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Hold the phone, that could be $298

Written By Unknown on Senin, 29 Oktober 2012 | 23.18

Drivers caught holding their phones risk fines of $298 and losing three demerit points / Pic: John Grainger Source: The Daily Telegraph

DRIVERS are rushing to buy in-car mobile phone holders to beat new road rules that ban motorists from touching their phone.

Authorities warn there will be no grace period for drivers who flout the rules that come into effect from Thursday.

The only way motorists will be able to use their phone to make or receive calls is if it's sitting in a cradle mounted on the dash.

Is this going too far? Tell us below

The changes mean drivers who have their phones resting on their lap could be be hit with a $298 fine and the loss of three demerit points.

Centre for Road Safety general manager Marg Prendergast said drivers who were caught holding their phones had no excuse.

"Under the old rules you weren't allowed to touch your phone and these changes simply give drivers clarification on how they can use their phone," Ms Prendergast said.

"Drivers weren't given direction how they could use their phone if they needed to."

Changes mean thousands will need to buy a cradle for their phone, with DYI solutions not passing muster.

"Sticking it on with Blu Tack or Velcro isn't going to cut it," she said. "It has to be a commercially designed and manufactured for that purpose (of holding a phone)."

A number of technology shops contacted by The Daily Telegraph said motorists were already moving to beat the law change. Auburn Supercheap Auto manager Jitin Sidana said demand for the kits began picking up last week.

"We have been selling lots," Mr Sidana said.

"I had five of six customers come in (last Friday) talking about the new rules and wanting to buy a holder."

The changes also clarify what you can and can't use your smartphone for, even if it is in a holder. If it's in a cradle you can still use it as a GPS unit, to play music and to make and receive calls, but texting, checking emails and watching videos on the go are out.

If it's not in a cradle the only reason you can touch it is to pass it to a passenger.

Learner and P1 drivers can not use their phone at all, as per the previous rules.

More than 42,000 drivers in NSW were caught using their mobiles in the last financial year year. "We know that it's impossible to text and drive, but people continue to do it," Ms Prendergast said.

"The danger is when you take your eyes off the road."


23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Sex harassment rife in 'a man's world'

Four out of five victims of sexual harassment are women and those aged under 40 are the most likely targets. Source: Supplied

WOMEN who speak out about sexual harassment at work are more likely to be labelled troublemakers by their colleagues, become ostracised and, in extreme cases, even demoted.

And the number of women who suffer harassment and make an official complaint has fallen as a result.

The report, commissioned by the Human Rights Commission, found the number of victims who suffer in the workplace after they complain has jumped from 16 per cent to 29 per cent since 2003.

Four out of five victims of sexual harassment are women and those aged under 40 are the most likely targets.

The report found that while more than one in five are now subjected to harassment only 20 per cent make a formal complaint and the number of women who confront their harasser has also fallen.

Women working in health and community services, accommodation, cafe and restaurants, retail and education are most likely to suffer some form of sexual harassment.

The most common types of sexual harassment include sexually suggestive comments or jokes, inappropriate leering or staring, intrusive questions about physical appearance and sexually explicit emails or text messages.

The report also showed the number of men who have been harassed by other men has risen from 7 per cent in 2003 to 23 per cent today.

Sex Discrimination Commissioner Elizabeth Broderick said progress in addressing workplace sexual harassment "has stalled in this country."

"Compounding this concern are the findings that a number of people are bystanders to incidents of sexual harassment in the workplace, and understanding about sexual harassment remains limited, with only marginal improvements in understanding since the 2008 survey," she said.

"Until a critical mass of people speak up about sexual harassment we wont get the cultural change that is necessary to eradicate it from the organisational landscape.

"We must make it safe for them to speak out and at the minute our research shows were still not at that point."

"I wouldn't characterise Australia as a sexist country, but there is pockets of sexism that exist in 2012.

"If you look at workplaces its a man's world. It doesn't matter what sector you look at, the leadership levels will be dominated by men.

"It's got to be about a community belief that men and women are equal in all aspects of public life. Sexual harassment is about power."

High-profile sexual harassment cases involving text messages and email - such as those involving former speaker Peter Slipper (who denies any wrongdoing) and former David Jones employee Kristy Fraser-Kirk - appear to have helped stall cyber harassment.

People who reported receiving sexually explicit emails or text messages dropped from 22 per cent to 17 per cent between 2008 and 2012.

Employment law expert and Maurice Blackburn Lawyers principal Giri Sivaraman said workplaces can have all the policies in the world, but if there is no change in the culture from the chief executive down, then the problem will persist.

"I seem to have seen more and more victims of sexual harassment over the last few years, he said.

"It can involve sometimes really senior female employees that are victims of harassment, sometimes even senior executives. Often in those circumstances the alleged perpetrator is the most senior person in the organisation.

"There are protections in the (Sex Discrimination Act) and the law for people who make complaints in the workplace. Thats important for people to know. Protection is important when there is a huge power imbalance between you and the perpetrator.

SEXUAL HARASSMENT IN AUSTRALIA

Source: Australian Human rights Commission report Working Without Fear: Results of the Sexual Harassment National Telephone Survey 2012.

Respondents who reported negative consequences (eg victimisation, demotion etc) after reporting sexual harassment

2012: 29%

2008: 22%

2003: 16%

Respondents who were sexually harassed that made a formal complaint

2012: 20%

2008: 16%

2003: (not recorded)

Percentage who decided to confront the harasser themselves

2012: 26%

2008: 38%

2003: 45%

Male harassment of men

2012: 23%

2008: 18%

2003: 7%

The average score for feeling offended by the sexual harassment (5 is the maximum, 0 is not offended at all)

2012: 2.8

2008: 3.2

2003: 3.5

Sexual harassment in large organisations (more than 100 employees)

2012: 41%

2008: 39%

2003: 37%

Most common industries for sexual harassment

Health and community services: 14% (2008 - 14%)

Accommodation, cafI and restaurant: 11% (2008 - 10%)

Retail: 11% (2008 - 8%)

Education: 10% (2008 - 12%)

Service industries: 16% (2008 - 9%)

Sales: 8% (2008 - 5%)

Most common types of sexual harassment

Sexually suggestive comments or jokes 56%(2008 - 55%)

Intrusive questions about private life or physical appearance: 50%(2008 - 47%)

Inappropriate staring or leering: 31% (2008 - 32%)

Sexually explicit emails or SMS messages: 17% (2008 - 22%)


23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

All bets on for a $70m dream

Source: The Daily Telegraph

THE Melbourne Cup might be the race that stops a nation - but it's the dream of instant mega-bucks in tonight's $70 million Oz Lotto draw that has one in three Australian adults reaching for their wallet.

Punters are expected to splurge more chasing the statistically impossible Lotto dream - more than $186 million since the draw began to jackpot eight weeks ago - than the $150 million bet on last year's Cup. About 5.5 million tickets are expected to be sold ahead of the division one draw with 7600 entries a minute being processed at the height of the anticipated frenzy between 4pm and 5pm today, according to NSW Lotteries.

Despite the growing Lotto mania, the forecast ticket sales are slightly down since the last time the jackpot reached $70 million in May, which was shared by three winners from 7.5 million entries.

NSW Lotteries and its interstate counterparts do not reveal specific dollar amounts spent on individual draws.

But an average spend of $20 would see punters spend an anticipated $110 million chasing dreams of private islands, personal jets and an easy life.

What would you do with 70 million bucks? Tell us below

That follows $76 million spent on 3.8 million entries in last week's $50 million draw, which returned a total prize pool of $21.5 million, including $51,000 each to 12 division two winners, but no jackpot.

While mathematicians rate the odds of winning at one in 45 million, the possibility of instant riches appears more compelling to punters than the Melbourne Cup, where the odds essentially boil down to one in 24.

Tattsbet divisional general manager Brad Tamer said Australians bet $150 million through TABs on last year's Melbourne Cup.

NSW Lotteries spokeswoman Una O'Neill said research into the past four biggest draws - ranging from $40 million to $90 million - found the numbers 6, 11, 23, 29, 34, 40 and 42 have each been drawn twice.

After researching the odds of winning games of chance, University of Technology Sydney mathematics professor Alex Novikov has one piece of advice for hopeful punters: don't bother. "I don't advise to play any game," he said.

"Of course somebody wins, for everyone else the odds are practically zero."If you miss out tonight though, there's always Saturday - the Lotto Superdraw has jackpotted to $21 million. Or you can try your luck next week on The Melbourne Cup.


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Tomic finds trouble in Paradise

Hot water: Bernard Tomic after his 6-4, 6-0 defeat to Germany's Florian Mayer, has landed in trouble with the police again. Picture: Peter Parks. Source: AFP

IF only he fought so long and so hard on the court.

Tennis ace Bernard Tomic is in strife with the law yet again after turning on police during an early morning brawl following a wild night of partying at Surfers Paradise.

Officers were called to the Moroccan Apartments on the glitter strip at 5.30am yesterday after a fight broke out in the spa between Tomic and a male friend. When police arrived they separated the two before Tomic turned on officers.

WHAT MADE TOMIC A TANK ENGINE?

He reminded police of "who he was" and accused them of running a hate campaign against him after his Australia Day run-in this year.

Police sources said Tomic appeared to be agitated.

The incident comes just days before he is due to face Southport Magistrates Court on a string of hooning charges, including evading police.

On Australia Day this year, Tomic was issued a $300 ticket for driving his bright orange BMW M3 V8 in breach of the special conditions of his licence. Queensland law bans P-platers under 25 from driving eight-cylinder cars. Tomic had an exemption to drive to training.

