and poverty.




Palestinian West Bank security chief JIBRIL RAJOUB says a high-level meeting of Israeli
and Palestinian security officials has ended in failure.




The director of the New South Wales Art Gallery says he's been offered Afghan Buddhist
works of art almost certainly looted from Kabul before the Taliban was ousted.




FINANCE.....




At 1115 AEDT the all ordinaries index was UP 10.8 points at 3278.5.

The Standard & Poor's ASX/200 index was UP 10.7 points at 3334.8.

The Australian dollar was buying 51.14 US cents, DOWN from 51.49 at yesterday's close.

The Australian dollar was also trading at 56.83 euro cents, DOWN from 57.12 yesterday.

Gold in Sydney is trading 50 US cents HIGHER at $US276.35 an ounce.




AND IN SPORT......



Cricket SAfrica Toss (SYDNEY)

South African captain SHAUN POLLOCK has won the toss and elected to bat first in the
cricket tour match against New South Wales at the SCG starting today.

South Africa brought in the four players who weren't involved in the first Test loss
to Australia earlier this week.

Rested from the tour party are JACQUES KALLIS, NEIL MCKENZIE, NANTIE HAYWARD and MAKHAYA NTINI.

NSW made two late changes.

COREY RICHARDS came into the squad for MICHAEL SLATER, who rolled an ankle at training,
while JAMIE HEATH is in for NATHAN BRACKEN, who has a back strain.


Oly Skate Liu (SYDNEY)

Figure skater ANTHONY LIU has been selected in the Australian team for next year's
Winter Olympics at Salt Lake City.

The 27-year-old from Brisbane will be making his second Olympic appearance after being
a late inclusion in the Australian team for Nagano in 1998.



ENDS BULLETIN
AAP RTV rp

KEYWORD: MIDDAY ROUND-UP

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

HighLights of the AAP National Wire at 14:45, Aug 7


AAP General News (Australia)
08-07-2001
HighLights of the AAP National Wire at 14:45, Aug 7

CANBERRA - Attorney General Daryl Williams today said there was still a slim hope of
a breakthrough in the chase for the assets of Christopher Skase, despite the death of
the failed businessman. (Skase Williams)

SYDNEY - Fugitive businessman Christopher Skase had hidden the extent of the illness
that claimed his life from his family for years, his distraught stepdaughter claimed.

(Skase Family, see also Skase sidebars)

SKASE NIGHTLEAD to come

CANBERRA - Two Australians face possible execution in Afghanistan after one confessed
to converting Muslims to Christianity. (AFGHAN CLOSURE AUST to come)

SYDNEY - A vote on a return to work by striking car component workers has been delayed
by at least two hours. (Cars Meet Delay)

ADELAIDE - Car production in Australia is not expected to get back into full swing
until next week, even if the two-week Tristar dispute in Sydney is settled today. (Cars
resume, see also Cars sidebars)

CARS NIGHTLEAD to come

DARWIN - Northern Territory police today would not rule out a link between the stabbing
death of a man near Alice Springs and the disappearance of English tourist Peter Falconio.

(Gunman 2nd Daylead, NIGHTLEAD to come)

SYDNEY - The 17-year racing exile of high profile former bookmaker Rob Waterhouse will
end on Saturday. (Gallops Bookies, NIGHTLEAD to come)

CANBERRA - Prime Minister John Howard today declared the coalition had a real chance
of victory at the coming election. (Howard)

CANBERRA - The federal government was today under continued pressure from Labor to
release details of its Budget surplus early to better inform the public on election promises.

(Tax Senators, see also Tax sidebars)

TAX NIGHTLEAD to come

CANBERRA - Australians could make a contribution to their nation and to history by
filling out the first census form of the new millennium, Financial Services Minister Joe
Hockey said today. (Census Hockey, see also Census sidebars, CENSUS NIGHTLEAD to come)

BRISBANE - American adventurer Steve Fossett crossed Australia's east coast today on
his attempt to become the first solo balloonist to circle the earth. (Fossett Aust, see
also Fossett sidebars, FOSSET NIGHTLEAD to come)

CANBERRA - Australia had the fastest growing economy in the industrialised world, Treasurer
Peter Costello told a joint meeting of the coalition parties today. (Economy Costello)

SYDNEY - The Australian economy is on track, meaning the Reserve Bank of Australia
is unlikely to change interest rates after its monthly board meeting today. (Rates preview)

