Sunday, March 4, 2012

ELECTION RESULTS DEFLATED AN IMPEACHMENT BALLOON.(MAIN)

Byline: RONALD BROWNSTEIN

Who would have thought Newt Gingrich would lose his job before Bill Clinton did? To call it ironic is to slight the true reversal of fortune. Gingrich was not only Clinton's rival, he was his shadow. Both were hyperarticulate, visionary and undisciplined. However imperfectly, Clinton embodied the baby boomers who embraced the cultural tumult of the 1960s; Gingrich embodied those who stood apart. Each man saw himself as the fulcrum of a new majority in American politics. Gingrich rose as Clinton fell, and vice versa.

In that way, Gingrich's demise underscored with unambiguous clarity the most important message of last week's election. Barring some jaw-dropping (and incontrovertibly proven) new allegation, you can now put a sheet on the effort to force Clinton from office. Impeachment is a dead man walking.

Clinton is surviving and Gingrich is departing largely because the President understands …

Big 3 incentives rise faster than prices.(Incentives)

Byline: John K. Teahen Jr.

The Big 3 are losing ground in their struggle to balance rebates and price increases.

An Automotive News analysis finds that the Big 3 raised sticker prices an average of $204 when they introduced their 2005 models.

But Edmunds.com, a consumer auto Web site, reports that incentives now cost the three manufacturers an average of $460 more than they did last June.

Good news, bad news

That's good news for customers and bad news for manufacturers. But shoppers can expect more price increases through the 2005 model year.

The $204 price increase for the Big 3 compares with a boost of $222 when the …

Israel's Netanyahu compares Iranian leader to Hitler

Israeli opposition leader Benjamin Netanyahu is comparing Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to Adolf Hitler and likening Tehran's nuclear program to the threat the Nazis posed to Europe in the late 1930s.

The former premier, who leads the conservative Likud Party, repeated Israeli charges that Iran seeks to acquire nuclear arms. Tehran says it is pursuing nuclear energy for peaceful …

Herbs Boost Nation's Debt to Chicken Breasts

There's a second deficit facing the American people, one that isnot being recognized - the shortage of appealing chicken breastrecipes.

It's obvious from looking in the supermarket meat case, wherechicken breasts in various forms (from bone and skin on to bonelessand skinless) are heaped high, that the poultry cut is in big demand.

But though seemingly everyone wants to make the switch, eitherbecause chicken breast meat is relatively low in fat or because itcooks in minutes, it can be a sacrifice. Unfortunately, it's bland -and no one wants to give up flavor.

So it's time to stimulate our imaginations, put our seasoningsto work and create a positive …

Pemex to replace six old fuel vessels.

(ADPnews) - May 31, 2010 - Mexico's state oil monopoly Petroleos Mexicanos (Pemex) will get rid of six old fuel distribution vessels in the next months, planning to replace them with new ones for up to USD 35 million (EUR 28.5m), local daily El Economista reported, quoting Pemex's infrastructure plan.

The six …

Saturday, March 3, 2012

Ebbers will lose up to $45M.(Business)

Byline: ERIN McCLAM Associated Press

NEW YORK - A judge gave her blessing Monday to a settlement under which former WorldCom chief Bernard Ebbers will forfeit nearly all his cash and personal assets - as much as $45 million.

U.S. District Judge Denise Cote gave preliminary approval two days before Ebbers, 63, faces sentencing and almost certain lengthy prison time, on his criminal conviction in the WorldCom fraud.

The civil settlement, which springs from a suit filed by angry former investors in the toppled telecom, will leave a modest Mississippi home for Ebbers' wife and about $50,000 for her to live on.

"Basically we left them with their …

CUs Are Stepping To The Front On Financial Education Efforts.

WASHINGTON -- Credit unions have become one of the nation's leading providers of financial education, to youth, the elderly, low- and moderate-income families and individuals and to new immigrants, lawmakers reviewing the nation's financial literacy were told last week.

In fact, 94% credit unions surveyed by NAFCU recently said they offer some kind of financial education programs, Frank Pollack, president of Pentagon FCU, told the House Financial Services Committee subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Credit, during a routine oversight hearing.

The need for financial education was never greater than now, said Pollack, who was appearing on …

20 rebels likely killed in gunbattle between Indian troops and Maoists, official says

Indian government troops scoured forests in eastern India for Maoist rebels Monday and reported killing up to 20 of them since the militants launched a coordinated wave of attacks on government targets late last week.

Three security personnel also have been killed in gunbattles with the rebels, known as the Naxalites, since Saturday evening.

The skirmishes follow the carefully coordinated rebel attacks Friday night on four police stations, a training academy and an armory in Orissa state's Nayagarh district, that killed 13 police officers, a village guard and a civilian.

"We have received reports of the elimination of 20 Maoists. The reports …

Bate, Stanley (Richard)

Bate, Stanley (Richard)

Bate, Stanley (Richard), English composer and pianist; b. Plymouth, Dec. 12, 1911; d. (suicide) London, Oct. 19, 1959. He studied composition with Vaughan Williams, Morris, and Jacob and piano with Benjamin at the Royal Coll. of Music in London (1932–36), and then pursued composition training with Boulanger in Paris and Hindemith in Berlin. He toured widely as a pianist. In 1938 he married Peggy Glanville-Hicks; they divorced in 1948. He wrote music in a finely structured cosmopolitan manner, making use of modern devices but observing the classical forms and shunning doctrinaire systems.

Works

DRAMATIC: Ballet: Eros

Murder: Accused in 'not guilty' plea.

A 26-year-old Ballymena man charged with murdering a Coleraine man has told a Crown Court judge he is "definitely not guilty" of the charge.

Desmond Andrew Heaney is accused of killing 40-year-old father-of-two Patrick Fleming.

The victim was stabbed at a party in the Hazelbank Road area of the town on May 14 last year.

Heaney, who appeared in Antrim Crown Court sitting in Belfast, denied the murder charge.

Appearing alongside Heaney was 28-year-old Kevin Brendan …

ANCRAM MINE HEARINGS SET FOR OCTOBER.(Local)

Byline: Jane Gottlieb Staff writer

In hearings scheduled for next month, a state-appointed judge will hear arguments concerning the application of a Putnam County company to mine and crush gravel on 78 acres along Route 22 here.

On Wednesday, Oct. 11, Andrew Pearlstein will hear public comment in a session scheduled for 6:30 p.m. at the Ancram firehouse. In a more formal setting the following morning in town hall, he will hear selected evidence on environmental issues raised by Harlem Valley Materials Inc. Parties wishing to testify must register with the state Department of Environmental Conservation.

Pearlstein, who is with EnCon's office of …

Pope's Mexico itinerary leaves out capital

MEXICO CITY (AP) — Pope Benedict XVI will head to the Catholic-rich state of Guanajuato in his first visit to Mexico in March, and skip the country's heavily populated capital.

The Mexican Episcopal Conference says Benedict will arrive on March 23 in the city of Leon where President Felipe Calderon will welcome him.

The organization said in a Sunday statement that Benedict also plans to greet …

Positive Vibes Take Buckeyes to Atlanta

SAN ANTONIO - Ohio State coach Thad Matta looked down the bench and locked eyes with Greg Oden. The big man, sitting out with three fouls, nodded. "Let's go," Matta told him, adding his usual advice in such situations: "Play real hard and don't foul anybody." Oden followed orders perfectly, dominating like only a 7-footer can over the decisive stretch in the second half to carry the top-seeded Buckeyes past Memphis 92-76 and into the Final Four.

Oden's numbers in Saturday's South Regional championship weren't huge: 17 points, nine rebounds. His presence was.

While Oden was on the bench with his third foul, Ohio State (34-3) went from five points up to five points down. …

HALFMOON AUTO BODY SHOP BURNS.(Local)

Ten fire departments from around southern Saratoga County responded to a fire Thursday night that seriously damaged Crescent Auto Body on Woodin Road, authorities said.