Tomic was also charged with not keeping his $150,000 car to the left of the double dividing road lines and failing to stop for police. He has previously pleaded not guilty to the charges.

TOMIC AND HIS INFAMOUS BMW

While police have not charged him over this latest run-in, it is still under investigation. The latest incident tops off Tomic's annus horribilis, a year best forgotten both on and off the court.

The man once considered Australia's next great tennis hope has slid from a ranking of 28 to 49 in recent months following a lacklustre performance that has seem him only twice make it past the second round of a tournament.

His efforts have earned him the moniker "Tomic the Tank Engine" after he was accused by John McEnroe of "tanking it" in his US Open capitulation to Andy Roddick.

Tomic's high-profile defence lawyer Chris Nyst said yesterday: "So far as I am aware, there's no suggestion Mr Tomic has committed any offence of any kind. If there is, he certainly hasn't been charged or even questioned about it. So I'm really not sure what all the ruckus is about.

"Obviously the police have seen some use in splashing these allegations in the media, which is pretty unfortunate, particularly given Mr Tomic has to conduct a trial against police in court next week."

Tomic celebrated his 20th birthday last weekend and it is understood the birthday bender lasted for days.


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Travel levy urged for Aussies

Committee chairman and Labor MP Nick Champion said the levy "could add as little as $3 to $5 to every airline ticket". Source: AFP

AUSTRALIANS going overseas should pay a new "travel levy" to meet the rising cost of fellow travellers getting into trouble, according to a parliamentary committee.

A report backed by Labor, the Coalition and the Greens said the huge increase in Australians needing help in foreign lands was eating into the cost of running formal diplomatic operations.

It called for a combination of increased passport fees and an indexed travel levy to pay for consular services.

It said there could be a lower levy for people who had travel insurance.

One in five Australians going overseas is not insured and others, such as the elderly or pregnant, may not be fully covered.

Committee chairman and Labor MP Nick Champion said the levy "could add as little as $3 to $5 to every airline ticket".

The number of consular cases handled by Australian diplomats has soared by 50 per cent over the past five years to about 200,000 a year.

This includes welfare issues, "whereabouts" inquiries, help for people arrested or detained, medical emergencies, deaths, emergency loans for travellers and notarial services.

But funding and staff had remained almost static. The report said this was "unsustainable", and diverting resources to meet consular demands reduced the ability to represent Australia overseas.

The Department of Foreign Affairs said it did not consider it appropriate to charge people for help, but admitted Australians travelling overseas had "unrealistic expectations".

The former secretary of the department, Dennis Richardson, who now heads Defence, told the committee "some people think that when they go offshore, the rule of law does not apply to them while they are offshore".

The Lowy Institute backed the fee, saying looking after the welfare of Australians when they were travelling seemed "a perfectly worthy reason to charge people".

A day after release of the Asian White Paper, the report also slammed Australia's diplomatic network as "seriously deficient" and called for 20 new embassies to be opened.

It said Australia was "punching below our weight" with only 95 diplomatic posts when the OECD average was 133 posts.

phillip.hudson@news.com.au


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Paul absolves Yoko of Beatles break-up

Brisbane music writer Ritchie Yorke (left) worked with John Lennon and Yoko Ono in 1969 and 1970. Source: Supplied

Ritchie Yorke has been a long-time defender of Yoko Ono's role in the Beatles' demise. Picture: Campbell Scott Source: The Courier-Mail

SHE is one of the most controversial figures in modern music history, but former Beatle Paul McCartney now says Yoko Ono was not responsible for breaking up the band.

While fans have directed decades of anger at John Lennon's widow, Sir Paul has now told them to "let it be".

In a frank interview to mark 50 years since the iconic band released their first single, Love Me Do, McCartney, 70, said: "She certainly didn't break the group up, the group was breaking up."

And he claimed Lennon could not have written songs such as Imagine without Yoko's influence.

For decades Beatles fans made Ono a scapegoat for the band's 1970 split. McCartney said: "I don't think you can blame her for anything. When Yoko came along, part of her attraction was her avant-garde side, her view of things, so she showed him another way to be, which was very attractive to him.

"So it was time for John to leave, he was definitely going to leave (one way or another)." Ritchie Yorke, the Brisbane music writer who worked with Lennon and Ono in 1969 and 1970, has spent 40 years defending her role in The Beatles' demise.

"Paul is finally telling a truth that was always obvious to anyone with an ear inside The Beatles' camp in the late '60s," Yorke said yesterday.

"When Yoko first arrived on the scene in 1967, the band was all but broken up and hanging on to the last threads, trying to recover from the impact of their massive global success.

"Rather than break up something already partly broken, Yoko played a special role in encouraging an insecure John to believe in himself by following his own dreams and backing himself."

Lennon told Yorke in 1969: "I found out what to do, and it didn't really have to be with The Beatles. It could have been if they wanted."

McCartney is still bitter towards the late Allen Klein, saying the businessman who tried to take over following manager Brian Epstein's death in 1967 had created the rift in the group.

In 1970, McCartney took the other members of the band to court. Lennon retaliated with an interview with Rolling Stone, accusing McCartney of taking over the band and making the others feel like his sidemen.

According to The Observer newspaper, in the interview with David Frost for television channel Al Jazeera English, McCartney will talk about losing his mother at the age of 14 and his first wife, Linda, in 1998.

McCartney also tells Frost he would "like to retire soon".

----------------

with Daily Mail


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LIVE: 'The time for preparing is over'

Flooding has begun as Sandy mounts its attack on the US east coast. Picture: AP Source: AP

  • "Superstorm" Hurricane Sandy threatening 50 million people
  • Heart of storm tracking for New York City
  • High winds expected, fears of widespread flooding
  • Qantas flights cancelled | Sandy's massive size
  • ALL TIMES AEDT | REFRESH THIS PAGE FOR UPDATES

HURRICANE Sandy is threatening 50 million people on the heavily populated East Coast of the United States as forecasters warn that New York could bear the brunt of the one-of-a-kind superstorm.

Live updates, photos, news and alerts will be posted here as they come to hand.

2.53am: Hurricane Sandy is now the largest tropical storm ever recorded on the northeast coast of North America, Bloomberg News reports. It quotes Rob Carolan, a meteorologist at Hometown Forecast Services Inc. in Nashua, New Hampshire, saying: "The storm is the largest tropical storm in the Atlantic."

Mr Carolan adds: "So many bad things had to come together all at once. It is going to make the 'Perfect Storm' look small. It's remarkable what an impact this is going to have."

2.46am: New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg has announced schools will be closed for a second day on Tuesday. Watch his full update here:

2.35am: The US National Weather Service is reporting 24-foot seas off New Jersey.

2.26am: US President Barack Obama will make televised statement on Hurricane Sandy at 3.45am AEDT.

2.24am: Maryland Governor Martin O'Malley has said fatalities are inevitable as Hurricane Sandy bears down on the Mid-Atlantic state with all its force.

"Hurricane Sandy is going to come over Maryland, she's going to sit on top of Maryland and beat down on Maryland for a good 24 to 36 hours," he told reporters at the Maryland emergency coordination headquarters.

"This is going to be a long haul," he said. "The days ahead are going to be difficult. There will be people who die and are killed in this storm."

Mr O'Malley warned of "very high winds" by early Monday afternoon, lengthy power outages in the afternoon and evening, and severe flooding in the countless rivers and streams that feed into the Chesapeake Bay.

Ocean City, on Maryland's easternmost Atlantic coast, is already being lashed by a combination of wind, rain and "very heavy surf," with the resort town's pier sustaining heavy damage, the governor said.

The mandatory evacuation of downtown Ocean City has been completed, he said, and "there are few if any residents left in the town."

2.18am: Mayor Michael Nutter of Philadelphia said on Monday morning that about 150 people had checked into the city's three emergency shelters. Occupants include adults, children, dogs, cats, a turtle and a spider, he said. Read the New York Times' report here.

2.16am: Forecasters say Hurricane Sandy has picked up a little strength and is making a turn toward a projected landfall on or near the southern coast of New Jersey.

The National Hurricane Centre said the storm's top sustained winds had risen to near 150km/h, with higher gusts. The storm's centre is about 415km south-southeast of New York City and expected to make landfall Monday evening or night along or just south of the southern New Jersey coast.

Reminder - you can see the action live from webcams at Times SquareWall St and Brooklyn Bridge

1.52am: New York state authorities have ordered the closure of two of three key Manhattan road tunnels because of the risk of floods from Hurricane Sandy.

Governor Andrew Cuomo said the Holland and Battery tunnels would close from 2pm (5am AEDT). He told a press conference the predicted flood levels from the looming hurricane were "really extraordinary".

Norfolk resident Jack Devnew looks at the water covering a dock as he checks on his boat at a marina near downtown Norfolk, Virginia. Picture: AP Source: AP

1.39am: US President Barack Obama has landed at Andrews Air Force base outside Washington after cancelling campaign events to steer the response to Hurricane Sandy.

Mr Obama touched down after a flight from Florida, an AFP photographer aboard Air Force One said, after the president ditched plans to hold a campaign event with former president Bill Clinton, eight days before election day.

1.29am: Almost 9000 flights have been cancelled so far as a result of Hurricane Sandy, according to the information service flightaware.com.

1.20am: The US Coast Guard has rescued 14 members of a crew forced to abandon the tall ship HMS Bounty caught in Hurricane Sandy off the North Carolina Outer Banks and continued the search for two other crew members.

Coast Guard Petty Officer 1st Class Brandyn Hill said the crew members were rescued by two Coast Guard helicopters around 6.30 am local time Monday. The survivors were being taken to Air Station Elizabeth City on the North Carolina coast. He had no immediate word on their conditions.

