среда, 29 февраля 2012 г.

FED:Mandatory detention 'essential': Bowen


AAP General News (Australia)
08-17-2011
FED:Mandatory detention 'essential': Bowen

The federal government is standing firm on its support for mandatory detention of boat
people despite immigration department boss ANDREW METCALFE publicly raising doubts about
the policy.

In an unusual move for a senior public servant, Mr METCALFE has urged a parliamentary
committee to reconsider whether mandatory detention worked as a deterrent and how long
boat people should be incarcerated.

Mr METCALFE has also urged the committee of Labor, Liberal and Greens MPs and senators,
to consider whether some boat arrivals could be managed differently.

Opposition spokesman SCOTT MORRISON says the comments could be seen to cast doubt on
the government's commitment to mandatory detention, but a spokesman for Immigration Minister
CHRIS BOWEN says mandatory detention is an essential component of border control.

AAP RTV ag/bwl/wz

KEYWORD: DETENTION (CANBERRA)

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

NSW: Main stories in today's Sydney newspapers=4


AAP General News (Australia)
02-21-2007
NSW: Main stories in today's Sydney newspapers=4

THE AUSTRALIAN FINANCIAL REVIEW

Page 1: James Hardie chairwoman Meredith Hellicar and two other directors resign from
the company. Federal government's economic growth forecasts under pressure as drought
shows few signs of breaking and summer crop production is at the lowest level in 24 years.

Foster's Group 10 per cent slump in Australian win sales caused by experiment gone wrong
was nothing short of disastrous, chief executive Trevor O'Hoy says.

Page 3: Federal Health Minister Tony Abbott to warn states that in return for funding
Canberra …

QLD:Solar farm tender for Cloncurry


AAP General News (Australia)
04-20-2011
QLD:Solar farm tender for Cloncurry

By Petrina Berry

BRISBANE, April 20 AAP - The Queensland government is offering $5.7 million to any
company willing to build, own and operate a solar farm in the state's northwest.

A solar farm in Cloncurry, east of Mount Isa, has been on the cards for some years
and is part of the state government's push to make Queensland the solar state.

The proposal was put on hold after a Sydney-based energy company pulled out of the
development last year.

Energy Minister Stephen Robertson says the project is back on track and the government
is offering the $5.7 million incentive.

"We want industry to design, build, own and operate a solar farm with a life-span of
more than 20 years," Mr Robertson said.

"The quality and price of solar technology is moving rapidly so we will test the market
to find the most suitable solar system for the region."

The location and size of the farm has not been determined.

Expressions of interest close on May 25.

Cloncurry Mayor Andrew Daniels told ABC Radio the town's the perfect location for a solar farm.

"I'm really surprised, there's been companies from all over the world and they've really
enlightened me with what they can do with solar today," Mr Daniels said.

AAP peb/crh/dep

KEYWORD: CLONCURRY

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

Play with food


Jerusalem Post staff
Jerusalem Post
01-06-2011
Play with food
Byline: Jerusalem Post staff
Edition: Weekend
Section: Features
Type: News

Not many things evoke such emotions as what we put in our mouths. Food is about our earliest memories, about our family and where we live; it reveals our secrets and exposes our desires, it is a part of every aspect of our lives.

Nowadays food is often more than that: it's a a status symbol, it's trendy, fashionable and there are more television shows and Internet sites about cooking than there are on almost any other subject.
In recent years, designers such as megastar Philippe Starck have started looking at food as objects. Starck said, "We can now see two trends related to food: The engineered fast food that rules the supermarkets and the return to organic, slow food that we can find in farmers' markets. We designers are more interested in the second trend."

The exhibition "Playing with Food" that opens this month in Holon looks at the relationship between food and design. The show explores food as raw material for design and as a tool for understanding society, and also explores the links between eating and architecture.

January 15 to March 5, The Mishkan Gallery, Beit Meirov, Rehov Harzfeld 31, Holon, (03) 651-6851, Tues. to Thurs. 5 to 8 p.m.; Fri. and Sat. 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.(c) Copyright Jerusalem Post. All rights reserved.

Illustrations/Photos:
Caption: Roi and Seffi Yannai: a glove made from eggplants. Yael
Friedmann: organic rings. Nitzan Debbi: molecular. Dani Hochberg and
Odelia Lavi for Shakuff restaurant. Amir Farber and Dan Peretz - Red

(Copyright 2011 The Jerusalem Post)

FED:Windsor got rid of 'two cancers'


AAP General News (Australia)
08-23-2010
FED:Windsor got rid of 'two cancers'

Independent New South Wales MP TONY WINDSOR says he got rid of "two cancers" when he
gave up smoking and left the Nationals in the 1980s.