Dispatchers for the Saratoga County Sheriff's Department and the West Crescent Fire Department said the building was virtually destroyed in the blaze, which was reported around 9 p.m.

Dispatchers said one firefighter was injured on the scene, …

Friday, March 2, 2012

US Horse of Year Rachel Alexandra retired

Rachel Alexandra, the sensational filly named as the United States 2009 Horse of the Year, was retired Tuesday following a disappointing season in which she won only two of five races.

Co-owner Jess Jackson said it was time to "reward her with a less stressful life," and that Rachel Alexandra would be bred to Curlin, the 2007 and 2008 Horse of the Year, at Jackson's Stonestreet Farm in Lexington, Kentucky.

"Imagine what possibilities those two super horses might produce," said Jackson, who owns a majority stake in Curlin.

The 4-year-old caused a stir last year when she won all eight of her races. She beat …

THE SKY IS NO LIMIT

Cloud computing is becoming de rigueur for pharma companies, affecting nearly every aspect of an increasingly complex business model where collaboration and the seamless integration of information are becoming a key source of competitive advantage

Technology and communication go hand-in-hand. Facebook, Twitter, email, instant messaging, and the smartphone- all of which are usually within arm's length- tell us that technology is all about connecting. In the pharmaceutical industry as much as anywhere else, new technology leads to new ways to keep in contact: sales reps with providers, physicians with patients, and marketing departments with payers. Although the technology behind cloud computing is now well understood, pharma is still struggling to identify the best and most practical ways to leverage its potential in line with the standard regulatory and confidentiality concerns.

The most important element in assessing possible applications of the cloud is to establish a clear definition of what it is. With service providers and pharma companies tossing around phrases such as "software as a service" and "multi-tenancy" and defining those terms in whatever way casts their own business in the best possible light, how can Big Pharma make sense of what we're hearing? Here is Pharm Exec's take: At its most basic, "the cloud" is a server- stored on the Internet and accessed via a service provider- used for delivering, deploying, and running any number of software applications, from clinical trials to drug distribution to automated call centers. To coin a useful analogy, if you've ever been in an apartment complex, you already have a basic understanding of the cloud.

"You have a house and I have a house," explains Matt Wallach, chief strategy officer of Veeva Systems, a cloud-based business solutions provider for the global life sciences industry. "You own a lawnmower; I own a lawnmower. You have a rake; I've got a rake. You have a shovel; I've got a shovel." However, explains Wallach, "Multi-tenancy is the thing that makes cloud computing special. If you live in an apartment building, we share things. We share the exterior of the building, and we don't own tools anymore. If you ever meet someone who lives in an apartment building, they don't own a shovel. They don't have a lawn mower." They don't need to; either they can borrow one from someone else in the building or they can just let the building's maintenance staff handle an issue, should it arise. The point is, you'll have the right tools you need for the job at your disposal, but they won't be taking up space in your closet, shed, garage, and so on.

From here, it's pretty easy to see how Wallach's apartment analogy translates to the benefits of something like cloud computing for Big Pharma. "If they put in a new elevator, you as a tenant on the tenth floor don't have to install the new elevator. You just step into it. You've got to look at it from the customers' perspective. It's really good for the customers if they don't have to pay for upgrades." In other words, the cloud is a major source of efficiency by providing common platforms that allow for a sharing of costs related to the production and dissemination of useful information.

Benefits to Big Pharma

Why is such a pay-as-you-go model useful, particularly to the healthcare industry? With patent cliffs approaching fast, healthcare reform and aging baby boomers adding more patients (but not more physicians) into the mix, and R&D costs skyrocketing, it's no secret that saving money has become crucial to the industry. And cloud computing saves costs in a number of ways, from initial setup of productive technologies, to long-term maintenance, to upgrades and troubleshooting. Storage of data, too, has become more efficient with the cloud. Gone are the days of filing cabinets, of storing everything on your computer and then backing it up on the server, and of giant, bulky towers taking up space in your office: "The cloud" (storage on the Internet) is now your filing system- light as air, with nothing to update, troubleshoot, or maintain.

It's not just IT (information technology) costs that make the cloud a worthwhile investment. The ease of use and the ability to communicate with a team across the globe can be crucial when it comes to stopping or turning on a dime, as the regulatory environment of pharma often requires. "In a highly regulated market like pharma, the ability to be up and running quickly and then make changes whenever regulatory requires them is one of the big keys to the cloud," explains Don Keane, VP of marketing and product strategy for Angel, a provider of cloud-based customer engagement solutions to pharma and healthcare companies.

"We believe cloud computing will significantly reduce the barrier of entry or the upfront costs [of understanding competitive challenges or opportunities], which is why we think it's so attractive to make these technology investments in emerging markets," says Kevin Julian, technology lead for Accenture Life Sciences Analysts. "I think the primary budgetary benefit of the cloud is to smooth the costs of the IT investment over time, making it easier to adopt the technology in the first place."

"What we're seeing in the last 12 to 18 months is that pharmaceutical companies have tremendous cost pressures on them, not just because of patent expirations, but because of the increasing regulatory climate that they're finding themselves in, not only for advertising and marketing their products in the commercial sector, but also in the clinical and medical sectors," says Greg Henry, life sciences client partner at consulting firm Model Metrics. "There's an increasing demand for more advanced signal detection, more advanced pharmacovigilance around the long-term safety profile of a product."

"Industry's in the business of discovering pharmaceutical products and bringing them to market. They're not in the business of IT. That's not their core competency- it's our core competency," says Mike Naimoli, worldwide managing director of Microsoft Life Sciences. "They want to focus their energy on innovation around product discovery, product management, and innovation of pharmaceutical products, which is tough enough as it is. I think what cloud computing can provide is an opportunity to get it right once and then provide the industry access to it."

On top of budget and regulation restraints, the potential for open and effective communication is one of the mostcited benefits of bringing pharma to the cloud. "When one person is working to solve one problem, they may discover information that isn't relevant to what their task is," explains DJ Edgerton, CEO and co-founder of digital innovation agency Zemoga. "But when they're aware of challenges in research that someone else is trying to achieve, that Aha!' moment happens a lot more quickly when information is shared. It was difficult to share it before the cloud, before technology allowed for this sort of global collaboration; now it's happening."

From cloud service providers, to healthcare ad agencies, to life sciences analysts, everyone Pharm Exec spoke with unanimously boiled down the benefits of the cloud to one word: collaboration. "I think there's a nice convergence of opportunity there when you look at some of the collaborative technologies that exist. I think the primary benefit in that regard is the speed with which one can assemble collaborative capability with internal and external partners," saysjulian.

"Every CIO that I know of or have heard of in the life sciences industry is seriously evaluating how they can migrate ... to a cloud infrastructure," confirms Henry.

Safe and Secure

Of course, we are still often wary of the unknown. And with good reason: Industry sales and marketing materials, R&D procedures, or clinical trial results in the wrong (competitor's) hands could prove disastrous. So what are some of the fears and doubts about security and confidentiality in the cloud? Are they grounded?

"When we tell customers that all of their proprietary, compliant, secret, special sauce that they've kept inside their firewall is now going to be floating up there in the cloud, they think that anyone can hack in," says Edgerton. "There are a lot of people who own gold that they've never put their hands on, but they know they own it. You can buy and sell gold, oil, and all of these things that have huge value, and you never touch them. It took a long time for the financial community to come to terms with that. People think when they own gold, it's a bar of gold and it's sitting in some safe somewhere, probably on their property."

"If you now consider the The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) compliant patient information or the R&D data as that gold bar," continues Edgerton, "pharmaceutical companies have to understand that the protections, just like the thickness of the steel on the safe, have been transferred to the cloud. That desire to keep everything internal and hold onto it because you want to protect it- we need to get over that fear."