The director of the HMS Bounty Organisation, Tracie Simonin, said the tall ship had left Connecticut last week en route for St Petersburg, Florida.

"They were staying in constant contact with the National Hurricane Centre," she said. "They were trying to make it around the storm."

Petty Officer Hill said an MH60 Jayhawk helicopter from Elizabeth City, North Carolina, arrived at 6.30am and rescued nine crew members who had donned survival suits and boarded 25-foot life boats. They abandoned ship after the HMS Bounty began taking on water and lost propulsion in the storm. A second helicopter arrived a short time later and rescued five other members of the crew.

1.02am: Reporters aboard Air Force One say US President Barack Obama has cancelled a campaign event scheduled for Tuesday in Green Bay, Wisconsin, to focus on Hurricane Sandy.

12.58am: Google has produced a live map which shows the storm's path, the location of evacuation centres and even local traffic conditions.

12:56am: "This is the worst-case scenario," Louis Uccellini, environmental prediction chief for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, told the Associated Press.

12.41am: Forecasters say Hurricane Sandy is about 505 kilometres south-southeast of New York City, and the centre of the storm is expected to be near the mid-Atlantic coast on Monday night.

The US National Hurricane Centre said early Monday local time that the storm has top sustained winds of 140km/h, with higher gusts. It is moving toward the north-northwest at 32km/h. Hurricane-force winds extend up to 280 km from the storm's centre.

Sandy is on track to collide with a wintry storm moving in from the west and cold air streaming down from the Arctic.

Major metropolitan areas from Washington to Boston are bracing for what is expected to be a superstorm that could menace some 50 million people in the most heavily populated corridor in the US.

12.23am: Reuters reports that at least 14 of the 17 sailors aboard the abandoned HMS bounty have been rescued off the coast of North Carolina. The crew were rescued using helicopters, the director of the vessel told the news agency.

12.17am: Connecticut Governor Dan Malloy says his state is bracing for a sea surge of up to 11 feet higher than a normal high tide. "This is the most catastrophic event that we have faced and been able to plan for in any of our lifetimes. And we continue to do anything in our power to be ready," he said.

President Barack Obama has cancelled all engagements and flown home to Washington to monitor the storrm's progress. Picture: AP Source: AP

12.13am: Water has breached the seawall at Battery Park City in lower Manhattan, pictures on CNN have shown. A reporter at the scene said he was standing in five inches of water on the boardwalk at the mouth of the Hudson River.

11.35pm: Global markets started the week on a downbeat note as investors fretted over the cost of a mammoth storm that was heading towards the eastern US and prompted the closure of Wall Street, the Associated Press reports.

"The economic impact cannot be underestimated," said Elsa Lignos, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets.

Insurers such as Munich Re, Aviva PLC and Zurich Insurance underperformed other stocks as investors worried about the potential cost of the storm's damage.

They weighed on indexes across Europe. The FTSE 100 index of leading British shares was down 0.6 per cent at 5768 while Germany's DAX fell 0.8 per cent to 7178. The CAC-40 in France was 1 per cent lower at 3400.

The New York Stock Exchange has been closed, effectivley stalling all world financial markets. Source: AP

10.55pm: The crew of the HMS Bounty, a tall ship that has been used in several films including the mutiny movie starring Mel Gibson, was forced to abandon the distressed vessel off North Carolina's Outer Banks as Hurricane Sandy bore down on it, the Coast Guard said.

All 17 people aboard got into two lifeboats, wearing survival suits and life jackets, as the ship lost power and began taking on water.

The Coast Guard is trying to determine whether to use cutters or helicopters to rescue the crew.

The ship was about 135km southeast of Hatteras when the ship's owner called saying she'd lost contact with the crew.

The 180-foot, three-masted ship also appeared in Pirates of the Caribbean II.

The "HMS Bounty" during a visit to Chicago. Picture: AFP /JEFF HAYNES Source: AFP

9.45pm: CBS reports that Sandy's wind speeds have risen as it approaches New York .

With winds now topping 130km/h, the Category 1 hurricane is moving north at more than 20km/h after earlier tracking to the northeast. Quoting America's National Hurricane Centre, CBS says hurricane-force winds extend up to 250km from the storm's centre. Gale force winds were reported over coastal North Carolina, southeastern Virginia, the Delmarva Peninsula and coastal New Jersey.

Sandbags have been brought in to protect Lower Manhattan businesses, including the stock exchange. Picture: AP Source: AP

Web cams - Times SquareWall St, Brooklyn Bridge

8.41pm: The state branches of America's National Weather Service have issued a series of extremely strongly worded warnings.

"If you are reluctant to evacuate, think about your loved ones, think about the emergency responders who will be unable to reach you when you make the panicked phone call to be rescued."

Read more here.

8.32pm: What makes Hurricane Sandy so special? There are five things that make it a "superstorm". Read about them here.

Hurricane Sandy is being labelled a 'Frankenstorm' by forecasters, an unusual nasty mix of a hurricane and a winter storm. Source: AFP

8.17pm:

"Frankenstorm", "Hell-oween", "Perfect Storm II". Call it what you want, but New Yorkers hav ebene turned on their head before Hurricane Sandy has even hit.

The Statue of Liberty re-opened after a year of renovation - and closed again straight away. Nervous shoppers have stripped supermarket shelves of water, bread and batteries.

Read more here.

A shopper finds the bread shelves empty at a Supermarket in Manhattan Sunday. Picture: AP Source: AP

8.14pm: AP has released this photo of waves crashing on New Jersey. Hurricane Sandy is coming.

Waves crash onto the sea wall protecting homes in Longport, New Jersey. Picture: AP Source: AP

8.06pm: Hurricane Sandy has grounded thousands of flights in the US northeast and upended travel plans across the globe, stranding passengers from Hong Kong to Europe.

The massive storm threatens to bring a near halt to air travel for at least two days in a key region for both domestic and international flights.

Major carriers such as American Airlines, JetBlue and Delta planned to cancel all flights into and out of three area airports in New York, the nation's busiest airspace.

According to the flight-tracking service FlightAware, nearly 7500 flights had been cancelled for Sunday and Monday. Philadelphia International Airport and Newark International Airport, a hub for United Airlines, each had more than 1200 cancellations for the two days.

Delays rippled across the US, affecting travellers in cities from San Francisco to Chicago, and disruptions spread to Europe and Asia, where airlines cancelled or delayed flights to New York and Washington from cities that are major travel hubs including Berlin, Paris, Tokyo and Hong Kong.

Emergency services stand ready to respond to disaster. Picture: AP Source: AP

Earlier today, Qantas announced flights between Los Angeles and New York were suspended.

7.55pm: Major U.S. financial markets, including the New York Stock Exchange, Nasdaq and CME Group in Chicago, planned a rare shutdown Monday.

The last time the stock exchange shut down for weather was on September 27, 1985, for Hurricane Gloria.

The United Nations also shut down and canceled all meetings at its New York headquarters.

7.40pm: Earlier today, New Jersey resident MArk Palazzolo boarded up his bait-and-tackle shop with the same wood he used during Huricannes Isaac and Irene. 

"I think this one is going to do us in," he said.

Read more about the preparations.

Mark Palazzolo, owner of a bait and tackle shop on the Manasquan Inlet in Point Pleasant Beach, New Jersey, sits next to wood he has used to board up his business in previous major storms. He said, "I think this is going to do us in." Picture: Wayne Parry Source: AP

7.30pm: President Barack Obama has declared emergencies in several states including Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, authorizing federal relief work to begin well ahead of time.

He promised the government would "respond big and respond fast'' to states and cities after the storm hits.

"My message to the governors as well as to the mayors is anything they need, we will be there, and we will cut through red tape,'' Obama said.

"We are not going to get bogged down with a lot of rules.''

Authorities warned that New York could get hit with a surge of seawater that could swamp parts of lower Manhattan, flood subway tunnels and cripple the network of electrical and communications lines that are vital to the nation's financial center.

President Barack Obama speaks during a briefing at Federal Emergency Management Agency headquarters. Picture: AP Source: AP

7.18pm:  What we can expect from Sandy over the coming hours.

7.08pm: New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg warned people in low-lying areas of lower Manhattan and Queens to get out.

"If you don't evacuate, you are not only endangering your life, you are also endangering the lives of the first responders who are going in to rescue you,'' he said.

"This is a serious and dangerous storm.''

New Jersey's famously blunt Gov. Chris Christie was less polite: "Don't be stupid. Get out."

New York called off school Monday for the city's 1.1 million students and announced it would suspend all train, bus and subway service Sunday night because of the risk of flooding, shutting down a system on which more than 5 million riders a day depend.

There's always one... a surfer out to make the best of the violent sea. Picture: AP Source: AP

6.58pm: Forecasters warned the megastorm could wreak havoc over 1,300 kilometers from the East Coast to the Great Lakes. States of emergency were declared from North Carolina to Connecticut.

Airlines canceled more than 7,600 flights and Amtrak began suspending passenger train service across the Northeast. New York and Philadelphia moved to shut down their subways, buses and commuter trains Sunday night and announced that schools would be closed on Monday. Boston, Washington and Baltimore also called off school.

As rain from the leading edges of the monster hurricane began to fall over the Northeast, tens of thousands of people in coastal areas from Maryland to Connecticut were under orders to clear out Sunday.

That included 50,000 in Delaware alone and 30,000 in Atlantic City, New Jersey, where the city's 12 casinos were forced to shut down for only the fourth time in the 34-year history of legalized gambling there.

6.55pm: To put Hurricane Sandy into context, this is the five day tracking forecast over the US:

This is the storm over Australia:

See the comparisons here.

6.52pm: The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has released this image of the oncoming storm.