Mr WINDSOR denies his former membership of the Nationals would sway him towards the
Coalition and has been scathing of Nationals senator BARNABY JOYCE.

He's told Sky News he doesn't like Mr JOYCE and won't be dealing with him.

However Mr WINDSOR says he can work with anybody and has refused to give a clear indication
of whether he would align himself with Labor or the Coalition to form government.

He says there's a process at work and it wouldn't be fair to the people of his electorate
if he made a decision too soon.

The member for New England will meet with the other independent MPs ROB OAKESHOTT and
BOB KATTER in Canberra today or tomorrow to discuss their preferences.

AAP RTV ih/wjf/sw/

KEYWORD: POLL10 WINDSOR (SYDNEY)

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

NSW: Abbott loses the lycra to greet wife after nine-day ride


AAP General News (Australia)
04-15-2010
NSW: Abbott loses the lycra to greet wife after nine-day ride

TONY ABBOTT's completed his gruelling nine-day bike ride.

And moments after finishing the one thousand kilometre Melbourne to Sydney charity
event .. the federal opposition leader vowed to do it all again next year .. even as prime
minister.

This year's ride has raised 200 thousand dollars for the Poche Centre for Indigenous
Health at Sydney University.

It will use the money to help students complete clinical outreach placements to remote
communities in western NSW and the Northern Territory.

AAP RTV lpm/evt/af

KEYWORD: PEDAL (SYDNEY)

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

Fed:Swan to hold press conference on rates decision at 1510 AEDT


AAP General News (Australia)
12-01-2009
Fed:Swan to hold press conference on rates decision at 1510 AEDT

CANBERRA, Dec 1 AAP - Federal Treasurer Wayne Swan will hold a press conference at
1510 AEDT to discuss Tuesday's decision by the Reserve Bank of Australia to lift the cash
rate by a further 25 basis points to 3.75 per cent.

AAP cb/sb/bwl

KEYWORD: SWAN

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

Tas: Bugler's call for help


AAP General News (Australia)
04-24-2009
Tas: Bugler's call for help

By Paul Carter

HOBART, April 24 AAP - If you think it's tough choking back the emotion during the
Last Post on Anzac Day spare a thought this year for the bugler.

Army Reserve Corporal Ashley Thomson blew the haunting call at the State funeral for
the last living Gallipoli veteran, Alec Campbell, in 2002.

He played it at the funeral for Tasmania's last living World War I veteran, Frank MacDonald,
in 2003.

He'll play it again as usual on Saturday in Hobart at the dawn service, a Cathedral
Mass and at the Cenotaph, before sounding it at an AFL match in Launceston.

Despite all his experience, the 51-year-old Cpl Thomson says the Last Post still effects him.

Its emotion threatens to trip what he says is a proud duty that has terrified him at times.

"How much it means to other people never escapes me," Cpl Thomson said this week.

"When you've got a crowd and they are crying, it just obviously means so much to them.

"But I invariably try not to look at the people because I can't afford to get caught
up in the emotion.

"I will usually pick something in the distance, spot a tree, and I'll just concentrate
on the tone quality.

"I don't think about how the piece goes because I've played it that many times.

"And because everybody is silent I can picture myself at home.

"I just try to distance myself and get through it well.

"But I'm always mindful that it's not the bugle show.

"Every person that stands up in silence is honouring the fallen and I'm just a part
of that sequence."

Home in the Huon River hamlet of Geeveston, where the army reservist works in a hardware
store, is the place where Cpl Thomson does his best bugling practice, he says.

Buglers don't get to warm up, so a "cold" session first thing in the morning prepares
him to play in Hobart's sometimes harsh April dawns, he says.

"I've discovered the best way to practice is get up in the morning and pick up the
bugle from the kitchen table and the first thing I do for the day is see if I can do a
really good call totally cold - just pick it up and do it," Cpl Thomson said.

There are 80 dawn services in Tasmania on Saturday and the demand for buglers far outstrips
supply.

Cpl Thomson says more school children, who play cornet or trumpet, should be encouraged
to learn the bugle and play at dawn services.

"It's not a hard piece of music at all," he says.

"What is hard is the situation you are doing it under.

"And most brass players like the comfort of being in the ensemble and not sitting out
the front being so exposed.

"I did my first bugle call at my school when I was about 11 and I remember it clearly.

It was terrible.

"But the more you do it the more confident you get."