The general consensus seems to be that, while such fears are natural initially, most of these companies have been working with cloud-based technology long enough that the bugs have been worked out; cloud computing seems to be no more or less risky than ordering Star Wars memorabilia off of eBay. Firewalls, encrypted data, and security codes have calmed many of the industry's fears. "We don't generally run into security concerns. Part of it is that the cloud is a proven model now . . . it's really a non-issue at this point for us," says Mario Mart�nez, CEO and founder of 360 Vantage, a provider of cloud technology for the life sciences industry. "I think overall, most executives and CIOs that we're working with are pretty comfortable at this point with the security level."

Dynamics of Change

Pharma is increasingly using the cloud to get its sales messages across to physicians, hospitals, and patients. "Being able to connect with a patient or an HCP in a variety of different venues that the target chooses- on a mobile device, through an interactive experience at a convention, or an interactive sales aid delivered by a rep in the physician's office-the ability to change the sales dynamic from a monologue to a dialogue has a lot of benefits for pharma," says Matt Collins, director of interactive development at healthcare ad agency AbelsonTaylor.

Agencies like AbelsonTaylor are deploying branded websites through the cloud, and cloud service providers are working with their healthcare clients to develop cloud-based mobile applications designed specifically for sales reps in the field, to make the sharing of accurate and vital information in real-time the rule, rather than the exception. "One of the features in our products is a very comprehensive way to ensure that sales representatives only talk about relevant products. When they're talking to a physician, they should only talk about products that are relevant to that physician's specialty; there are certain products you shouldn't talk about to a pediatrician, for example," explains Peter Gassner, CEO of Veeva Systems. In this way, says Gassner, cloud-based technology helps keep the reps compliant and efficient.

"One of the major benefits with the solutions we deploy for the sales force is ease of use. We incorporate direct reps and feedback into the process, but the primary aspect of it is how they access the systems, and how easy it is to get to the information that is most important to them," agrees Mart�nez.

Some companies are even looking beyond convenience for sales forces, at how cloud technology can really help position and leverage a brand. "You have the brand teams, the marketing, the franchises that can leverage it to generate campaigns, and this is all connected," explains Henry. "All these use cases can be connected in the commercial setting. So a doctor signs into a portal; he requests medical information. He wants to enroll in a Phase IV trial. He wants more information about a new product. He wants off-label information about a drug. All that information can reside in this cloud platform."

"We have a very large pharmaceutical company that is using a mobile sales force empowerment tool and leveraging the cloud, and their sales forces are absolutely ecstatic. What we've done is made them more effective and made their jobs easier," says Edgerton.

R&D in the C-L-O-U-D

While leveraging the cloud for sales and marketing may seem like the most obvious use for pharma, there's some benefit to be had in R&D as well, even if it just means more seamless communication for pharma companies internally, across the office, across the nation, or across the globe. "Using the cloud for the initial stages of experimenting and building the drugs that the pharma companies are working on makes a lot of sense, because they can get to information that other scientists are using and sharing out there," explains Joe Doyle, interactive services director at healthcare marketing agency HCB Health.

"R&D is now very collaborative, both inside and outside the four walls of the company," says Gassner. "So the nice thing with a cloud-computing-based system is you can easily give access to people inside and outside your company. So, for example, if you have specific research agencies that are collaborating with your research department on a document, a policy, or a procedure, in a cloud-based system it's very easy to share this information."

Greg Henry calls cloud computing for clinical trial management "obvious." "In the distributed environment of a clinical trial, you have multiple centers across multiple countries all generating patient information, tracking the payments to the physicians, screening patients, enrolling patients, creating case report forms, and submitting safety reports," he says. "We've developed solutions that include patient recruitment, site qualification, the actual management of the trial as it's active, and the closeout of the trial."

"If you look at the clinical trial landscape, it's an extremely fragmented landscape that is really ready for somebody to come in and offer an integrated platform to pull all these applications together in one place and to provide access across the industry," says Naimoli.

Harnessing the Power

There are other, more behind-the-scenes facets of the industry that could also benefit from cloud computing. For example, getting drugs from the distribution centers to the pharmacies that need them is a time-consuming process full of complicated paperwork ... until you leverage the cloud. Application service provider Legisym, for example, creates cloud-based solutions for drug manufacturers and distributors to help facilitate the process of getting those drugs to the pharmacies and hospitals without all the traditional headaches.

"When hundreds or thousands of pharmacies all over the nation are supplied by a single distributor, it's very difficult to install software on all those client machines, all those desktops around the nation that communicate with your server. Instead, allow the Internet to be the network, the backbone," explains David Kessler, chief business officer of Legisym. "In the past, every time a pharmacy needed to purchase morphine, they would have to fill out a form and send it to their supplier. And their supplier couldn't fill and ship that order until they received that hard copy form. Now they get to toss the paperwork out and that order comes electronically."

That ability to work seamlessly- across borders- is something pharma should not underestimate. "As people in Asia end their day, teams with whom they are collaborating in Europe can wake up, respond to requests, and continue the work; then, as they end their day, teams in North America can take the baton and keep things progressing despite the fact that their Asian and European colleagues may be asleep. As the Asia teams wake up, they will see answers to their questions, progress on tasks, and pose new questions-all of which occurred in the cloud," says Linda Bowers, vice president of life sciences product marketing for IntraLinks, which delivers technology solutions to clients across many industries, including life sciences. "This allows pharma to move at a faster pace, have critical insight required to make important decisions, and to course-correct in a way that simply isn't possible in a traditional, paper-based environment."

Other companies, such as Angel, use cloud technology to make customer service for their healthcare clients run more smoothly. Angel uses a cloud platform for services like Interactive Voice Response (IVR) technology, which is the stuff automatic call centers are made of. "If you're somebody like AstraZeneca or Pfizer with a large call center of agents, the Angel platform helps you manage your calls and those agents and how customers interact with those agents," says Keane. AstraZeneca started using Angel's cloud-based technology for its customer satisfaction surveys, and has since branched out, using cloud technology for everything from call center management to branded discount and coupon codes.

Dave Tolliver of Angel explains: "When a brand has a savings card, which can be used to help get medication into the hands of a consumer, it allows the patient to get a discount on their first prescription fill or a set of fills. They call in to an Angel phone line and activate that savings card, walking through an automated system. It captures the patient's name and other contact information and passes that to AstraZeneca, and the consumer can then use the card to have a prescription filled with the discount."

Angel and AstraZeneca are both aware of sensitive patient privacy issues when it comes to collecting such information for savings cards. The patient is asked for information including savings card number, date of birth, name, and address. If the information is intended for use for any purposes other than the activation ofthat particular savings card, such as future coupon offers, the patient is offered an opt-in option. The data is passed from Angel to AstraZeneca in an encrypted format to ensure complete confidentiality and compliance to privacy regulations.

"By virtue of the cloud-based technologies and the platform that Angel has, pharma companies have expanded to other methods of communication that they've never even had before, such as Click to Call, Click to Chat, e-mail notifications ... all these multichannel modes of interacting with their consumers. And their goal is really to provide any channel for their consumers to interact with them," says Tolliver.

Other uses for the cloud in healthcare include nonprofits tracking grant requests and applications, patient data management, intranet communication websites, and video conferencing software. While these elements might not be as glamorous or as high profile as R&D, these functions are still vital cogs that keep the healthcare machine running smoothly.

"Microsoft certainly has bet its future on the cloud," confesses Naimoli. "I think it's a hugely disruptive source of innovation, and that's not bad. Disruptive technology is technology that allows you to do things differently and changes the fundamental way in which things are done. It's really going to change things for the industry. The industry is under such pressure right now that they're really looking for anything that can help give them the advantage they need."

Pharma Above and Beyond

Though pharma has been traditionally slow to adapt to new technologies, in large part because of the strict regulatory environment, it seems that cloud computing is the way of the future for the industry. "I think that cloud computing will grow over the next decade because it's going to allow a much more niche market- much more focused best-of-breed applications-to reach a much bigger authence," says Kessler.