This NOAA satellite image shows Hurricane Sandy off the Mid Atlantic coastline moving toward the north. Picture: AP Source: AP

6.45pm: Federal Emergency Management Administrator Craig Fugate warned that the "time for preparing and talking is about over,'' as Sandy made its way up the Atlantic on a collision course with two other weather systems that could turn it into one of the most fearsome storms on record in the U.S.

"People need to be acting now,'' he said.

As America's biggest city braces for the storm, so do ordinary homeowners out to protect their own properties with sandbags. Picture: AP Source: AP


23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Phobias so weird they'll scare you

Written By Unknown on Senin, 22 Oktober 2012 | 23.18

Kelly Osbourne, Billy Bob Thornton and Christina Ricci all live with unusual phobias. Picture: AP, Getty Source: news.com.au

FEARS. We all have them but some are stranger than others.

We're not talking about a fear of flying, or dying, or trying. We're talking about those fears that are perhaps a little more left-field than your average phobia.

Like chopsticks, for example. Consecotaleophobia. Try explaining THAT next time you're invited to yum cha.

Or genuphobia, a fear of knees. We all have two of them! But some experience a fear of knees so great that symptoms include - but are not limited to - becoming sick to the stomach, excessive sweating, dry mouth, and anxiety when presented with a situation including knees or kneeling.

Christina Ricci suffers from botanophobia, an irrational fear of plants. "They are dirty. I'm repulsed by the fact that there's a plant indoors. It just freaks me out," she said.

While Billy Bob Thornton has admitted he has a phobia of antique furniture: "Maybe it's a past life thing and I got beat to death with an old chair. But I'm totally serious. I can't eat around antiques," he once said.

As for Kelly Obsbourne, she struggles with haphophobia which is the fear of being touched. Her brother Jack once said in an interview, "All you have to do is just touch her collarbone. It's awesome, she starts dry-retching."

A phobia goes beyond normal rational thought and is described as an anxiety disorder which manifests itself as a persistent fear of an object or situation.

Most phobias are classified into three categories:

  • Social phobia - social anxiety
  • Agoraphobia - fear of leaving home or a safe area, loosely defined as a fear of open spaces
  • Specific phobias - fear of a single object, idea or thing that triggers panic

And while most phobia's are no laughing matter, it's some of the "specific phobias" that prove to be the most interesting.

Here are some of the more unusual phobias we've come across:

Trichophobia: fear of hair. Picture: ThinkStock Source: news.com.au

Trichophobia: fear of hair
Tricophobia goes beyond the sight of manky hair in the shower drain, it's a fear of hair altogether - touching it, seeing it loose on the floor or on clothing and is defined by a "morbid disgust" for loose strands. Trichopobia is closely related to it's hairy cousin "pogonophobia" - a fear of beards.

Koumpounophobia: fear of buttons. PIcture: ThinkStock Source: news.com.au

Koumpounophobia: fear of buttons
Every heard the saying "cute as a button" - not so for koumpounophobics. Koumpounophobia is a fear of buttons and can also extend to similarly shaped things like discs, coins, etc. Here, one sufferer tries to explain their fear: "I have an intense phobia of buttons (I find it very difficult to say the word or even type it). If I touch one by accident, eg. in a clothes shop, I can feel my heart suddenly jump and sometimes I feel like I'm going to be sick. If there are clothes lying around anywhere, I will always arrange them so that there are no buttons showing anywhere. This phobia is a huge problem for me, as it affects my whole life. If I have to go somewhere where I would have to wear a shirt (e.g. a smart night-club), I will just not turn up & pretend I can't go because I'm ill or something. This thread is full of people who suffer a fear of buttons.

Euphobia: fear of hearing good news. Picture: ThinkStock Source: news.com.au

Euphobia: fear of good news
You know how the saying goes; "do you want the good news or the bad news?" - well euphobics realise the two go hand-in-hand and never, ever want the good news. It's not so much hearing the news that causes their intense anxiety, but rather the consequences, as they believe that good news is always followed by bad. Euphobics are more common than you think.

Xerophobia: fear of dryness. Picture: ThinkStock Source: news.com.au

Xerophobia: fear of dryness
Don't ever take a xerophobe to the desert! The name comes from the Greek words xero (meaning dry) and phobia (meaning fear). Xerophobia is linked to the notion that water equals life and our bodies need water to survive. Xerophobes not only fear dry places and dry food, but also fear dry skin, dry lips and even dry genatalia. A person with this fear may avoid dry climates, use plentiful amounts of moisturizing hand and face creams, lip balm, and drink more than the neccessary amount of fluids.They may also insist on running a humidifier in their homes and making certain their lawns get loads of water.

Omphalophobia: fear of bellybuttons. Picture: ThinkStock Source: news.com.au

Omphalophobia: fear of bellybuttons
This one is a little different to the fear of buttons mentioned above. No matter whether it's an innie or an outie, omphalophobics probably don't know which one they have because they are terrified to touch it or even look at it. Atomic Kitten singer Jenny Frost suffers the condition and once explained; "I don't like anybody touching my belly-button and it's like I will vomit on you if you touch my belly-button, plus I find it painful. It's not a funny thing, I'm not joking I don't like belly-buttons at all."

Frigophobia: fear of becoming too cold Source: news.com.au

Frigophobia: the fear of becoming too cold
Frigophobics will often wrap up in excessive layers of clothing regardless of ambient air temperature. According to a study published in the Bulletin of the Chinese Society of Neurology and Psychology in 1975, this has also been associated with "genital retraction syndrome" which is a fear most commonly seen in men where they are afraid their manhoods may retract inside their bodies! Symptoms of this condition may consist of fast heartbeats, shakeing in attempt to warm-up and anxiety.

Nomophobia: fear of being out of mobile phone contact. Picture: ThinkStock Source: news.com.au

Nomophobia: fear of being out of mobile phone contact
We've all had that feeling of being lost when we've forgotten our mobile phones, stressing at the thought of how many people may be trying to call/text/tweet/poke us at the minute. But for nomophobics, the stress goes a step further. Being phone-less can bring on severe panic and breathlessness in those who are stuck in an area with no reception, or have run out of battery on their phones. It's a modern-day nightmare.

Papyrophobia: a fear of paper. Picture: ThinkStock Source: news.com.au


Papyrophobia: a fear of paper
No one likes exams, but for a person coping with Papyrophobia, (the fear of even touching paper) the feeling can be unbearable. The condition is particularly associated with blank paper and the pressure to begin filling it in. Other phobic reactions may be triggered by paper that is crumpled, torn or wet. As one sufferer explains: "If I touch paper.. it makes me shiver, when I'm writing in school I have to pull my sleeve down so I can cover my hand so I can't touch the paper." Some sufferers cannot cope with crumpled paper, while others report that it is the size of the paper is significant. Anxiety often increases according to how small the piece of paper is. Others report fear of paper cuts, the ripping of paper or even wet paper.

Phobophobia: a phobia of phobias. Picture: ThinkStock Source: news.com.au

Phobophobia: wait for it...
It's hard to believe but this is literally a phobia of phobias. If you managed to get through this list though, you're probably in the clear on this one.

What unusual phobia do you or someone you know suffer from? Leave your comments below.


23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Aust's cheapest seven-seater on its way

Proton's Exora will go on sale mid next year. Source: National Features

IT'S one of the cruelest ironies of the automotive world: those with the most mouths to feed can least afford a seven-seat wagon.

But budget brand Proton of Malaysia may provide some relief, with a new cut-price family car to go on sale by the middle of next year.

The new Proton Exora, unveiled at this week's Sydney Motor Show, is expected to undercut the Kia Ronda7 - which starts at $25,990 plus on-road costs for a model with manual transmission.

Proton says its Exora seven-seater will be priced below the Kia Rondo7 - and come with more equipment, including automatic transmission, a gutsy 1.6-litre turbocharged engine, a roof mounted DVD player, parking sensors, cruise control - and air-conditioning for each row of seats.

In further relief to families, the Proton Exora will come with free servicing, roadside assistance and warranty for five years - the longest such coverage in the industry.

''Australia is a tough market and Proton is still new to a lot of people, so we know we have to make a bold statement on price and peace of mind,'' says Proton Australia general manager of sales and marketing, Billy Falconer.

''The quality of our cars is now right up there with other manufacturers and the five-year coverage is about sending a message that Proton is here to stay.''

Proton says it will offer two versions of its seven-seater when it goes on sale in June 2013 - both will be priced below $30,000 drive-away.

The high-grade model also comes with a rear view camera.

While the Exora is well equipped, a question mark remains on safety.

The Exora comes with stability control (compulsory on all new cars from November 2012) but it only has four airbags - and they're only protecting front seat occupants.

The precious cargo in the second and third rows of seats have no airbag protection.

Proton Australia is unsure what safety rating the Exora will achieve when it is tested by independent authority ANCAP.

The highest ANCAP score Proton has received to date is a ''marginal'' three-star rating (out of five) for its S16 sedan tested in 2011.

The Proton Jumbuck ute scored an ''unacceptable'' one star rating when it was tested in 2010.

The Exora comes to Australia mid-way through its lifecycle.

Released in Malaysia three years ago it has just received a facelift; this is the model that will go on sale in Australia.

The next generation, all-new version of the Exora due for release in late 2014 or early 2015 will likely be a five-star safety car, Falconer says.

''Proton as a company has fully embraced five-star safety for the future,'' he says.

''They see it as an essential part of any new model.''

Falconer says interest in the Exora has been strong at the motor show.

''We've got a long list of names of people to contact when it finally goes on sale,'' he says.

''One lady has already tried to buy the car on display.''