Tasmania's RSL president Tony Scott agrees more school students should be nurtured
to play the bugle at dawn services.

He says there's been a shortage of players at local services for years.

"All we are trying to do is see if there are some younger ones out there who are musicians
and want to take on the job of being a bugler," Mr Scott said this week.

"The Last Post is a major part of any service and there's nothing more moving to hear
than a live playing of Last Post - it makes the hair stand up on the back of your neck.

"So hopefully we can get some more buglers coming up through the ranks so to speak
and have a go."

Cpl Thomson's band unit is claiming a boast this year with Army Reserve Corporal Keiron
Foley being one of only two reservists selected to play (saxophone) with the Australian
Army band corp contingent at the Gallipoli dawn service.

Six Tasmanian school students, winners of the Frank MacDonald Memorial Prize, will
be at Anzac Cove to see him play.

They are being led on a 16-day trip that includes a tour of the battlefields of Europe
after making winning studies of Australia's military history.

Their teachers, some Tasmanian RSL representatives and the state's Police Minister
Jim Cox will also make the tour.

Cpl Thomson's said he's never been to Gallipoli, but playing Last Post there at the
dawn service is a dream of his.

AAP pc/mo

KEYWORD: ANZAC TAS (AAP FEATURE) (PIX AVAILABLE) RPT

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

0600 FiveAA Adelaide Headlines


AAP General News (Australia)
12-19-2008
0600 FiveAA Adelaide Headlines

- South Australia govt under fire for the third chemotherapy bungle in hospitals this year

- One of the young women killed in Sydney plane crash had just qualified as instructor

- Merger talks off between Qantas and British Airways

- Women who began smoking in 60s and 70s now feeling the cost with cancer

- Boat operators advised Galwer Lock reopened for holiday period

- Nominations for SAGs announced

SPORT

- FIFA Cup, Cricket Test, Cricket Shield

AAP RTV tm

KEYWORD: 0600 FIVEAA

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

Box: Brad Pitt in Games turkey with a twist


AAP General News (Australia)
08-14-2008
Box: Brad Pitt in Games turkey with a twist

(EDS: Updates with super heavyweight Daniel Beahan eliminated)



By Laine Clark

BEIJING, Aug 13 AAP - In Hollywood terms, Brad Pitt's appearance at the Beijing Olympics
was a turkey.

But like most productions boasting that name, a sequel followed.

Heavily-hyped heavyweight Pitt bombed today, going down 11-6 in a points decision to
Morocco's Mohammed Arjaoui tonight.

And as a frustrated Pitt walked away contemplating his boxing future, the Australian
camp once again questioned the Olympic judges' scoring.

Pitt appeared to have a case, especially in the second round when he landed clear punches
that were not scored.

Thinking he was ahead when he came out in the third round, Pitt was 4-2 behind instead.

The Australians were also left shaking their heads over bouts involving middleweight
Jarrod Fletcher, light welterweight Todd Kidd and flyweight Stephen Sutherland earlier
in the week.

Australian assistant Mick Daly was clearly fuming tonight but deferred the spotlight to Pitt.

"I definitely came back after the second round. I thought I was at least up a point
but I was down two points - but that's the way it goes," he said.

At least the Australians couldn't complain about their other bout tonight.

The referee stopped the contest in just 49 seconds after Australian super heavyweight
Daniel Beahan copped a pounding in his first round bout with Kazazhstan's Ruslan Myrsatavyev.

Australia are desperate to break a 20-year boxing medal drought at the Olympics - but
their options are limited at Beijing to say the least.

Only lightweight Anthony Little has claimed a first round victory in the nine-strong team.

Pitt was out to make a name for himself at the Games and his pedigree was impressive.

He was the first Australian heavyweight to claim Commonwealth Games gold at Melbourne in 2006.

And the Australian camp believed Pitt's awkward style and heavy hands would provide
a winning combination at the Games.

No disrespect to Pitt but it wasn't his prowess but his film star name that attracted
an international media presence at his fight tonight.

While previous Australian boxers had not received a second look, journalists emerged
from the woodwork to watch the Victorian painter at the Beijing Workers' Gymnasium.

"There was a bit of expectation but I was confident I could get through, and I had
a good draw," said Pitt, predictably nicknamed Hollywood.

"I can't complain too much. What has happened is in the past. I've just got to move on."

AAP lc/jds

KEYWORD: OLY08 BOX AUST NIGHTLEAD

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

FED: Milestones of the week


AAP General News (Australia)
04-04-2008
FED: Milestones of the week

SYDNEY, April 3 AAP - Milestones of the week:



CHARGED - Swimmer Nick D'Arcy over a nightclub fight that could see him dropped from
the Olympic team.