In fact, all the experts Pharm Exec spoke with agree that cloud computing will eventually become a vital part of the way industry does business. But some caution that it is not going to be an overnight process. "Because this is relatively new, and we know how long it takes to go from the test tube to the market, we're not going to really start seeing the benefits from this tool for a few years," predicts Edgerton. "I think that pharmaceutical companies are less willing to take a chance until they see the mistakes that everyone else in other industries make."

Fast or slow, first to adopt or last-minute knuckle-draggers, there's just no doubt that pharma is on its way to becoming a cloud-based industry. "We're always a little bit behind when it comes to using the latest and greatest because we are such a heavily regulated industry, and that makes a lot of sense- we have to be conservative," says Doyle. "But we're starting to get to the point where cloud computing is really becoming the norm."

So, what is next for an industry typically behind the tech curve? "The future will offer us the opportunity to look at cloud solutions in a different light," says Neeraj Singhal, vice president of product strategy and innovation, at Cegedim Relationship Management, "beyond just being a higher ROI, a lower cost structure, or a faster time-to-value enabler, which is perhaps the most common business case today to leverage the cloud. One likely scenario is that businesses will seek a more integrated experience along a business process where components of the process operate in different or multiple types of cloud environments. Cloud computing is here to stay and it will become as common as ice cream or apple pie."

And there will be plenty of spoons to go around.

[Sidebar]

"The ease of use and ability to communicate across the globe can be crucial when it comes to turning on a dime, as the regulatory environment often requires."

- Matt Wallach, Veeva Systems

[Sidebar]

"That desire to keep everything internal and hold onto it because you want to protect it - we need to get over that."

- DJ Edgerton, Zemoga

[Sidebar]

"Microsoft certainly has bet its future on the cloud. I think it's a hugely disruptive source of innovation . . . It's really going to change things for the industry."

- Mike Naimoli, Microsoft

[Sidebar]

You can find Pharm Rep in the cloud as well. Follow us on Twitter@PharmRepMag. Or check out our PharmRep Community Facebook page.

Tibetans Exiles Hold Protests Worldwide

Police broke up a protest by 200 Tibetans in Nepal's capital on Saturday, beating them with bamboo batons and arresting at least 20, as Tibetan exile communities ramped up demonstrations around the world.

Hundreds gathered peacefully for a candlelight vigil in Dharmsala, India, the headquarters of Tibet's government-in-exile. But gatherings in western China, the United States, Australia and India's capital descended into violence when police tried to disperse crowds of distraught exiles.

They took to the streets a day after protests by Buddhist monks in Tibet turned deadly in the largest demonstrations in nearly two decades against Beijing's rule over Tibet. …

Contract Notice: DOD (California) Issues Solicitation for "AFN-BC INTERNET CAPABILITY"

WASHINGTON, March 18 -- DOD, OSD - Public Affairs for Internal Communication has a requirement for "AFN-BC INTERNET CAPABILITY."

The solicitation no. 2165-1007-3117 was posted on March 4, 2011.

All responses are due by Mar 18, 2011 2:00 pm Pacific.

Notice Type: Modification/Amendment

The NAICS code for this requirement is 517110 with a size standard of 1500 employees.

Set Aside: N/A.

Place of Performance/Delivery: 23755 Z STREET RIVERSIDE, California 92518 United States.

For more information visit: https://www.fbo.gov/spg/ODA/AFIST-ASA/MarchARBCA/2165-1007-3117/listing.html For any query with respect to this article or any other content requirement, please contact Editor at htsyndication@hindustantimes.com

Primary Point of Contact: Shevonn Moore, Contract Specialist shevonn.moore@dma.mil Phone: 951-413-2634 Fax: 951-413-2432

Ellis activated from DL; Barton sent to Triple-A

NEW YORK (AP) — The Oakland Athletics have activated second baseman Mark Ellis from the 15-day disabled list and optioned slumping first baseman Daric Barton to Triple-A Sacramento.

With the A's on a six-game winning streak, manager Bob Melvin chose to keep streaking rookie second baseman Jemile Weeks in the lineup for their game against the New York Mets on Wednesday night.

Weeks has hit safely in 10 of 13 games since being called up to fill in for Ellis on June 7. He's hitting .362 with a .400 on-base percentage and four steals, sparking the ballclub during the winning streak by going 9 for 22 (.409).

Ellis "made it very easy on me," Melvin said of the decision to start Weeks. "First thing I said to him was, 'the second base situation.' Well, he said, 'That's an easy one. You got to play him.' I want to win, too."

The only thing Melvin told Weeks was, "to keep playing."

Ellis was hitting .213 with one homer and 15 RBIs in 58 games before pulling his right hamstring.

Melvin said Ellis, Oakland's longest-tenured player, will work out at second base, third base and first base so he can get more playing time.

Barton was hitting just .212 without a homer and 21 RBIs in 67 games. His slugging percentage of .267 was second lowest in the majors. He has committed eight errors, which leads all big league first baseman.

USPTO ISSUES TRADEMARK: COUPON QUEEN

ALEXANDRIA, Va., July 29 -- The trademark COUPON QUEEN (Reg. No. 3824702) was issued on July 27 by the USPTO.

Owner: Refundle Bundle, Inc. CORPORATION NEW YORK 40 Herkimer Road Scarsdale NEW YORK 10583.

The trademark application serial number 77893816 was filed on Dec. 15, 2009 and was registered on July 27.

Goods and Services: Coupons. FIRST USE: 19801230. FIRST USE IN COMMERCE: 19801230

An interactive web site for users to review and rate internet content, people, companies, products and/or services utilizing a software application to award points whereby web site users are eligible to exchange points earned for promotional items consisting of coupons, rebates, discounts or special offerings on goods and/or service provided by web site sponsors; Promoting the goods and services of others by providing a community-driven web site featuring user-submitted content in the nature of coupons, rebates, price-comparison information, product reviews, links to the retail web sites of others, and discount information; Promoting the goods and services of others by providing a web site featuring coupons, rebates, price-comparison information, product reviews, links to the retail web sites of others, and discount information; Promoting the goods and services of others by providing a website featuring coupons, rebates, price-comparison information, product reviews, links to the retail websites of others, and discount information; Promoting the goods of others, namely, providing coupons, rebates and vouchers for the goods of others; Promotional services, namely, distribution of advertising flyers, coupons, catalogs and promotional items of others. FIRST USE: 19801230. FIRST USE IN COMMERCE: 19801230

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

Minersville Area Planning Elementary Center Renovations

MINERSVILLE - The Minersville Area School District is solicitingwritten proposals for the renovation of two classrooms in theelementary center to be completed before the 2011-12 school year.

"We are looking to bring some services back to the district,"said Jennifer C. Laudeman, district business manager.

With summer vacation started for the students, now is the perfecttime for renovations in the 70,000-square-foot school for studentsin first through sixth grades, officials said.

Laudeman said that the classrooms being renovated were originallyequal in size, but sometime in the mid 1990s they were turned into aroom for music classes that took up three-quarters of the space,while the remaining part was made into a room for more privateinstruction.

The extent of the work will be to remove and reposition a wallthat will put the classrooms back to their original specifications.

Other duties outlined in the district's request for proposalsincludes the removal of the current electrical work and otherhardware included in the wall, and the removal of carpet in one ofthe classrooms to install tile flooring. The carpet in the otherclassroom will remain unless the contractor notes reasons for notkeeping it.

The current wall will be replaced with drywall and appropriateelectrical work and other hardware, while other work includesreplacing ceiling tiles in one of the classrooms, soundproofingbetween the rooms, installing adequate lighting between the twoclassrooms and ensuring both rooms have telephone service.

In two addendums June 6 and 10, the district added that theclassrooms will need to be painted approved colors and noted thatheating, ventilation and air conditioning in one of the classroomsdoesn't need any changes. HVAC changes in the other will be handledseparately, although the initial proposal called for the contractorto verify and install adequate HVAC between the two classrooms.