See latest car reviews at carsguide.com.au


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Worst to come for friendless Lance

Lance Armstrong has been officially banned for life and stripped of his seven Tour de France titles. Source: Getty Images

LANCE Armstrong is just about officially friendless now - and his shame at being labelled history's worst sporting cheat might not be the worst of his worries.

Now that the UCI, the administrators of cycling, have unequivocally endorsed the United States Sports Doping Agency's verdict that he is guilty of a massive doping conspiracy that has brought the sport to its knees, he may be in deep legal trouble.

Armstrong has neither confessed nor apologised because it would probably be tantamount to convicting himself of perjury and volunteering for a spell behind bars, as well as setting himself up to be sued from several quarters.

Those contingencies are now more confronting.

Despite the massive weight of evidence against him, Armstrong wasn't the only one wondering whether the UCI might have been prepared to offer some wriggle room.


To the detriment of its own fragile credibility, it has always seemed reluctant to abandon -- or even properly scutinise -- the champion once considered the sport's best advertisement.

But controversial president Pat McQuaid is entitled to credit for his powerful "message to cycling: We have a future. We will never be put in this position again."

His organisation has now joined Armstrong's sponsors who deserted him en masse last week, the broader cycling family who desperately want to see their sport's honour and dignity restored, and overwhelming public opinion.

Apart from a dwindling band of loyalists who are entitled to their belief that his anti-cancer work is more important, Armstrong is completely isolated with nowhere left to hide.

"He deserves to be forgotten," McQuaid said.
 


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Where does Google search data go?

Google has taken its Street View cameras inside its own top-secret data centres. Pictured is one in Douglas County, Georgia. Source: AP

EVER wondered what happens to your Google searches every time you hit the "I'm Feeling Lucky" button on the search site's front page?

Google did something unprecedented recently, and took its Street View cameras inside one of its own top-secret data centres.

The huge building in North Carolina is crammed full of thousands of specially made computers.

A Google technician working on some of the computers in the Dalles, Oregon data centre.

No piece of data is stored in just one place, everything is doubled up in case of disk failure.

Disks fail a lot, so they have their own disk-destroying machine.

A Google data centre in Hamina, Finland. Google is opening a virtual window into the secretive data centres that serve as its nerve center.

A video about the data centre visit is on YouTube and there's also a photo gallery at Google.com.

A journalist takes an online tour of the inner workings of Google's data centres.


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The funniest parenting blog post ever

Dressing small child: Buy a live octopus and a string bag. Attempt to put the octopus into the string bag so that no arms hang out. Picture: Thinkstock Source: Supplied

THIS hilarious 'test' designed to find out if you're ready to have kids was originally posted on UK parenting website Mamami and has gone viral.

Test 1: Preparation

Women: To prepare for pregnancy

1. Put on a dressing gown and stick a beanbag down the front.
2. Leave it there.
3. After 9 months remove 5% of the beans.

Men: To prepare for children

1. Go to a local chemist, tip the contents of your wallet onto the counter and tell the pharmacist to help himself
2. Go to the supermarket. Arrange to have your salary paid directly to their head office.
3. Go home. Pick up the newspaper and read it for the last time.

Test 2: Knowledge

Find a couple who are already parents and berate them about their methods of discipline, lack of patience, appallingly low tolerance levels and how they have allowed their children to run wild. 

Suggest ways in which they might improve their child's sleeping habits, toilet training, table manners and overall behaviour.
Enjoy it. It will be the last time in your life that you will have all the answers.

Test 3: Nights

To discover how the nights will feel:

1. Walk around the living room from 5pm to 10pm carrying a wet bag weighing approximately 4 - 6kg, with a radio turned to static (or some other obnoxious sound) playing loudly.
2.  At 10pm, put the bag down, set the alarm for midnight and go to sleep.
3. Get up at 11pm and walk the bag around the living room until 1am.
4. Set the alarm for 3am.
5. As you can't get back to sleep, get up at 2am and make a cup of tea.
6. Go to bed at 2.45am.
7. Get up again at 3am when the alarm goes off.
8. Sing songs in the dark until 4am.
9. Put the alarm on for 5am. Get up when it goes off.
10. Make breakfast.
Keep this up for 5 years. LOOK CHEERFUL.

Test 4: Dressing Small Children

1. Buy a live octopus and a string bag.
2. Attempt to put the octopus into the string bag so that no arms hangout.
Time Allowed: 5 minutes.

Test 5: Cars

1. Forget the BMW. Buy a practical 5-door wagon.
2. Buy a chocolate ice cream cone and put it in the glove compartment. Leave it there.
3. Get a coin. Insert it into the CD player.
4. Take a box of chocolate biscuits; mash them into the back seat.
5. Run a garden rake along both sides of the car.

Test 6: Going for a walk

a. Wait.
b. Go out the front door.
c. Come back in again.
d. Go out.
e. Come back in again.
f. Go out again.
g. Walk down the front path.
h. Walk back up it.
i. Walk down it again.
j. Walk very slowly down the road for five minutes.
k. Stop, inspect minutely and ask at least 6 questions about every piece of used chewing gum, dirty tissue and dead insect along the way.
l. Retrace your steps.
m. Scream that you have had as much as you can stand until the neighbours come out and stare at you.
n. Give up and go back into the house.
You are now just about ready to try taking a small child for a walk.

Test 7: Conversations with children

Repeat everything you say at least 5 times.

Test 8: Grocery Shopping

1. Go to the local supermarket. Take with you the nearest thing you can find to a pre-school child - a fully grown goat is excellent. If you intend to have more than one child, take more than one goat.
2. Buy your weekly groceries without letting the goat(s) out of your sight.
3. Pay for everything the goat eats or destroys.
Until you can easily accomplish this, do not even contemplate having children.

Test 9: Feeding a 1 year-old

1. Hollow out a melon
2. Make a small hole in the side
3. Suspend the melon from the ceiling and swing it side to side
4. Now get a bowl of soggy cornflakes and attempt to spoon them into the swaying melon while pretending to be an aeroplane.
5. Continue until half the cornflakes are gone.
6. Tip the rest into your lap, making sure that a lot of it falls on the floor.

Test 10:TV

1. Learn the names of every character from the Wiggles, Barney, Teletubbies and Disney.
2. Watch nothing else on television for at least 5 years.

Test 11:  Mess

1. Smear peanut butter onto the sofa and jam onto the curtains
2. Hide a fish behind the stereo and leave it there all summer.
3. Stick your fingers in the flowerbeds and then rub them on clean walls. Cover the stains with crayon. How does that look?
4. Empty every drawer/cupboard/storage box in your house onto the floor and proceed with step 5.
5. Drag randomly items from one room to another room and leave them there.

Test 12: Long Trips with Toddlers

1. Make a recording of someone shouting 'Mummy' repeatedly. Important Notes: No more than a 4 second delay between each Mummy. Include occasional crescendo to the level of a supersonic jet.
2. Play this tape in your car, everywhere you go for the next 4 years.
You are now ready to take a long trip with a toddler.

Test 13: Conversations

1. Start talking to an adult of your choice.
2. Have someone else continually tug on your shirt hem or shirt sleeve while playing the Mummy tape listed above.
You are now ready to have a conversation with an adult while there is a child in the room.

Test 14: Getting ready for work

1. Pick a day on which you have an important meeting.
2. Put on your finest work attire.
3. Take a cup of cream and put 1 cup of lemon juice in it
4. Stir
5. Dump half of it on your nice silk shirt
6. Saturate a towel with the other half of the mixture
7. Attempt to clean your shirt with the same saturated towel
8. Do not change (you have no time).
9. Go directly to work
 


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Lance banned, stripped of titles

Cycling commentator Phil Liggett says the UCI's decision to not appeal USADA's sanctions on Lance Armstrong marks a sad day for the sport.

"No place for Lance Armstrong in cycling." The American has been banned for life and stripped of his seven Tour titles. Source: AP

DISGRACED Lance Armstrong's fate was sealed tonight, as cycling's under-fire world governing body decided to back a life ban for doping and strip him of his record seven Tour de France titles.

The International Cycling Union (UCI) said it supported the US Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) decision to erase the rider's entire career after August 1998, as president Pat McQuaid called the scandal "the biggest crisis'' the sport had ever faced.

"We will not appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport and we will recognise the sanction that USADA has imposed,'' McQuaid told a news conference in Geneva, saying he had been "sickened'' by the revelations.

"The UCI will strip him of his seven Tour de France wins. Lance Armstrong has no place in cycling... He deserves to be forgotten in cycling.''

Lance made a fool out of me: Phil Liggett

Earlier this month the US body released a devastating dossier on Armstrong, detailing over 202 pages and with more than 1,000 pages of supporting testimony how he was at the heart of the biggest doping program in the history of sport.

The revelations, including evidence from 11 of Armstrong's former teammates, plunged a sport which has been working hard to rid itself of its murky doping past into crisis.

McQuaid succeeded Hein Verbruggen as president of world cycling after Armstrong's seventh and final Tour victory in 2005 and is credited with boosting the body's anti-doping program, notably with the pioneering blood passport program.

The Irishman was under pressure to answer how Armstrong and his teams managed to dope for so long without being detected. But he rejected calls to quit, vowing to continue his work against the scourge of doping.

Cycling's drugs moratorium dilemma

Armstrong's sporting reputation as the cancer survivor who fought back to win cycling's most gruelling and celebrated race has been shattered since the revelations, leading to sponsors leaving him in droves.

There has also been fears of a wider withdrawal of financial backing for the sport after Dutch sponsor Rabobank said it was ending the sponsorship of its professional cycling team after a 17-year association.