FOUND - That soldier Jake Kovco died from an "irresponsibly self-inflicted" gunshot wound.



REVEALED - First photos of the wreck of the warship HMAS Sydney, sunk in 1941.



QUIT - Former Howard minister Peter McGauran, who is bowing out of politics.



AAP pbc/sp/imc

KEYWORD: MILESTONES

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

Vic: Three dead in 24 hours on Victorian roads


AAP General News (Australia)
12-02-2007
Vic: Three dead in 24 hours on Victorian roads

Three people have died in three separate crashes on Victorian roads in just over 24 hours.

A 56-year-old woman died when her car rolled down an embankment and struck a tree near
Numurkah .. 210 kilometres north of Melbourne .. about 4pm (AEDT) today.

Early today a pedestrian was stuck and killed by a car on the Western Highway at Melton
west of Melbourne.

Police say the accident happened at 12.45am (AEDT) when the woman .. thought to be
40 .. was struck by a westbound vehicle two kilometres west of Coburns Road.

Meanwhile a NSW man has died following an accident at Mt Granya .. east of Wodonga
.. about 3.30 pm yesterday.

The 51-year-old motorcyclist .. of the Albury suburb of Lavington .. was heading south
at Mount Granya when he ran off the road and hit a tree front-on.

The deaths take Victoria's road toll to 295 .. seven fewer than at the same time last year.

AAP RTV jrd/af

KEYWORD: TOLL VIC (MELBOURNE)

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

Vic: Bracks refuses to budge on federal Murray-Darling plan


AAP General News (Australia)
04-19-2007
Vic: Bracks refuses to budge on federal Murray-Darling plan

Victorian Premier STEVE BRACKS says he won't sign the prime minister's national water
plan .. despite Murray-Darling Basin irrigators facing the loss of water after June.

Mr BRACKS says today's allocation announcement will come as no surprise to Victorian
irrigators .. who've been warned to expect it.

And he says it has no connection with the federal plan.

Mr BRACKS says water allocation to irrigators can be negotiated to zero .. and Victoria
doesn't need to agree to the 10 billion dollar initiative.

He says Victoria wants to reward good irrigators .. not just have allocations to the
worst irrigation systems in the country.

AAP RTV kl/tb/gfr/rt/bart

KEYWORD: WATER VIC (MELBOURNE)

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

Qld: Farmers count the cost of devastating Qld storms


AAP General News (Australia)
12-18-2006
Qld: Farmers count the cost of devastating Qld storms

Farmers say fruit and vegetable crops were wiped out in wild storms that lashed south-east
Queensland at the weekend.

The horticulture industry group Growcom says small crop growers in the Cooroy district
and areas near Childers .. are assessing millions of dollars worth of damage to their
farms.

The area was hit by severe hail storms on Saturday .. with wind gusts of up to 200 kilometres.

They pulled down trees and power lines .. damaged buildings .. and ripped roofs from
homes on the Sunshine Coast .. at Toogoolawah and Esk .. west of Brisbane .. and at Tiaro
.. north of Brisbane.

Growcom chief executive JAN DAVIS says initial reports indicate that mango .. lychee
.. pineapple .. avocado .. pumpkin .. ginger .. passionfruit and stonefruit crops are
among hit.

AAP RTV rm/sc/wz/rt

KEYWORD: STORM QLD (BRISBANE)

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

Fed: Celebrity no shield for these survivors


AAP General News (Australia)
08-11-2006
Fed: Celebrity no shield for these survivors

By Erin McWhirter, TV Writer

SYDNEY, Aug 11 AAP - Being famous did nothing to protect the contestants on Celebrity
Survivor from the hardships of hunger, sickness and discomfort.

Dropped on a tropical island in Vanuatu for 25 days, the 12 so-called celebrities were
shocked by the reality of their situation.

It was no tropical paradise, and that was even before the bitchy behaviour began.

"It was hardly paradise," 48-year-old NSW state politician David Oldfield said of the
island on which the Seven Network set its new reality TV series Celebrity Survivor.

"We shared a beach with thousands of hermit and land crabs. There was no sand, it was
all broken coral and hard ground to sleep on.

"For the audience there is heaps of treachery, lies and deceit.

"Hunger makes people stupid because they aren't getting enough sugar and you see them
get stressed with the politics and mind games."

Celebrity Survivor, hosted by Ian "Dicko" Dickson, hopes to emulate the success of
the long-running US version of Survivor, shown in Australia on the Nine Network, and which
recently completed its 12th season.