The contractor is also required to obtain all permits from theborough.

Sealed proposals will be accepted until 11 a.m. June 27, and theboard's decision will be made at its regular monthly meeting at 7p.m. that day. All work on the elementary project will be completedby July 30.

At the Minersville Area school board's May meeting, it wasannounced that the high school classroom renovation project wascompleted. The project turned the former wood shop, metal shop anddrafting room into four classrooms for instructional purposes withtwo conference rooms to handle special services to students. All areequipped with Internet access.

In addition to the four-classroom conversion, the project alsotook an unused library area in the high school and converted it intoa Guidance Resource Center for students, which is equipped with 30computers offering Internet access to college and employmentinformation.

Acculynk Bringing PaySecure to Mobile Channel

Acculynk announced that it is bringing the security andconvenience of its PaySecure Internet PIN debit product to mobilesmartphones early this year.

PaySecure Mobile will allow consumers to authenticate theirtransactions by entering their bank-issued PIN on Acculynk'sgraphical, scrambling PIN-pad, which has been specially designed formobile smartphone platforms.

The prevalence of mobile transactions coupled with merchantdemand prompted Acculynk to extend the capabilities of PaySecurebeyond the Internet channel.

"We were approached by major merchants last year wanting to knowhow PaySecure would fit with their developing mobile channels, so westarted work on a mobile application," said Ashish Bahl, CEO ofAcculynk. "After several months of development, we'll be ready tolaunch PaySecure mobile in Q1 2011, allowing our merchants andpartners to benefit from the higher security of PaySecure in notjust one but two major purchasing channels. Additionally, PaySecureMobile is well positioned to add an additional layer ofauthentication to NFC payments on smartphones, since the phone issomething you have but the PIN offers something you know."

PaySecure Mobile is built on Acculynk's patented encryption andauthentication platform, which is also the backbone of Acculynk'sPaySecure Internet PIN debit product. Introduced in March 2009,PaySecure Internet PIN debit is supported by 9 U.S. EFT networks andimplemented on over 1,000 U.S. merchant websites.

But Acculynk is looking beyond Ecommerce payments in 2011, withnew applications for PaySecure including money transfer, Peer toPeer (P2P) authentication, online banking authentication, and PINdebit entry on a kiosk.

"In 2010, we established PaySecure as the standard for PIN debitpayments on the Internet, with a growing base of merchants, issuersand EFT networks," said Bahl. "In 2011, our goal is to expand thechannels where PIN debit can be accepted, like a mobile phone andeven kiosks - giving consumers a consistent payment experience andmerchants lower fraud and lower costs - while introducing newapplications for the product within those channels, such as P2Ppayments and online banking authentication."

PaySecure Mobile will be available on the iPhone, Android,Blackberry and Windows-7 platforms.

Acculynk secures online transactions with a suite of software-only services backed by a patented authentication and encryptionframework provide greater security for issuers, EFT networks,merchants and payment processors.

More Information:

http://www.acculynk.com

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

ReDefeatBush Unfurls Protest Umbrellas Tuesday in D.C., Questions Whether Bush is Capable of Conceding at Event Thursday in Va.

WASHINGTON, Oct. 25 /U.S. Newswire/ -- ReDefeatBush, a year-oldfederal PAC that has been a pioneer in the opposition industry, willunfurl the world's first protest umbrellas on Memorial Bridge in DCand VA on Tuesday morning 10/26 at 7 AM and hold a reception Thursday10/28 in Tysons Corner, VA with psychiatrist Dr. Justin Frank. Dr.Frank, who wrote the book Bush on the Couch, will explain why hebelieves Bush's messiah complex makes it nearly impossible for himand his supporters to concede defeat regardless of the outcome. Hesuggests Americans prepare for a post-election crisis in which Bushloses but refuses to accept the outcome.

Tuesday morning ReDefeatBush and the Virginia Grassroots Coalitionwill gather on both the VA and DC sides of Memorial Bridge connectingArlington National Cemetary with the Lincoln Memorial. Supporterswill walk on the sidewalk back and forth from a state to an occupiedfederal colony a few times to welcome the Virginia commuters to DCdisplaying our massive ReDefeatBush umbrellas, which will beavailable for only $5 to participants to thank them forparticipating. The umbrellas are also available in the ReDefeatBushstore online at ReDefeatBush.com.

On Thursday evening starting at 6 p.m., Dr. Justin Frank will leada discussion titled Bush on the Brink at eCiti Cafe in Tysons Corner,VA. He will discuss Bush's confusion of his own agenda with with Godand His agenda. The suggested donation for this event is $20 andparticipants can pick up lists to phone new Virginia voters fromhome. This is also co-sponsored with the Virginia GrassrootsCoalition. Directions to eCiti Cafe are available atReDefeatBush.com/calendar.

The ReDefeatBush calendar contains several dozen activities thisweek for residents of the National Capital region who wish tocampaign by foot or by phone throughout Northern Virginia, as well asReDefeatBush Calling Crews on Monday in Bethesda MD and ShirlingtonVA, on Tuesday in Adams Morgan and on Wednesday in Shirlington.Volunteers at these events will be calling newly registered Virginiavoters. ReDefeatBush also has events this week throughout the SanFrancisco Bay Area in Oakmont, Petaluma, Albany, Santa Cruz, Oakland,Palo Alto, Berkeley and Santa Rosa and in the Boston area.

On Tuesday ReDefeatBush is launching WhereYouVote.com to assistVirginia Democrats in finding their polling place for election day.

ReDefeatBush began its ReDefeatBush Calling Crews in March and hasengaged thousands of volunteers in dozens of events nationwide, whichhave registered tens of thousands of Democratic voters inPennsylvania and Oregon. It is headquartered on the Internet atReDefeatBush.com

http://www.usnewswire.com

Fed: Teenage girls more likely to deliberately harm themselves


AAP General News (Australia)
08-01-2004
Fed: Teenage girls more likely to deliberately harm themselves

By Kylie Walker, National Medical Correspondent

SYDNEY, Aug 1 AAP - Teenaged girls are more likely than boys to deliberately cut themselves
or overdose on medication or illicit drugs, suicide prevention researchers have found.

Cutting and drug overdoses were the most common ways in which teens hurt themselves,
followed by self-battery, hanging and inhaling toxic substances, Australian Institute
for Suicide Research and Prevention director Professor Diego De Leo said.

"Among those who described deliberate self harm episodes, ... females were more likely
than males to have self-harmed in the previous year," Prof De Leo said.

After interviewing thousands of year 10 and 11 students at co-educational Queensland
high schools, Prof De Leo and colleagues found more than 11 per cent of girls interviewed
had hurt themselves deliberately in the preceding 12 months.

That compared with only 1.6 per cent of teenaged boys surveyed, he revealed in today's
Medical Journal of Australia.

"Factors associated with increased deliberate self harm in the previous year in females
were exposure to self-harm in friends or family members, sexual orientation worries, smoking,
low self-esteem and other distressing events," Prof De Leo said.

Other reasons were boyfriend or girlfriend problems, amphetamine use, past physical
or sexual abuse, being bullied at school and a tendency for the teen to blame his or herself
for getting into distressing situations.

"Living with one parent was associated with lower rates of deliberate self harm for
females," Prof De Leo added.

Most teenagers who deliberately harmed themselves did not seek any help, and those
who did went to friends and family rather than doctors or help lines.

"Perhaps a comprehensive evaluation of medical, mental health and phone counselling
services' accessibility and efficiency should be performed," Prof De Leo said.

"Primary prevention of suicidal behaviours among adolescents should include educating
young people in the use of professional services to deal with their problems."