The sponsor described professional cycling as "sick'' to its core and unlikely to recover in the foreseeable future.
The strongly-worded comments went to the heart of claims of failings at the UCI and in particular to McQuaid, who has been criticised for failing to see the extent of doping within the sport.

Comment: Worst to come for friendless Lance

Verbruggen, who stepped down in 2006 but remains honorary president, ran the UCI during Armstrong's golden era - a time when USADA's report says Armstrong and team-mates evaded dope tests either by hiding or being tipped off in advance.

The Dutchman has also been accused of protecting Armstrong - even accepting a donation to cover up a positive dope test. McQuaid on Monday said the UCI "absolutely deny'' that Armstrong bought off the body.

Armstrong's cancer backstory and Tour triumphs from 1999 to 2005 were seen as key to restoring cycling's tattered image after a string of high-profile doping scandals in the 1990s.

His Tour victories are unlikely to be re-awarded, the race's director Christian Prudhomme has said. The void would prevent further headaches, given that most riders who finished on the podium in that time have since been implicated in doping.

Timeline: The Armstrong doping controversy

But the final decision will come in a special UCI meeting on Friday.

Armstrong on Sunday spoke briefly to some 4,300 cyclists at the Livestrong Challenge charity benefit, a 100-mile (160-kilometre) race in his hometown of Austin, Texas.

"I've been better but I've also been worse,'' said Armstrong. "Obviously it has been an interesting and difficult couple of weeks.''

Since the USADA report, sponsors have fled Armstrong and he was forced to resign as chairman of the Livestrong cancer-fighting charity he founded in 1997 over concerns his tarnished reputation could hurt the cause.

Gallery: Lance Armstrong through the years

Armstrong, who overcame testicular cancer that had spread to his brain and lungs to achieve cycling stardom, inspired more than $500 million in donations to Livestrong and pushed other cancer survivors to battle the condition.

No criminal charges were filed against Armstrong from an 18-month US federal probe that ended earlier this year and evidence from that case was not given to USADA.

But Armstrong could yet face court cases from former sponsors who accepted his assurances that his legacy was not aided by banned substances.


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How to handle the aftermath of infidelity

Couples often play the blame game when infidelity is present in a relationship. Picture: ThinkStock Source: news.com.au

DAVID and Gwen perched at opposite ends of the couch the first time they came to my office.

As soon as they sat down, David started talking about Gwen's affair with her co-worker. He fluctuated between outrage and grief as he described his feelings since learning that his wife of two years had been unfaithful.

Gwen said that the affair ended months before David found out and that it "meant nothing to me''. She cried, saying that she didn't understand how she got involved in "something so stupid''.

David bitterly reminded her that she had broken every promise they made to each other on their wedding day.

Gwen went on to say that David was demanding details about the affair, repeatedly asking questions she was not comfortable answering.

"He is fixated on the sex; wanting to know how often we were together and what it was like. Yesterday, he asked me if Larry was better in bed than he is. I keep trying to explain to him that it was not about sex.''

None of which was at all consoling to David. But it's true that for women, affairs have little to do with sexual needs and everything to do with emotional needs.

The US National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago reports that 25 per cent of men and 17 per cent of women admit to having affairs while married.

But sex isn't the only symptom of infidelity. Cyber relationships and emotional affairs offer false promises of instant gratification without the guilt or risk of a sexual encounter. These pseudo affairs can be just as damaging to a committed couple, stealing time and energy that intimate relationships require.

Life's daily challenges can undermine each person's ability to focus on a primary relationship and to meet the needs of their partner.

Financial and physical hardships can significantly increase the risk of an affair. Stress affects a couple's daily communication and the quality of their intimacy.

Financial problems and ongoing health issues also make it hard to relax and enjoy time together. Throw in worries about the kids, and you have a long shadow of tension and worry over every aspect of the relationship.

The newness of an extramarital relationship excites and distracts people from the mundane routines of life.

Disappointments and dissatisfactions fade into the background. The pleasure-seeking region of the brain gets excited and activated when a new relationship starts. Norepinephrine and dopamine surge through the body during the attraction phase.

Why does this matter? Understanding how the body responds to these temptations can help balance the seductive emotional high that follows flirtations with someone new. And it can help you understand why it never lasts for long.

What does last are the guilt and recriminations that follow an affair. Infidelity does not have to mean the end of a marriage, but it should mean the start of a serious re-examination of the relationship.

The following tips can help both of you deal with the aftermath of an affair:

  • Expect waves of extreme emotions. Whether infidelity is a deal-breaker or a chance to rebuild depends on the inner strength and willingness of both parties to explore the true meaning of the affair. There is no shortcut around the grief, rejection and anger inherent in this experience.
  • Handle the details with caution. Wounded spouses or partners will often demand to learn as much as possible about the affair. But specifics can cause more grief than relief, complicating the healing process.
  • Reach out for help if either of you starts to feel overwhelmed. Each partner can experience different forms of guilt over the breakdown of the relationship. The betrayal started long before the actual affair.

Barbara Rhode is a licenced marriage and family therapist in private practice in Florida and co-author of Launching: Parenting To College and Beyond.


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Marriage a sham for glamour couple

Written By Unknown on Senin, 15 Oktober 2012 | 23.18

Danielle Spencer was snapped in Sydney as news came out that her marriage to Russell Crowe is over / Pic: Adam Taylor Source: Supplied

Actor Russell Crow with wife Danielle Spencer and their sons in 2010 on Hollywood Blvd

MUST C Russell Crowe's wife Danielle Spencer wraps her arms around her 'Dancing with the Stars' partner, Damian Whitewood / Pic: Splash Source: The Daily Telegraph

Russell Crowe rides his bike through Tribecathis week in New York City / Pic: Josiah Kamau/BuzzFoto/FilmMagic Source: The Daily Telegraph

RUSSELL Crowe and Danielle Spencer have been living in separate homes for more than a year while keeping up the public persona of one of Australia's most esteemed celebrity couples, it was revealed yesterday.

As the entertainment world absorbed the news that the pair had split just a few months shy of their 10-year wedding anniversary, claims surfaced that they had been estranged since late last year.

While the rumoured reasons behind the break-up flitted between Crowe's hectic filming schedule and Spencer's long-suspected relationship with her Dancing With The Stars partner Damien Whitewood, friends of the pair admitted that when Crowe has come back to Sydney, he has remained at his expansive Woolloomooloo Wharf penthouse apartment while Spencer and the couple's two sons have been living at the $10 million Rose Bay house they bought only last year following a long search.

As of last night, neither party had made an official comment on the marriage breakdown, with Crowe getting back to work on Darren Aronofsky's biblical epic Noah in New York while Spencer remained holed up in her eastern suburbs abode.

According to neighbours, the pretty slice of suburbia has never been home to the family of four.

"(There were) no signs a man had even lived there," said one, gesturing the interiors were particularly "girly".

But despite the apparent estrangement, Crowe and Spencer have been seen together on a few occasions, most notably a well-publicised walk in Los Angeles after pictures of Spencer and Whitewood out partying together were made public in June. The shots - published in The Sunday Telegraph - were taken by a patron inside The Star casino's cocktail bar Cherry and showed the dance partners with their arms around each other.

Days later, Spencer flew to LA and walked hand-in-hand with Crowe through the streets of Beverly Hills before a pack of photographers.

However cracks in the relationship were first floated earlier last year at the relaunch of The Star in September, when the pair arrived together on the red carpet but were apart and acted "frosty" towards each other for the rest of the evening.

Melissa Hoyer: 'They always seemed like the perfect couple'

Russell Crowe and Danielle Spencer life in pictures

Crowe had spent almost all of 2011 overseas working on at least three different films. When Spencer starred on Dancing With The Stars earlier this year, her husband's absence from the Sunday night live shows was well-noted.

A backstage source at Channel 7 claimed the Oscar winner sent his wife a bunch of roses for Mothers Day, but Spencer "looked at them and gave them away" to someone else.

"There was pretty much no mention of (Russell) backstage," the source said.

"It's like it was understood not to talk about him or something.

"She didn't want to be known as Russell Crowe's wife - she wanted to be Danielle Spencer, the singer-songwriter."

Crowe is also said to have sent a basket filled with Belvedere Vodka and everything needed to make vodka lime sodas - Spencer's favourite drink - including limes, a knife, chopping board and San Pellegrino soda. "Only the vodka was touched," the source said.

Crowe is believed to have been "blindsided" by the fact the couple's break-up had now been made public.

The 48-year-old recently made a whistlestop return from the Big Apple set of Noah to watch his beloved South Sydney rugby league team get beaten by Canterbury in an emotional playoff for an NRL grand final spot.

But he and Spencer were not sighted together during the visit.

Close confidants say that rather than his work being solely responsible for the breakdown of the marriage, it seems the Hollywood action star has spent the year preparing a war chest in readiness for divorce. Crowe will likely earn between $80 and $100 million this year from his work in films Man With The Iron Fist, Les Miserables, Broken City, Man Of Steel and Noah.

Although Spencer, 43, is believed to have signed a pre-nup worth about $20 million in cash and property, including the Rose Bay home, the actor will undoubtedly look after his sons - Charles, 8 and Tennyson, 6 - who remain his first priority.


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'I just wanted to come back alive'

Watch as daredevil Felix Baumgartner plummets from the edge of space and lands safely, breaking the fastest freefall record - and the sound barrier.

DAREDEVIL Felix Baumgartner reached a top speed of 1342km/h, or 1.24 times the speed of sound, in a record-breaking freefall from the edge of space.

The speed, revealed at a press conference  after the unprecedented leap from 39km up, was significantly higher than that given earlier by a spokeswoman, who had put his maximum speed as 1136km/h.

No one has ever reached that speed wearing only a high-tech suit.