And it'll be hoping to avoid the fate of Nine's Australian Survivor in 2002, which was a flop.

As well as the scenery and the battle against the elements, the success of the Survivor
concept often depends on how well, or badly, the rival contestants get on.

"This show definitely brings out the best and worst in people," said entertainment
reporter Amber Petty, better known to many as Princess Mary's bridesmaid.

Other contestants include model Imogen Bailey, white witch Fiona Horne, former motorcycle
world champion Wayne Gardner, model Gabrielle "The Pleasure Machine" Richens, ironman
Guy Leech, actor Justin Melvey, retired rugby union star Elton Flatley and dancer Kym
Johnson.

"The general consensus was if you have celebrities going on (the island) they are going
to make the journey easier (than what they would for regular punters)," said 42-year-old
Leech.

"I made sure when I signed on it was going to be the real deal because I am a huge
fan of the American show.

"But other people turned up not really gauging how hard it would be and not knowing
there would be no help along the way."

The real deal meant no camping equipment, food, water or medication were provided.

Not even a bout of food poisoning, infected coral cuts or one contestant's infected
eye was enough to bring in the medical crew.

Gardner says he wanted to quit after the first night, when he injured an eye groping
around in the dark for firewood.

"I thought I had done a lot of damage," recalls the 46-year-old.

"My eye was filled with wood and the first night I lay in so much pain it gave me a
migraine. The doctors wouldn't help me because you are in the show of `Survivor'.

"On the second night I was in such bad pain with the migraines and my head was so bad
... I said I needed it fixed or I was leaving the show.

"Finally I got help ... that was the only time when I wanted to go home, otherwise
I loved the experience."

On their second night on the island, near Havana Harbour on Vanuatu's Efate island,
the contestants encountered torrential rain.

Soaked from head to toe, cold, hungry and with no shelter, emotions ran high.

"Dealing with not having enough sleep, not getting enough food ... you are constantly
fighting that little person inside who is saying `I really want to go home now'," said
29-year-old Bailey.

Split into male and female groups, the contestants were forced to band together and
use their collective wit to survive without any mod-cons.

"This is real survival. We're not going to feed these people. It's do or die but it's
also an exploration of personal politics, power and manipulation," said Dickson.

In Survivor, the winners of daily physical challenges are rewarded with food, implements,
or protection from expulsion.

Losers must go to tribal council and vote off a team member.

The winners of American Survivor win $US1 million.

The victor in Australia's Celebrity Survivor get to donate $100,000 to a charity of their choice.

"Whoever thought up Survivor and the way it stretches someone one way, stretches them
the other and pulls them around so they aren't doing what they normally do, is a genius,"

said Leech.

Some admit it added clarity and direction to their lives.

"I call it a cleansing of all the body because you are detoxing from lack of food and
secondly it's a real cleansing of the mind because you are locked away from the rest of
the world in a closed environment, I found it exhilarating," said Gardner.

"It gave me a new found confidence."



** Celebrity Survivor premieres on August 17 on the Seven Network at 8.30pm (AEST).

AAP em/sp/de/nf

KEYWORD: SURVIVOR (AAP TV FEATURE)(WITH PIX) RPTNG

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

Fed: Vaile, Downer statements to be handed to Cole inquiry


AAP General News (Australia)
04-05-2006
Fed: Vaile, Downer statements to be handed to Cole inquiry

CANBERRA, April 5 AAP - Two senior federal government ministers will hand personal
statements to the AWB kickbacks inquiry today, paving the way for them being called as
witnesses.

The head of the inquiry, retired judge Terence Cole, gave Foreign Minister Alexander
Downer and Deputy Prime Minister Mark Vaile until today to provide their sworn statements.

Mr Downer said yesterday his statement was still "being worked on", while a spokesman
for Mr Vaile said the deputy prime minister's was ready to go.

Both ministers have previously said they would be happy to appear at the inquiry.

Lawyers for the inquiry revealed last week they had asked the ministers for statements
outlining what they knew about claims wheat exporter AWB paid nearly $300 million in kickbacks
to Saddam Hussein's regime.

Once the statements are received, the inquiry's legal team and lawyers for AWB and
its executives will study them before deciding whether to call Mr Downer or Mr Vaile to
the witness box.

They could be called as early as next week.

AAP shh/evt/sd

KEYWORD: AWB FEDERAL DAYLEAD

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

понедельник, 27 февраля 2012 г.