AAP kbw/hu/sd

KEYWORD: HARM

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

Fed: Canberra braces for extreme fire risk


AAP General News (Australia)
02-19-2004
Fed: Canberra braces for extreme fire risk

Emergency officials say fire conditions in the ACT tomorrow could be at their most
dangerous since last year's devastating bushfires.

Emergency Services Commissioner PETER DUNN says temperatures in the high 30s and wind
gusts of up to 45 knots could lead to extreme fire danger on Friday and Saturday.

Mr DUNN's called for vigilance and says a decision on whether to declare a total fire
ban for Friday and Saturday will be made late today.

Canberra residents have been advised to consult bushfire information kits which were
issued after last January's firestorm which killed four people and destroyed around 500
houses.

AAP RTV pj/sb/swe/rcg

KEYWORD: BUSHFIRES ACT (CANBERRA)

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

WA: Two children found in house with murdered mother


AAP General News (Australia)
12-29-2003
WA: Two children found in house with murdered mother

Two children have been taken into protective care after being found in a house with
their murdered mother.

The body of the 41-year-old woman was found overnight in the house in St Ives Loop
near Kallaroo, in Perth's northern suburbs.

Police say her throat had been cut.

The woman's 49-year-old husband is being questioned by police, and forensic experts
are examining the house.

Police won't confirm reports that the children had been abducted prior to the attack
on their mother.

Officers were called to the house shortly before 4am after a duress alarm was activated,
but the woman was dead before they arrived.



(EDS: Reissuing, changing keyword and adding location in second paragraph.)

AAP RTV tc/sp/sco/jlw/rp

KEYWORD: THROAT (PERTH)

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

Qld: AMAQ backs one expert rule in civil court cases

00-00-0000
Qld: AMAQ backs one expert rule in civil court cases

BRISBANE, Aug 20 AAP - The number of medical experts allowed to testify in civil courtcases should be limited to one to prevent "hired guns" from producing biased evidence,a Queensland doctors' lobby group said today.

Queensland branch of the Australian Medical Association (AMAQ) spokesman Rob Sinclairsaid it was important to stop expert opinion being sold off.

"The aim of true objectivity for the experts is, put simply, to tell the truth," DrSinclair said in a statement.

"However, the hired gun image has tarnished the credibility of the adversarial processand undermined the academic value of expert testimony."

Dr Sinclair said the AMAQ called for a variation of the Queensland courts rules committee'sproposed single-expert plan.

The committee's plan would see a single expert, either to be nominated by the courtor agreed to by both parties in the dispute, able to give evidence.

However Dr Sinclair said the AMAQ would prefer medical experts be chosen instead froma panel of appropriately credentialed professionals in suitable areas of medicine.

"Most areas of medicine have become very specialised and it's imperative that the courtshave access to a panel of experts who possess sufficient knowledge, skill and experience,"

he said.

"It's also essential that the opinions espoused can survive scrutiny under potentialfuture judicial reliability criteria."

Earlier this week Queensland Chief Justice Paul de Jersey called for a "cultural change"

among lawyers opposed to limiting the number of experts who can give evidence in a courtcase to one.

The Bar Association is against the reform claiming it would negate the counsel's abilityto challenge the experts bona fide's if lawyers cannot call on another expert.

AAP ch/sc/cjh/bwl

KEYWORD: EXPERTS

Thursday, March 1, 2012

NSW: Lawyers for Hep C sufferers get access to donor identities

00-00-0000
NSW: Lawyers for Hep C sufferers get access to donor identities

By Kylie Williams

SYDNEY, April 10 AAP - Lawyers for a group of Hepatitis C sufferers, who contractedthe disease through blood transfusions, have been granted access to the identities ofthe donors responsible.

The three Hepatitis C sufferers are seeking compensation from the Red Cross after theywere infected by blood products it had supplied to hospitals more than 15 years ago.

They claim the Red Cross failed in its duty of care by not using a "surrogate" testingmethod which existed at the time as a marker to high risk donors.

A NSW Supreme Court judge today granted lawyers for the three victims access to theidentities of the donors provided they give undertakings to the court.

These include agreeing not to take legal action against the donor and to only contacthim or her through a social worker or counsellor.

The victims' lawyers would only be able to access the identities 21 days after givingthe undertaking, allowing the Red Cross sufficient time to lodge an appeal if desired.

Last year the Red Cross provided the group with "edited" versions of records on donorswho were discovered to be carrying the disease after they gave blood.

But counsel for the victims Dean Letcher, QC, last week sought the full release ofthe information in the NSW Supreme Court.

He argued the edited version was deficient and littered with inconsistencies that raisedmore questions than answers and would need to be cleared by interviewing donors aboutthe specific events.

The blood donor connected to one victim had been carrying the disease since 1980 butdid not find out until 2000, Mr Letcher told the court.

In handing down his judgement today, Justice Jeff Shaw said contact with the donorwas necessary to ascertain whether the Red Cross asked relevant questions and if the answerswere followed up.

"In the present case the evidence given points out the respondent's allegation thatrelevant questions should have been asked of the donor and answers should have been followedup, there being knowledge of the risk factors at that time," he said.

"Proof of that allegation would require contact with the donor."

AAP klw/hn/rcg/bwl

KEYWORD: BLOOD

Vic: Ned Kelly movie premiere for Melbourne

00-00-0000
Vic: Ned Kelly movie premiere for Melbourne

Melbourne will roll out the red carpet in March for the world premier of the Australian-madefilm Ned Kelly.

Aussie screen stars HEATH LEDGER, GEOFFREY RUSH and NAOMI WATTS are all expected toattend the film's launch at the Regent Theatre on March 22.

Starring HEATH LEDGER as the notorious bushranger, the film was shot at various …

Fed: Democrats likely to abolish National Compliance Committee

00-00-0000
Fed: Democrats likely to abolish National Compliance Committee

Australian Democrat members are likely to abolish the party's National Compliance Committeewhich was at the root of the resignation of former leader MEG LEES.

Democrats Leader ANDREW BARTLETT says a review of the committee will be the major issueto be raised at a three day party conference starting in Sydney tomorrow.

More clearly defined powers for …

Fed: Government considers shipbuilding shakeout

00-00-0000
Fed: Government considers shipbuilding shakeout

By Max Blenkin, Defence Correspondent

CANBERRA, Aug 29 AAP - The government is considering a plan to sell the AustralianSubmarine Corporation (ASC) below market value to force a shakeout of naval shipbuilding.

That rationalisation would leave defence doing business with a single large shipbuilderformed out of one or more existing players.

A strategic plan for naval shipbuilding, prepared by the Defence Department, was releasedtoday by Defence Minister Robert Hill.

It found future work would not be sufficient to sustain more than one shipbuilder.

The alternative, it said, was for defence to use its power as sole customer to directthe shape of the industry.

"This is the approach favoured in the plan," it said.

The report said projected defence workload for government-owned ASC was not enoughto keep its workforce intact but it remained vital for future support of the Collins submarines.

It said it might not be in the national interest for the government to seek maximumreturn when it eventually sold ASC.

"Ideally the proposed privatisation of ASC would be catalyst and focal point for restructuringthe naval shipbuilding and repair sector," it said.

Currently, the industry comprises three big players - ASC, Tenix and ADI - and smallerplayers including Forgacs, NQEA and Austal.

The strategic plan indicates government is heading in a direction opposite that suggestedby the Australian Strategic Policy Institute in its recent discussion paper.

ASPI said there was plenty of work and rationalisation should be left to the industrywithout government intervention.

It suggested a number of rationalisation possibilities such as selling ASC to Tenixor ADI, or encouraging Tenix and ADI to amalgamate naval operations then negotiating along-term deal with the ensuing mega-shipbuilder.

Senator Hill said he had not decided what option to take to cabinet.

He said the industry was at the crossroads with major projects ending and their skilledworkforces being lost.

"Part of the strategy here is to ensure that there is an industry in the future thatcan not only build the ships we want but just as importantly continually upgrade and maintainthem," he told reporters.