The 43-year-old floated down to Earth on a red and white parachute canopy.

Felix Baumgartner celebrates with Art Thompson, Technical Project Director, after successfully jumping from a space capsule lifted by a helium balloon at a height of just over 128,000 feet above the Earth's surface. Baumgartner landed in the eastern New Mexico desert minutes after jumping from his capsule 24 miles (38.6km), above Earth AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin

At the press conference, Baumgartner also spoke of some of the problems he encountered during the record-breaking jump, including fogging on his helmet visor, which coud have aborted the mission and a flat spin as he fell.

"When I was standing there on top of the world, you become so humble, you do not think about breaking records anymore, you do not think about gaining scientific data. The only thing you want is to come back alive,'' he said after the jump.

Baumgartner says that traveling faster than sound is "hard to describe because you don't feel it.''

A screen grab from the live YouTube feed of Felix Baumgartner's jump from space.

With no reference points, "you don't know how fast you travel,'' he told reporters.

"Sometimes we have to get really high to see how small we are,'' he said.

Mission control erupted in cheers as Baumgartner made a near-perfect jump from a capsule hoisted aloft by a giant helium-filled balloon to an altitude of around 128,000 feet (39km).

A screen grab from the live YouTube feed of Felix Baumgartner's jump from space.

"Sometimes you have (go) up really high to (realise) how small you are," Baumgartner said shortly before he jumped, watched in live footage beamed around the world.

"I think 20 tons have fallen from my shoulders. I prepared for this for seven years,'' he told German-language ServusTV in Austria in his first interview after the leap.

 Live stream breaks YouTube record

A screen grab from the live YouTube feed of Felix Baumgartner's jump from space.

More than eight million people watched the livestream of Baumgartner's jump on Red Bull's YouTube channel.

The video sharing site posted on its blog that as well as his other records Baumgartner's now held the record for "creating a livestream with the most concurrent views ever on YouTube".

Mashable reported the Austrian diver had already broken an online record before he even jumped with 7.1 million people watching in anticipation of the freefall dive.

Moments after he landed, Red Bull posted this image of Felix Baumgartner on its Facebook page. The image immediately got hundreds of thousand of "likes" and was shared more than 50,000 times. Picture: Red Bull via Facebook

The 'live' online feed of the jump was delayed by 20 seconds in case something happened to daredevil Baumgartner.

Talkback radio in Australia operates on just a seven second delay, which is enough time for producers to cut any caller who makes vulgar or defamatory comments.

It is unclear why the Stratos producers needed the full 20 seconds. One theory doing the rounds is that if Baumgartner got into trouble, it would have been difficult to tell if he was unconscious or just falling in an ungainly manner.

Red Bull Stratos, a mission to the edge of space. This animation shows how Felix Baumgartner will be going up to 120.000 feet in a capsule attached to a helium balloon. Once he's up there he'll jump doing the highest parachute jump ever done by a human.

A few extra seconds would have proved handy in allowing the crew to analyse data from its 30 cameras on the ground, in the capsule and aboard a helicopter.

Fortunately, the mission was a great success so the delay proved to be nothing more than a sensible precaution.

 Minor glitch

Felix Baumgartner of Austria sitting in his trailer during the final manned flight for Red Bull Stratos in Roswell, New Mexico, USA on October 14, 2012.

Referring to a helmet problem that nearly forced him to abort the mission at the last minute, Baumgartner said: "Even on a day like this when you start so well, then there's a little glitch.

"And you think you'll have to abort -- what if you've prepared everything and it fails on a visor problem. But I finally decided to jump. And it was the right decision.''

He had taken more than two hours to get up to the jump altitude. Baumgartner had already broken one record, before he even leapt: the previous highest altitude for a manned balloon flight was 113,740 feet, set in 1961.

Felix Baumgartner seen onscreen in a screen at mission control center in the capsule during the final manned flight for Red Bull Stratos in Roswell, New Mexico.

The Austrian had been due to jump from 120,000 feet, but the balloon went higher than expected, to 39 kilometers.

The Red Bull Stratos mission was the second attempt for the skydiver after an initial bid last week was aborted at the last minute due to winds.

Risky ride

As the sun rises, workers prepare at the launch site, ahead of an attempt by Felix Baumgartner to break the speed of sound with his own body. Picture: Ross D. Franklin

The biggest risk Baumgartner faced was spinning out of control, which could exert G forces and make him lose consciousness. A controlled dive from the capsule was essential, putting him in a head-down position to increase speed.

More gruesomely, the skydiver's blood could have boiled if there were the slightest tear or crack in his pressurized spacesuit-like outfit, due to instant depressurisation at the extreme altitude.

Temperatures of minus 68 Celsius could also have had unpredictable consequences if his suit somehow failed.

Felix Baumgartner waves to his ground crew after landing safely following his record-breaking freefall from the stratosphere. Picture: Red Bull

The leap went off flawlessly though there was a minor problem as the capsule ascended: a heater failed on Baumgartner's helmet faceplate, meaning it was becoming fogged up when he exhaled.

After considering the options they decided to go ahead with the jump.

Baumgartner's 100-strong backup team includes retired US Air Force colonel Joe Kittinger, who had held one of the records he was trying to break: the highest freefall jump, which he made from 102,800 feet (31,333 metres) in 1960.

Felix Baumgartner's mother Ava Baumgartner, middle, watches with other family members and friends as his capsule lifts off. AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin

"Let the guardian angel take care of you," Kittinger told Baumgartner shortly before he leapt into the void.

The giant balloon - which holds 30 million cubic feet of helium - is needed to carry the Red Bull Stratos capsule to the stratosphere.

It is made of near transparent polyethylene strips even thinner than a dry cleaner bag, which are heat-sealed together. Very thin material is necessary to save weight.

The capsule and attached helium balloon which will carry Felix Baumgartner to the edge of space. Picture: Ross D. Franklin

The Austrian has been training for five years for the jump. He holds several previous records, notably with spectacular base jumps from the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur and the Christ the Redeemer statue in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

The jump was a hit on social media, with Twitter, YouTube and Facebook going into overdrive.

Here's a look at how the world, through the Internet, watched the jump.

Felix Baumgartner, of Austria, waves to the crowd after successfully jumping from a space capsule. Baumgartner landed in the eastern New Mexico desert minutes after jumping from his capsule 24 miles (38.6km), above Earth AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin

YOUTUBE: As Baumgartner ascended in the balloon, so did the number of viewers watching YouTube's live stream of the event.

Its popularity grew as the moment of the jump drew closer, as people kept sharing links with each other on Twitter and Facebook and websites embedded the stream.

Nearly 7.3 million viewers were watching as Baumgartner sat on the edge of the capsule, moments before the jump.

Viral sensation puts Lego Felix up into space ready for free-fall. Vision: Stratos Jump

In the United States, the opportunity to watch the jump on TV was limited to the Discovery Channel, though more than 40 television networks in 50 total countries carried the live feed, organizers said. It was streamed by more than 130 digital outlets.

FACEBOOK: After Baumgartner landed, sponsor Red Bull posted a picture of the daredevil on his knees to Facebook.

In less than 40 minutes, the picture was shared more than 29,000 times and generated nearly 216,000 likes and more than 10,000 comments. Immediately after the jump, Red Bull solicited questions for Baumgartner through Facebook and Twitter, promising to answer three at a post-jump news conference.

TWITTER: During the jump and the moments after Baumgartner safely landed, half the worldwide trending topics on Twitter had something to do with the jump - pushing past tweets about Justin Bieber and seven National Football League games being played at the same time. Celebrities of all kinds weighed in, including athletes, actors and high-profile corporate executives.

``It's pretty amazing that I can watch, live on my computer, a man riding a balloon to the edge of space so he can jump out of it. #TheFuture,'' tweeted Wil Wheaton, who acted in the iconic science-fiction series Star Trek: The Next Generation.'

``Felix Baumgartner is a boss,'' tweeted Jozy Altidore, a soccer player for the U.S. men's national team.

REDDIT: Two threads related to the jump made the front page of Reddit.

Users quickly upvoted a request for Baumgartner to participate in an ``Ask Me Anything'' on the site, where users pepper someone on the site with questions about anything they want.

President Barack Obama held court as the subject of a similar thread in August.

Nearly 29,000 users weighed in on a separate thread about the jump itself, voting it up and down and robustly commenting.

Speaking before the launch, Baumgartner said he would be proud to be the first person to break the speed of sound in freefall.

"But really, I know that part of this entire experience will help make the next pressure suit safer for space tourists and aviators," the jumper pointed out.

The launch coincided with the 65th anniversary of American pilot Chuck Yeager breaking the speed of sound.

 Austrian leaders were quick to congratulate Baumgartner .

"I warmly congratulate Felix Baumgartner on this great success, which was achieved with courage and perseverance and is finding worldwide attention,'' President Heinz Fischer reacted on his Facebook page almost immediately after Baumgartner had landed safely in New Mexico.

"Austria is proud of your accomplishment,'' he added.

Chancellor Werner Faymann also hailed the achievement in a statement.

"His jump from a height of around 39 kilometres was a fascinating event for millions of people worldwide,'' Faymann said.

"But I'm first and foremost happy everything went well.

"I congratulate Felix Baumgartner and his team for this impressive achievement. Together they went to the boundaries of human possibility and of physics.''


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Filmmakers' raid on classic literature

On The Road film adaptation: Viggo Mortensen, Sam Riley, Elisabeth Moss, Danny Morgan, Amy Adams, Garrett Hedlund and Kristen Stewart. Picture: Icon Film Source: Supplied

THE giants of literature are set to rule this season's cinema box office after a raid on the classics by filmmakers.