Fed: Sen Joyce threatens to cross floor again


AAP General News (Australia)
12-07-2005
Fed: Sen Joyce threatens to cross floor again

Mr Howard would not comment on Senator Joyce's declaration he would cross the floor
unless his VSU amendment was adopted.

The government may now be forced to turn its attention to Family First senator Steve
Fielding as it seeks to have VSU up and running by the second semester of the 2006 academic
year.

A spokesman for Senator Fielding today said he was yet to make up his mind which way
he would vote on the VSU legislation.

AAP db/sb/mon/jlw

KEYWORD: VSU HOWARD 2 CANBERRA

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

NSW: Main stories in today's Sydney newspapers = 2


AAP General News (Australia)
08-04-2005
NSW: Main stories in today's Sydney newspapers = 2

THE AUSTRALIAN:

Page 1: Sixteen judges face the sack for failing to file outstanding tax returns; Queensland's
new Education Minister vows to remove post modernist "mumbo jumbo" from the state school
syllabus; Steve Vizard's accountant may be fined up to $100,000 and a life ban from his
professional body for refusing to give evidence against the disgraced businessman; Former
judge Jeff Shaw was recommended for criminal charges after allegedly giving false evidence
to the NSW Police Integrity Commission; The federal government is planning a "reassuring"

advertising campaign to sell its new industrial relations laws; Australia's leading business
lobby told to cut greenhouse gas emissions.

Page 2: New NSW Premier is planning to sell off the state's waste management and forestry
industries to fund the $1 billion shortfall created by scrapping the vendor tax.

Page 3: Public confidence in opposition leader Kim Beazley has dropped to levels comparable
to those of Mark Latham before the last election; Schapelle Corby's hopes for freedom
dashed.

World: Air France crew hailed over the escape of 300 passengers aboard a plane that
crashed on landing in Canada.

Finance: Rio Tinto takes advantage of record commodity prices and reported record half-year
earnings of $US 2.2 billion.

Sport: Former Australian cricket vice-captain Ian Healy supports players' rights to
express concerns about safety especially if there were further terrorist attacks in London.