Senator Hill said he was keen to get ASC back on the market as soon as possible.

"Whether the sale will be linked to this rationalisation plan is still to be decidedas well," he said.

AAP mb/daw/jnb

KEYWORD: SHIP

NSW: Millions of Australians on edge of homelessness - charity

00-00-0000
NSW: Millions of Australians on edge of homelessness - charity

SYDNEY, April 22 AAP - Millions of Australians are only one step away from being homeless,a leading welfare organisation said today.

Mission Australia said the type of person likely to become homeless was changing, withyounger people more at risk.

The welfare group today launched its national homeless appeal, hoping to raise $1.8million for the country's poorest people.

At the launch in Sydney the organisation warned that more needed to be done if Australiawas to avoid a homelessness epidemic.

Mission Australia chief Patrick McClure said on any given night 300 people were sleepingon the streets of Sydney alone, but thousands more homeless were in shelters, cars, squatsor other temporary accommodation.

Mr McClure also said the one million women who had suffered domestic violence, thealmost two million people in casual work and the 400,000 Australians holding down twoor more jobs could be "on the razor's edge" of homelessness.

He said causes of homelessness included domestic violence, family breakdown, mentalillness and unemployment, which put millions of Australians at risk.

Most people's image of a typical homeless person was wrong, Mr McClure said.

"The stereotype we have of homeless people is of a male in his fifties or sixties witha mental illness," he told reporters.

"That's changed. It's now a young woman who's 28 years old and a young male who's 32 years.

"The key thing is homeless people are much younger (now) and for that reason we needsupport services that enable them where possible to get into rehabilitation, to get intomore stable accommodation and also where possible into training and employment."

Mr McClure also said 16 per cent of homeless people were Aboriginal, although indigenouspeople made up only two per cent of the population.

Mr McClure said a key part of Mission Australia's Missionbeat service would be to gatherinformation on homelessness in order to better address the problem.

The charity has also decked out a Sydney bus with the Missionbeat logo to spread awarenessof the problem.

AAP jh/arb/wjf/bwl

KEYWORD: HOMELESS

Fed; Health insurance costs Victorians more

00-00-0000
Fed; Health insurance costs Victorians more

MELBOURNE, Feb 8 AAP - Private health insurance costs Victorian families an average$300 more a year than identical policies in other states.

The price difference meant premium increases being sought by medical insurers wouldhit Victorian families harder, the report in today's Herald Sun said.

Health funds have applied for federal government approval to raise premiums, with Australia'slargest private health insurer Medibank Private seeking a 13 per cent rise.

The latest figures showed 2.16 million or 44.5 per cent of Victorians had private healthinsurance.

But an analysis of the most …

NSW: Funeral group angry over police inaction on bodies mix-up


AAP General News (Australia)
12-10-2001
NSW: Funeral group angry over police inaction on bodies mix-up

Police have been accused of being too slow to investigate a mix-up by a Sydney funeral
director who allegedly cremated the wrong body.

The New South Wales Funeral Industry Council says it's been a month since the body
switch at a funeral home at Five Dock.

The incident is being investigated by police and the Fair Trading Department.

The family of ERROL RAYMOND DAVIDSON, 65, last month reportedly watched as his grave
was exhumed and the coffin opened to reveal the corpse of a woman, who died at age 100.

The council says DAISY JANE JONES was supposed to have been cremated two days before
Mr DAVIDSON'S planned burial on November 7, but the opposite occurred.

Council chairman MARK LENNON has also called for tighter controls to be introduced
in the funeral industry to prevent future mix-ups.

Mr LENNON says the council is seeking a meeting with police.

A police spokeswoman says the matter is under investigation and comment is being sought
from the Fair Trading Department.

AAP nd/arb/jjs/tnf/bwl/jtb

KEYWORD: FUNERAL (SYDNEY)

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

Fed: Anti immigration image hurting Australia: Keating


AAP General News (Australia)
04-26-2001
Fed: Anti immigration image hurting Australia: Keating

Former prime minister PAUL KEATING says Australia's relationship with Europe and Asia
is being damaged because of perceptions that Australia is anti-immigration.

Mr KEATING says images of rioting refugees in detention centres in the middle of the
desert are being broadcast internationally, putting potential tourists, investors and
immigrants off Australia.

He also says the rise and resurgence of Hansonism, and the current loose debate over
immigration is doing enormous damage to our relations with Asia.

The former Prime Minister suggests his successor, JOHN HOWARD, isn't doing enough to
present Australia as an open and tolerant society.

Mr KEATING says the debate created by PAULINE HANSON'S anti-immigration stance has
been allowed to go too far, causing economic and social problems with Asian relations.

He says Australia needs immigration to prosper and has to prove to the world it's an
open and welcoming country.

AAP RTV jh/nf/klw/rt d

KEYWORD: KEATING IMMIGRATION (SYDNEY)

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

Vic: Oppn blames Thwaites for hospital problems=2


AAP General News (Australia)
02-12-2001
Vic: Oppn blames Thwaites for hospital problems=2

Later, Mr BRACKS dismissed the Opposition's calls for a full-time health minister.

He told reporters Mr THWAITES had done more for health in one year than the previous
government did in seven, despite also being the state's planning minister.

He says the biggest problem in health for most Australian states is gaining federal
funding, which is focused on aged care.

The Premier says the Opposition left a mess after seven years, they sacked thousands
of nurses and closed thousands of beds, and they're trying to clean it up.

AAP RTV ce/imc/alt/jn

KEYWORD: HOSPITALS VIC 2 MELBOURNE (REOPENS)

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

Fed; Ferguson on attack over federal transport policies


AAP General News (Australia)
12-13-2000
Fed; Ferguson on attack over federal transport policies

The Opposition says the Howard government has demonstrated it is incapable of working
with the private sector by dropping both the second Sydney airport and the Very Fast Train.

Shadow Minister for Transport, Infrastructure and Regional Development, MARTIN FERGUSON,
says the federal government's announcement that both projects have been shelved is an
example of dodging the hard decisions.

He says day by day the Howard government has proven that it can't make tough decisions.

He says more importantly, the government has proved beyond any doubt that it can't
work with the private sector when it comes to getting big transport infrastructure projects
up such as the Very Fast Train in Australia.

Mr FERGUSON says there's always been a question mark over the VFT between Sydney and
Canberra and Labor has been urging that a line between Brisbane and Melbourne be investigated.

AAP RTV ra/jx/jn c

KEYWORD: AIRPORT FERGUSON (MELBOURNE)

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

Vic: Nats to vote against injecting rooms


AAP General News (Australia)
08-01-2000
Vic: Nats to vote against injecting rooms

MELBOURNE, Aug 1 AAP - The Victorian National Party today announced it would vote against
the government's heroin injecting facility legislation.

Leader Peter Ryan said the facilities would send the wrong message to young people.

"We strongly believe that prevention and education, coupled with improved rehabilitation,
detoxification and diversion programs are the best ways to reduce the problem," Mr Ryan
said.

He also floated purpose-built prisons for drug offenders.

Today's announcement was widely anticipated. The Nationals campaigned strongly against
the injecting rooms during its unsuccessful Benalla by-election campaign in May.

Liberal health spokesman Robert Doyle today told reporters the Nationals' decision
had no bearing on that of his party.

The Liberals are not expected to announce their own position on the government's enabling
bill until at least October, coinciding with the second report from the government's drugs
adviser, David Penington.

AAP pjb/jlw/bdm/br

KEYWORD: INJECT (CARRIED EARLIER)

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

Oly: Carr dismisses Oly transport fears


AAP General News (Australia)
02-14-2000
Oly: Carr dismisses Oly transport fears

New South Wales Premier BOB CARR has dismissed International Olympic Committee concerns
about transport problems at the Sydney Games.

Mr CARR says while delays will be inevitable, Sydney will cope with the extreme pressure
very well.