On the big screen soon will be 10 films inspired by literary masterpieces - from new versions of Leo Tolstoy's Anna Karenina and Victor Hugo's Les Miserables to Yann Martel's 2003 Booker Prize-winner Life of Pi. All three are getting early Oscars buzz.

Seven of the novels being crafted into film are by authors born in the 19th century, including Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights, Charles Dickens' Great Expectations, L. Frank. Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby and J.R.R. Tolkien's The Hobbit - proof that these best-selling, highly regarded and much-loved tales have enduring themes and characters that remain relevant in a modern world.

While classic novels have been portrayed on the big screen virtually since the dawn of cinema, Monash University associate professor and author Brian McFarlane says it is unusual to have so many adaptations released within weeks of one another.

"You don't usually get so many of the big names all in one go,'' says McFarlane, who has lectured on the adaptation of literature to film for more than 30 years.

"These stories being adapted now all have powerful narrative lines, a clarity of storytelling and a striking assemblage of interesting characters.''

Actor and comedian David Walliams, who features as Uncle Pumblechook in Mike Newell's all-star Great Expectations, is not surprised the world's great novels are getting new treatment.

"The themes of these novels are evergreen. They always seem relevant to the next generation,'' he says. "Even though there have been fantastic versions of Great Expectations, the modern and young audience wants a new version.''

Screen Queensland screen culture head Richard Moore says there is a thirst for novel adaptations, which is why he included Great Expectations and Anna Karenina in next month's Brisbane Film Festival - the latter chosen as the closing-night film due to its "knock-out'' quality and "audacious" interpretation.

"The reason (classic) novels have survived so long and will never go away is that they are wonderful stories and characters,'' Moore says.

If told well, they are all-absorbing, covering universal themes like love, faithfulness, loyalty and friendship.''

The director of Anna Karenina, Joe Wright, says he chose Tolstoy's late-19th-century novel because it was the ideal vehicle for title-role star Keira Knightley, and because there was no definitive film version of the novel.

Despite there being about 12 adaptations, I didn't feel anyone had cracked it,'' Wright says. "If there had been one really great version, I would have shied away from it. I loved the Greta Garbo version, but it was not representative of the book.''

Knightley, who starred in Wright's adaptations of Pride and Prejudice (2005) and Atonement (2007), follows some of the 20th century's biggest stars, including Garbo (1935) and Vivien Leigh (1948), in portraying highly strung heroine Anna Karenina.

"When reading the book I was immediately thinking of Keira,'' Wright says. ``She is up there with the greats of the past.''
Walliams says leading directors and actors of each generation always want the chance to tackle the greatest works and roles.

"Helena Bonham Carter is an actress who was born to play the role of Miss Havisham; Robbie Coltrane is brilliant as Mr Jaggers; while to see the process of how Ralph Fiennes transforms himself into Magwitch - he's such a brilliant actor,'' he says.

Great Expectations screenwriter David Nicholls says Hollywood has always turned to novels for inspiration.

"If you flick through the best movie nominations going way back to the 1930s, including Gone With the Wind and The Philadelphia Story, there has always been an instinct on the part of movie makers to not pay for the first draft but for it to already have been shaped and polished,'' Nicholls says.

Disney national marketing manager Annabel Weedon says nothing has changed, and people want to see their favourite stories brought to life on the big screen.

"People want to be lost in these worlds they have imagined . . . they want to relive the magic and memories of reading something wonderful,'' she says.

Cloud Atlas author David Mitchell, says writers can also be curious about how their work will translate into film. The upcoming cinematic version of Mitchell's 2004 masterpiece, a Booker finalist and a British Book Awards literary fiction winner, stars Tom Hanks and Halle Berry.

"There's a primal `wow' you get from seeing a character that began in your head projected larger than life on to a cinema screen,'' Mitchell says.

"And when the result is as singular a glory as the (directors) Wachowskis and Tykwer's Cloud Atlas, you feel a ticklish, unearned pride that three filmmakers at the top of their game have spent years of their creative life thinking more deeply about your novel than, I sometimes suspect, even its author did.''

Disney's Weedon says novels such as Cloud Atlas, The Hobbit, Life of Pi and The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (a prequel to the more-famous The Wizard of Oz) all have highly visionary and intricate settings that had previously seemed unfilmable.

"These films wouldn't have been possible to make until recent developments in technology and special effects, which has allowed directors to create these amazing worlds,'' Weedon says.

Walter Salles, who has worked for eight years to make the first film version of Jack Kerouac's On the Road, says the seminal 1957 novel was difficult to turn into a film because it did not have a simple three-act narrative.

"On the Road is at the crossroads of what has been lived and what has been imagined. That is the book's unique resonance and originality,'' says Salles, who also included some of Kerouac's real story in the film after visiting a museum dedicated to the author and being granted access to personal letters and the original 1951 version of the novel.

The adaptation of literary giants is rarely easy. Mitchell's Cloud Atlas seemed an almost impossible book-to-film proposition. It has no clear narrative but instead has six interlocking stories in settings that range from a 19th-century South Pacific ship voyage to a post-apocalyptic world.

"All the changes (in the film) were made in the spirit of the book,'' Mitchell says. ``They paid my book the greatest compliment by disassembling it and reassembling it in the shape of a film.''

McFarlane believes novel adaptations should only be done if a filmmaker has something new to say.

"I like it when directors take classics by the scruff of the neck and make them interesting and new rather than those plodding and terribly faithful Sunday night BBC versions,'' McFarlane says.

Nicholls says that with material as amazing as Great Expectations, it was important to strike a balance between fidelity to the source but "making a movie which makes sense''.

"It is finding original ways to respond to the work,'' Nicholls says.

Wright adds that he and screenwriter Tom Stoppard only had one rule in cutting down Tolstoy's 817-page tome - they only included scenes that were about love. He and Stoppard were determined to include the hopeful story of Russian farmer Konstantin Levin, usually cut for film versions, to balance the tragic tale of Russian society wife Anna Karenina and her affair with Count Vronsky.

"Levin's story is the whole point of the novel. Without Levin, Anna's story doesn't make any sense,'' says Wright, who also made the bold but inspired decision to set much of the action in the theatre - partly for budget and practical reasons but mostly because he read a book about Russia's cultural history that described St Petersburg's high society as living their lives as if upon a stage.

While Wright chose a highly stylised interpretation, the latest Wuthering Heights is also winning acclaim - for its raw and natural qualities.

The Andrea Arnold movie features mainly first-time actors, is filmed totally on the Yorkshire moors and has no music soundtrack, just the wailing wind and the sounds of wildlife.

Salles and Walliams agree that the ultimate hope of adapting any novel to film is that new fans will turn to the original material.

"The book is the definitive. The film is the interpretation. There will always be more films . . . it will ensure authors such as Dickens keep living forever,'' Walliams says.

Classic film adaptations

1 ON THE ROAD
(in cinemas now)
Adapted from Jack Kerouac's 1957 novel. Directed by Walter Salles and stars Sam Riley, Garrett Hedlund, Kristen Stewart.

2 WUTHERING HEIGHTS
(in cinemas now)
Adapted from Emily Bronte's 1847 novel. Directed by Andrea Arnold and stars Kaya Scodelario and James Howson. There have been more than 30 TV and radio adaptations, with this the fifth film version. The most famous, in 1939, starred Laurence Olivier and Merle Oberon.

3 ANNA KARENINA
(Brisbane Film Festival, November 14-25, in cinemas January 17) Adapted from Leo Tolstoy's serial publication 1873-1877. Directed by Joe Wright and stars Keira Knightley, Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Jude Law. This is the 12th cinema adaptation since 1914. The most famous version starred Vivien Leigh in 1948.

4 LES MISERABLES
(Boxing Day)
Adapted from Victor Hugo's 1862 novel. Directed by Tom Hooper and stars Hugh Jackman, Russell Crowe and Anne Hathaway. There have been more than 60 film and TV adaptations since 1897. The most famous are the 1935 film starring Fredric March and Charles Laughton, and 1998's with Geoffery Rush.\

5 THE HOBBIT: AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY
(Boxing Day release)
Adapted from J.R.R. Tolkien's 1937 novel. Directed by Peter Jackson and stars Martin Freeman, Ian McKellen and Hugo Weaving. The first of three Hobbit movies, with The Desolation of Smaug out in 2013 and There and Back Again (2014).

6 GREAT EXPECTATIONS
(BFF, in cinemas March 5)
Adapted from Charles Dickens' 1860-61 serial publication. Directed by Mike Newell and stars Jeremy Irvine and Helena Bonham Carter. The 10th cinema/TV version since 1917. The most famous is David Lean's 1948 Oscar winner starring John Mills and Jean Simmons.

7 LIFE OF PI
(January 1)
Adapted from Yann Martel's 2001 novel. Directed by Ang Lee and stars Suraj Sharma and Rafe Spall.

8 CLOUD ATLAS
(February)
Adapted from David Mitchell's 2004 novel. The $100 million film is directed by Tom Tykwer and Lana and Andy Wachowski. It stars Tom Hanks, Halle Berry and Hugo Weaving.

9 OZ: THE GREAT AND POWERFUL
(March)
Adapted from L. Frank Baum's well-known 1900 novel. Directed by Sam Raimi and stars James Franco, Mila Kunis and Rachel Weisz.

10 THE GREAT GATSBY
(2013 release)
Adapted from F.Scott Fitzgerald's 1924 novel. Directed by Baz Luhrmann and stars Leonardo DiCaprio, Carey Mulligan and Tobey Maguire. This is the sixth film adaptation since 1926. The most famous version starred Robert Redford and Mia Farrow in 1974.
 


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