MORE na/it

KEYWORD: FRONTERS NSW 2 SYDNEY

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

WiMax takes high ground in Net delivery

Ken Belson
International Herald Tribune
12-01-2004
Jeff Thompson may be afraid of heights, but he appears to be at home on the 81st-floor terrace of the Empire State Building. Overlooking the drop, a distance of 1,000 feet, or 305 meters, Thompson said he saw the entire New York metropolitan area as the battleground where his company, TowerStream, will challenge phone companies for high-speed Internet business customers by delivering fast, cheap service without digging up streets to install cables. Next to him, a TowerStream antenna beamed high-powered wireless Internet connections to companies several miles away. This kind of aerial system, many technology experts say, could uncork the most nettlesome bottleneck in the telecommunications industry: The phone companies' control of the ''last mile'' of wire that travels from their switching stations to homes and offices. ''We're competing against the Bells,'' said Thompson, referring to the major U.S. phone companies, ''so we have to work quickly.'' Waving his arm toward the potential customers below, Thompson, the chief operating officer at TowerStream, said with a laugh, ''This is when I get excited by heights.'' With 700 customers in five cities, TowerStream is the most active player in an emerging industry that sells a technology known as WiMax, or worldwide interoperability for microwave access. Unlike WiFi, the radio wave technology in airports and cafes that allows users to log on to the Internet from their laptop computers within 150 feet of an antenna, WiMax delivers broadband Internet connections through fixed antennas that send and receive signals across entire cities. Using the most powerful equipment, a single antenna atop a tall building can provide high-speed data transmission to users as far away as 30 miles, or about 50 kilometers, although the optimal range is less than half of that. The radio signals and antennas are not affected by bad weather and provide an alternative to data cables that are sunk below sidewalks and can be cut accidentally by construction crews. Price is another advantage of the system. TowerStream charges $500 a month for a 1.54-megabits-a-second connection, about one-third to one-half less than the cost of service on comparable T1 lines that phone companies sell to businesses for data transmission. TowerStream can charge less because it does not have to rent connections from Verizon Communications or other former Bell companies that run local switching stations. Getting businesses to buy WiMax is a challenge because the technology is new. TowerStream, which was formed in 2000 and, according to the company, has been profitable since June, is finding that securing rooftop space on skyscrapers is a hurdle, too. TowerStream spent more than two years negotiating a lease with the Empire State Building. But from that perch, and similar ones atop the MetLife Building and a phone company office in Downtown Manhattan, TowerStream can reach virtually every office in the city. ''The real estate is the hard part of the business,'' Thompson said. ''When you tell people you can reach 10,000 clients, they don't believe you. But everything I see could be a customer.''The business of delivering wireless high-speed Internet service is worth about $400 million globally and could quadruple in the next few years, according to the WiMax Forum, an industry group of WiMax providers and equipment makers. Businesses in urban centers are the primary focus. But customers in rural areas where there are no broadband connections to cable or phone companies are also targets. In those places, antennas can be placed on radio or cellular towers. WiMax is also being introduced in developing countries. WiMax and wireless broadband connections may dent behemoths like Verizon and SBC Communications, but they are unlikely to put them out of business. Large companies, particularly brokerage firms and banks, place the highest premium on secure data lines with backup power. Small companies may use WiMax as their primary data line, but for most companies WiMax will remain a dependable alternative to, not a replacement for, fixed lines. FreshDirect, an online grocery store in New York City, ordered a wireless link from TowerStream in March.FreshDirect already leased DS-3 lines to power its service center in Manhattan and its warehouse in the New York City borough of Queens. Now an antenna sits atop the warehouse roof, facing the Empire State Building a few miles west. The company has been expanding rapidly and needs backup Internet access to make sure its Web site and inventory, billing and management systems keep humming in the event any of its primary data lines fail.''In this business, it's not a matter of if, but when, something will go wrong,'' said Myles Trachtenberg, FreshDirect's chief technology officer. Level 3 Communications provides FreshDirect's primary data connection, and its backup line is from Globix. But Verizon operates only one switching station near the company's warehouse, and all Internet providers, including Level 3 and Globix, must go through that location. So FreshDirect was still vulnerable if the switching station had problems. TowerStream's connection has worked without a hitch, Trachtenberg said. In time, he plans to use it for Internet phone service as well. Still, there are limits to WiMax's expansion. Because it uses public airwaves rather than a licensed spectrum, signals are vulnerable to interference if providers overload a frequency in a market. Mobile phone companies, which are investing billions of dollars in third-generation cellular networks, may also increase the speeds of their data connections to compete with WiMax. WiMax is too expensive for residential use. The antennas on a customer's premises cost about $500 each For now, TowerStream and other providers use proprietary equipment and can beam signals only to antennas on rooftops. The WiMax Forum, which helps set industry standards, has endorsed the technology to deliver broadband to fixed antennas, but there is still no consensus on a standard for users to receive WiMax links on laptops and other mobile devices. In the meantime, TowerStream continues its hunt for skyscrapers on which it can plant antennas. In November, the company added service in Los Angeles, and plans to move into San Francisco in the first quarter of 2005, to go with current service in New York, Boston, Chicago and Providence, Rhode Island. Thompson said TowerStream planned to be in 10 cities by 2006.

2004 Copyright International Herald Tribune. http://www.iht.com

order cheque

order cheque See cheque.

Tax doesn't have to be taxing.

M2 PRESSWIRE-22 July 2002-UK Government: Tax doesn't have to be taxing (C)1994-2002 M2 COMMUNICATIONS LTD

RDATE:07222002

Tomorrow's World presenter and author Adam Hart-Davis will front the Inland Revenue's new Self Assessment advertising campaign.

The campaign is designed to show the benefits of early filing and to challenge the temptation to put off what many people see as an unwelcome chore.

During the course of the campaign Adam appears in a variety of situations showing the wide range of help and support available from the Revenue all geared to enable taxpayers to get their tax return completed and out of the way.

Launching the new campaign, Paymaster General Dawn Primarolo said today: "We know that filling in a tax return isn't something most people look forward to and that's one of the reasons we've put so much help and support in place to overcome the practical barriers and deal with the concerns that people may have.

"We want taxpayers to know that sending in their return by the 30 September takes away the need to calculate any tax due - the Revenue will do the work for you." Inland Revenue Marketing Director Ian Schoolar commented: "The Revenue's Core Purpose is about ensuring that everyone understands and pays what they owe, or receives what is due to them.

"Getting the return in on time is an important part of this process and our new campaign encourages people to file in good time rather than hold out until the last moment." DETAILS The ads will run in three bursts from 22nd July to January 2003.

The main messages are: - Take advantage of the convenient internet filing service - Get your tax return in before 30 September and the Inland Revenue will do the main calculation for you - Make sure your return is in by 31 January or you face a #100 penalty - Make sure final payments are made by 31 January. Interest and surcharges are applied to tax paid late.