The premier says transport planning for the September event will be as extensive as
it was for the city's New Year's Eve celebrations.

He says Sydney copes well with big events.

IOC coordination commission chairman JACQUES ROGGE yesterday said Sydney could have
a problem if people ignored public transport on offer and tried to use private cars during
the Olympics.

AAP RTV jw/tsm/msk/smf

KEYWORD: OLY CARR (SYDNEY)

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

Fed: Australian get faster access to medicine thanks to guide


AAP General News (Australia)
12-13-1999
Fed: Australian get faster access to medicine thanks to guide

CANBERRA, Dec 13 AAP - Australians should have access to vital medicines and medical
equipment more quickly, thanks to a new guide launched today by the federal government.

Released by government's main regulatory watchdog for medicines, the Therapeutic Goods
Administration (TGA), the plain-English guide will make the legal requirements for the
release of new medicines more accessible.

Launching the publication, Senate President Margaret Reid said it was important the
laws relating to medical items were easily understood.

"We live in a society where a presumption of knowing the law is the basis of our legal
system," she said.

"But in an area like this, which is inevitably quite complex, I think it is necessary
to present information in a way that people can understand it."

The guide, which will be available in booklets, on CD and the Internet, brought together
all present information and would benefit academics, industry and consumers, Senator Reid
said.

Pushed partly by the Australian Democrats, she said government had accepted the regulatory
process administered by the TGA needed to be more easily read and updated.

"It was recognised that this will make it simpler and make it easier for people to
understand what the TGA does and why it does it," she said.

TGA national manager Terry Slater said anyone who wanted to produce a therapeutic good
for this $8 billion-a-year sector in Australia needed to get approval before they put
it on the market.

"The process can sometimes take a while so this should help things along and make sure
valuable products get on the market sooner," he said.

AAP rft/mfh/kr

KEYWORD: THERAPEUTIC

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

VIC: Detectives investigate Shepparton school fire


AAP General News (Australia)
08-01-1999
VIC: Detectives investigate Shepparton school fire

The arson squad is investigating a fire which caused $200,000 damage to classrooms at a
school in Shepparton, in central Victoria.

Police say the fire at Notre Dame College was apparently started by one or several people
who broke into the school.

After ransacking student lockers and throwing the contents to the ground, they lit the fire
which quickly engulfed the stairs, then spread to the roof.

Three classrooms and an outside verandah were damaged before it could be extinguished.

AAP RTV sjg/er/rp

KEYWORD: SCHOOL (MELBOURNE)

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

FED: Telstra s competitors call for release of USO figures


AAP General News (Australia)
02-03-1999
FED: Telstra s competitors call for release of USO figures

CANBERRA, Feb 3 AAP - Telstra's competitors today called on the carrier to open its books
to justify the universal service obligation price it passes on to other phone companies and
for a share of Telstra's USO business.

The USO ensures all Australians, regardless of where they live, can access a standard
telephone service at a reasonable price.

Telstra is required to fulfill the USO throughout Australia and all carriers must share
costs Telstra incurs to provide the USO in areas without a reasonable commercial return.

VIC:Knife attacks worry Victorian police


AAP General News (Australia)
12-30-2011
VIC:Knife attacks worry Victorian police

By Steve Lillebuen

MELBOURNE, Dec 30 AAP - A dispute over parking killed three. An egging led to the death
of another. But for all the strange and fatal twists in crime across Victoria this year,
one common thread continues to trouble police.

"Crimes involving knives are a concern," explained Detective Inspector John Potter,
head of the state's 50-person homicide squad, in a year-end interview with AAP.

"If we could do away with knife fights, or knife-related assaults, we would resolve
a lot of issues in the Victorian community."

The state has recorded nine homicides in December alone - half of them have been linked
to the use of knives.

Every year, around 1000 incidents of knife attacks are reported to police across the state.

The vast majority of these cases are assaults of some kind, but they can tragically,
and so easily, end up on the desk of the homicide squad.

"The difference between a non-fatality and a fatality can sometimes be millimetres,"

Det Insp Potter said.

"In the heat of a knife fight, there's always the potential that someone's going to die."

Based out of the St Kilda Road police building in central Melbourne, each homicide
investigator knows they are always on call - and fully aware they could be sent in the
dead of the night to a crime scene as far away as Mildura or Mallacoota.

Detectives are divided into crews headed by a senior sergeant to provide statewide
24/7 coverage. Many keep an extra suit at the ready for when that mobile phone does inevitably
ring.

Their lives are always busy.

While 2011's homicide toll won't be confirmed until July - at the end of the Victoria
Police financial year - detectives typically work on about 100 murder or manslaughter
cases in a 12-month period, or about two cases a week.

Last year, Victoria had 84 homicides classified as murders or manslaughters; two years
ago, there were 129 cases.

Det Insp Potter, a former head of the drug squad, says being a homicide cop can be
totally unpredictable.

Take the month of October, for instance: there were 10 homicides during those 31 days
while the same period last year had none.

"No real explanation," he said. "It was just one of those unexplained peaks in the
type of work we do."

Some cases are solved quickly.

A few homicides in 2011 even saw the suspect turn themselves in, or still at the scene
when police first arrived.

But some investigations can take a much greater toll.

Detectives think of their own families, and their own children - just as they did when
confronted by 2011's most baffling and frustrating mystery.

In June, 13-year-old Siriyakorn "Bung" Siriboon vanished on her way to school in Melbourne's
outer east.

Police fear she has been abducted, but an exhaustive search by a dedicated taskforce
has found little evidence, even after interviewing 200 registered sex offenders who live
nearby.

"Somebody clearly knows what's happened and we're asking that person to ring us," Det
Insp Potter said.

Other cases remain unsolved.

Sydney racing identity Les Samba fled gunfire while on a trip to Melbourne in February,
but died from his wounds in the street.

Detectives have travelled to NSW, South Australia and Queensland, but have made no
arrests or laid any charges.

Despite these setbacks, the homicide squad did solve some horrific cases this year.

A mother was stabbed to death in front of her family in July after confronting a group
of youths who threw eggs at her house in northern Melbourne. The case is now before the
courts.

A death linked to Crown casino transfixed the city.

Several months of investigation resulted in criminal charges being laid against the
casino's security guards - who were allegedly recorded on CCTV holding the man down for
up to six minutes.

He later died of a heart attack.

And the year was bookended by bizarre spats over parking spots.

In February, feuding neighbours in an apartment block in Moe argued over a car park
space until two men died and a third was charged with murder.

A few weeks ago, a 78-year-old pensioner died while reporting an assault at a northeast
Melbourne police station.

Police say the man had been arguing earlier that day with two others over a disabled
car space at their nearby church.

An autopsy report will be key in deciding if criminal charges will be laid, but a decision
won't be made until next year - when Victoria Police will undergo a series of changes.

Officers will get their new uniforms in 2012, which have been dubbed a "New York-style"

tough guy look with dark navy blue shirts.

A new dress code takes effect too.

There will be a management decision made on the wider use of Tasers after a lengthy
trial in rural Victoria.

And a high-profile report into police command is expected to shake up how the force is managed.

The state government has been sitting on the report since November, but has not yet
made it public.

Then there's the ongoing need to recruit over 900 armed guards to staff train stations,
a key state election promise, but the inaugural class took a year to get going and attracted
under two dozen students.

Despite all these changes in policing circles, it will largely remain business as usual
in the state's homicide squad.

Detectives will continue their unpredictable life of waiting for the phone call that
notifies them of another suspicious death.

But Det Insp Potter points out that while many of their cases never make the front
page, detectives treat all victims, whether it's a missing girl or a lonely man with no
family, as equals in homicide.

"They are all of equal importance, regardless of the individual victim," he said.

"We'll continue to pursue these cases - for years, if need be."

AAP sbl/gfr/afr

KEYWORD: CRIME VIC NEWSFEATURE (WITH FACTBOX AND PIX)

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