ECONOMY NIGHTLEAD to come

SYDNEY - Enex Resources Ltd today launched one of the largest floats in Australia's
history and one of the largest to take place globally in 2001. (Enex Resources, NIGHTLEAD
to come, also ENEX FACTBOX to come)

MELBOURNE - Australian batsman Mark Waugh will not face any charges over allegations
by an Indian bookmaker that he received money in exchange for team information. (Cricket
Fix Waugh Nightlead, chasing Waugh reaction for possible Second Nightlead)

EDMONTON - Cathy Freeman is tipping a former drug cheat and old foe to take over her
title as world 400m champion tomorrow. (Aths World Freeman Nightlead, see also ATHS
WORLD AUST NIGHTLEAD to come)

AAP mo

KEYWORD: HIGHLIGHTS NATIONAL

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

NSW:Police union expects final pay offer tomorrow


AAP General News (Australia)
02-22-2001
NSW:Police union expects final pay offer tomorrow

The New South Wales government is tomorrow expected to make its final offer in the
long-running police pay dispute.

Negotiations between the NSW Police Association, the NSW Police Service and the government
have continued for three months after the state's 14,000 officers rejected an original
pay offer of 16 per cent over four years.

Two weeks ago the union announced an in-principle offer reached in preliminary talks
with NSW Treasurer MICHAEL EGAN.

The parties have spent the past two weeks in ongoing talks to …

NSW: Parkes marks federation with new museum


AAP General News (Australia)
12-26-2000
NSW: Parkes marks federation with new museum

The effigy of Sir HENRY PARKES which features on the new $5 note, will also feature
inside a new $2 million museum at the town named after him.

The small central west New South Wales town of Parkes will be preparing for the visit
of 80 folk from sister city Coventry, England, Sir HENRY's birthplace.

Celebrations in Parkes will run throughout January culminating in the visit by the
Coventry 80 during which the English town's mayor, SHEILA COLLINS, will lay the foundation
stone for the Sir Henry Parkes Cottage.

The cottage will form the basis of a $2 million museum on the approaches to Parkes.

Sir HENRY PARKES Cottage is expected to be completed late in 2001.

AAP RTV sal/klw

KEYWORD: FEDERATION PARKES (SYDNEY)

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

Fed: Johnny O Keefe musical to tour nationally


AAP General News (Australia)
08-14-2000
Fed: Johnny O Keefe musical to tour nationally

By Karen Michelmore

SYDNEY, Aug 14 AAP - Australia's king of rock and roll, the late Johnny O'Keefe will
be immortalised in a stage musical, it was announced today.

The show opens in Melbourne in December, before touring Australia and New Zealand,
Jacobsen Entertainment announced today.

O'Keefe, described as The Wild One, is possibly the greatest entertainer in Australian history.

The musical - The Wild One - will be produced by O'Keefe's former producer Kevin Jacobsen
and Col Joye, who performed alongside the star.

The family of the late singer, who died in 1978, today said they had been involved
in developing the musical for two years.

"The stage musical is based on and celebrates the life, time and music of Johnny O'Keefe
and his era of rock and roll music," his brother, Justice Barry O'Keefe said today.

The songs featured in the musical include top hits from his 25-year career such as
Wild One, Shout!, Sing Sing Sing, She Wears My Ring and Ooh Poo Pah Doo.

Born John Michael O'Keefe in Sydney in 1935, Johnny O'Keefe's career took off in the
mid to late 1950s, when he pioneered rock'n'roll in Australia, alongside American born
entrepreneur Lee Gordon.

He is also famous for practically single-handedly establishing the Australian record
industry and fighting to promote Australian talent.

His efforts paved the way for artists such as Olivia Newton John and Peter Allen.

The story of the birth of rock'n'roll, The Wild One, The Johnny O'Keefe Musical will
open at the Victorian Arts Centre State Theatre in Melbourne on December 26.

It will travel to Sydney, Adelaide, Perth, Canberra, Newcastle and Brisbane before
heading to New Zealand.

AAP km/ah/cjh

KEYWORD: O'KEEFE

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

NSW: Train driver says didn t proceed with extreme caution


AAP General News (Australia)
02-25-2000
NSW: Train driver says didn t proceed with extreme caution

The driver of a commuter train has admitted travelling at twice the permissible speed
before he slammed up the back of another train at Glenbrook.

An inquiry into the disaster has heard KEVIN SINNETT slammed on the emergency brakes
and yelled to a friend to run.

That was the last time Mr SINNETT saw 55-year-old PAUL MARCELLINO alive.