NOTES FOR EDITORS

1. Adam Hart Davies joined Yorkshire Television in 1977 as a researcher His TV work includes 'History with Hart Davies', 'What the Victorians Did For Us', 'Tudors and Stuarts' and 'Science Shack'.

Adam has written over a dozen books and is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts.

2. The campaign has been devised for the Inland Revenue by advertising agency Miles Calcraft Brigginshaw Duffy and media planning agency Optimedia.

3. The campaign will feature television advertising supported by radio, on-line, national and specialist press.

4. The advertisements will also appear on taxi receipts in major UK cities and on London taxis.

Non-media enquiries: your own tax office or 020 7438 6420 Web: www.inlandrevenue.gov.uk

((M2 Communications Ltd disclaims all liability for information provided within M2 PressWIRE. Data prepared by named party/parties. Further information on M2 PressWIRE can be obtained at http://www.presswire.net on the world wide web. Inquiries to info@m2.com)).

Arkansas iNet LLC.

Arkansas iNet LLC of Little Rock, doing business as World Lynx, and eLec Communications Corp., a publicly traded telecommunications company of New Rochelle, N.Y., have won approval from the Arkansas Public Service Commission to operate as competitive local exchange telephone carriers in Arkansas. Arkansas iNet can now sell high-speed DSL lines for Internet access to business and residential users. The company, which has 19,015 users, plans to offer DSL services in 25 locations around Arkansas in the first half of this year. ELec provides communications services to small and medium-sized business customers, including local, long-distance, dial -up access, dedicated access, xDSL, and Web site design and hosting.

marchFIRST Forms Alliance With Wholetree.com.

Companies to Help Clients Conduct Business Internationally

In Native Language, Currency

CHICAGO, June 21 /PRNewswire/ --

marchFIRST, Inc. (Nasdaq: MRCH), the new global Internet professional services company created by the merger of Whittman-Hart and USWeb/CKS, today announced that it has formed an alliance with Wholetree.com Inc., a subsidiary of LanguageWare.net Ltd. (OTC Bulletin Board: LWNTF and LWNUF), to help companies conduct business worldwide in their native language and currency.

Under the alliance, marchFIRST will help its clients implement Wholetree.com's technology, which is designed to support multilingual Web sites that are configured to conduct transactions in multiple currencies. Wholetree.com's solutions will enable marchFIRST clients to efficiently convert currency and translate multilingual correspondence as well as allow their customers to retrieve, display, edit and print information from Web sites and databases in multiple languages.

In turn, Wholetree.com will refer its clients that want to develop innovative business strategies, distinctive brands and world-class technology solutions to marchFIRST.

"Our unrivaled global scale makes marchFIRST the provider of choice for large, multinational corporations and fast-growing companies that want to reach customers in international markets," said Robert Wise, marchFIRST Chief Technology Officer. "Clearly there are unique challenges related to international e-business. This alliance with Wholetree.com provides marchFIRST with another robust tool that we can leverage to help our clients worldwide overcome these challenges, enhance relationships with international customers and open doors to new foreign markets -- all at Internet speed."

"Displaying foreign language characters on a computer screen is simple, but transacting global e-business is a much more complex, complicated process because it requires inputting and manipulating text before characters can be converted to a single format," said Todd Oseth, President and Chief Executive Officer of Wholetree.com. "Managing multiple systems to support different languages is not cost-effective. With Wholetree.com's technologies, companies can manage a transaction-oriented site from one location and serve customers no matter where they live. Similarly, marchFIRST can serve companies wherever they do business. With its commanding global reach and deep expertise, marchFIRST is an ideal alliance partner for us."

About marchFIRST

marchFIRST is a leading global Internet professional services firm that creates winners in the new digital economy by helping companies build visionary business models, brands, systems and processes. This multidisciplinary approach empowers companies to fundamentally transform their business, drive innovation and become market leaders. The Company has more than 9,000 employees in 14 countries worldwide. Its Web site is www.marchFIRST.com .

About Wholetree.com Inc.

Wholetree.com Inc. enables businesses to communicate, transact and provide customer support multinationally and multiculturally over the Internet. Its comprehensive e-business platforms are designed to help companies, their customers, vendors, suppliers and employees interact with each other in their native languages and currencies on an international scale. The company is a wholly owned, U.S. subsidiary of LanguageWare.net Ltd., which was founded in 1988. For additional information, visit the company's Web site at www.wholetree.com .

This press release contains historical information and forward-looking statements. Statements looking forward in time are included pursuant to the safe harbor provision of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Such statements involve known and unknown risks and the Company's actual results in future periods may be materially different from any future performance suggested herein.