Six other passengers also perished the December 2 collision in the New South Wales Blue Mountains.

Under cross-examination by ALEC SHAND, QC, Mr SINNETT …

Fed: Child care workers lose pay but no promised laws Bevis


AAP General News (Australia)
12-23-1999
Fed: Child care workers lose pay but no promised laws Bevis

A child care centre in Western Australia is the latest casualty of the lack of federal
laws protecting workers caught up in company insolvencies.

Labor said five employees at the Tomato Lake Child Care Centre in Western Australia
will lose their jobs on Christmas Eve.

Opposition industrial relations spokesman ARCH BEVIS says they are owed amounts ranging
from $365 to $8,528.

Mr BEVIS says the closure follows the collapse of the Oakdale coal mine and Domino
Mining in New South Wales and nursing homes in Yeppoon and Rockhampton, Queensland, owing
workers millions of dollars in unpaid accrued entitlements.

He's attacked Workplace Relations Minister PETER REITH for failing to have in place
promised laws to protect workers' entitlements by the end of the year.

Mr BEVIS says Mr REITH hasn't even introduced a bill into the parliament let alone
set up a protective system.

Mr REITH, who is currently on holidays, earlier this month blamed the states for dragging
the chain on setting up a national employees' entitlements scheme.

He said the form of the scheme had not yet been decided but should take shape early
in the new year.

AAP RTV dep/rcg/jn

KEYWORD: OAKDALE (CANBERRA)

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

NSW: AFP search and rescue experts look for snowboarders


AAP General News (Australia)
08-11-1999
NSW: AFP search and rescue experts look for snowboarders

SYDNEY, Aug 11 AAP - Australian Federal Police (AFP) officers trained for search and rescue
have joined the hunt for four snowboarders missing in Kosciuszko National Park since Sunday.

The ACT Region Search and Rescue team of four officers joined the operation at the request
of the NSW Police, according to a statement from the AFP.

The Pol-Air helicopter was due to arrive in the area at 11.30am (AEST) to add air support
to the operation.

The search for the missing men resumed in perfect conditions this morning after it
was suspended yesterday afternoon when low cloud, high winds and snow reduced visibility.

The snowboarders, all in their early 20s, set out on a three-day trip from Thredbo Village
early on Saturday, headed for Lake Albina, a 10km overland trip passing the base of Mt
Kosciuszko.

They were due home on Monday night in the Sydney suburb of Frenchs Forest.

AAP maur/sb/kr

KEYWORD: SNOWBOARDERS AFP

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

Vic: Mother contributed to baby s suffocation coroner


AAP General News (Australia)
02-15-1999
Vic: Mother contributed to baby s suffocation coroner

A mother has rejected a coroner's finding today that she contributed to her baby daughter's
suffocation death by leaving her to sleep alone in her pram.

Seven-month-old ABIGAIL JANE SWANSSON died when the BabyCo pramette she was in tipped
backwards onto the floor, suffocating the baby on October 27, 1997.

Initial investigations discovered the BabyCo Burwood model stroller was found tipped
backwards with the backrest lowered and no safety harness in use.

BabyCo says the pram was not designed to have the back panel laid flat and the model
conformed to the Australian Standard.

ABIGAIL's mother STEPHANIE told the court she had done nothing unusual in leaving her child
to sleep in the pram.

But Deputy State Coroner IAIN WEST said there was an instruction booklet outlining that a
child should not be left alone in the pram and the fitted safety harness should be used at all
times.

He says both Mrs SWANSSON and ABIGAIL contributed to the cause of death.

ABIGAIL'S father MALCOLM SWANSSON says the family doubts the pram's safety despite the
manufacturer being cleared of blame.

AAP RTV cmc/ra/jv/jn

KEYWORD: SWANSSON (MELBOURNE)

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

QLD:Boy, 10, critical after school crash


AAP General News (Australia)
02-02-2012
QLD:Boy, 10, critical after school crash

A ten-year-old boy is in a critical condition after a car ploughed into a fence at
a school in Brisbane's south this afternoon.

The boy is in the Royal Children's Hospital with …

QLD:Cyclone baby girl born in Cairns=2


AAP General News (Australia)
02-03-2011
QLD:Cyclone baby girl born in Cairns=2

Ms Bligh said two babies were also born at Innisfail Hospital on Tuesday night - one
at 10.43pm and another at 10.44pm (AEST) - right in the midst of the storm.

"Innisfail, right in the line of fire, so it would have been an anxious time for all
of those staff as well," she told …