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Instagram soldiers grin and bear arms

Written By Unknown on Senin, 19 November 2012 | 23.18

IMAGES on social media of young, attractive men and women could depict a generation on their way to schoolies. Instead they're fighting in a war.

If not for the khakis and the machine guns you'd be forgiven for thinking these guys and girls are on holiday, or even school camp.

The recent spate of happy snaps posted to social networking sites has shocked the world as we hear ever-escalating reports of violence and destruction on the Gaza strip.

Images of smiling youths holding machine guns with captions such as  "We're coming for you Gaza" highlight not only the destruction of civilian lives but also the lives of young soldiers who are forced to partake in violence.

Its easy to forget that it's these same youths that are locked in a deadly battle with Hamas in one of the most populated patches of land in the world.

Using the hashtag #IDF soldiers post and share their snaps across social networking sites around the world.

Military service is mandatory for all Israeli citizens over the age of 18, men serving three years and women two.

The smiling demeanors of these fresh-faced youths is a far cry from reports of infant casualties from the escalating violence between the warring countries of Israel and Palestine.


23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

More discounts leak ahead of Click Frenzy

Retailers increasingly see online shopping as being where it's at. Source: The Courier-Mail

MORE specials have leaked from Australia's first nationwide online sale, including discounted television sets and music downloads.

But overseas competition is heating up prior to Click Frenzy's local launch, with America's Cyber Monday and Black Friday specials already appearing and predictions that more than half of all American consumers will venture online for bargains.

Australia's Click Frenzy event, which begins on Tuesday at 7pm AEDT, will feature specials from more than 200 retailers, including Myer, Dick Smith, Westfield, Jeans West, Bonds and Toys `R Us.

The specials are not due to be publicised until the sale begins, but online retailer Kogan has aired some of its bargains early, including a 46-inch TV for $499 (33 per cent off) and 22-inch TV with built-in personal video recorder for $139 (26 per cent off).

Telstra also unveiled two of its Click Frenzy specials - half-price on all BigPond Music albums and half-price bed linen on its BigPond Shopping website.

But America's Cyber Monday sales event, on which Click Frenzy is modelled, will be held next Tuesday, Australian time, and the local version will have to offer big discounts to compete. American holiday specials already revealed include a 7-inch Samsung tablet for $US179 at Best Buy, Beats Solo HD headphones for $US179 at Target, and a 250GB Xbox 360 console with Call of Duty: Black Ops II for $US249.

Australians may not be able to buy all deals directly, though can use a mail-forwarding service to participate.

Research firm Radium One predicted that 57 per cent of US consumers would participate in the Cyber Monday event, spending as much as $1.4 billion online in just 24 hours.

But financial counselling service MoneyHelp yesterday warned buyers from either event to take their time before adding items to virtual shopping carts to avoid pre-Christmas over-commitment.

"This type of marketing is designed to get you to make on-the-spot decisions," advice services manager Penelope Hill said.

"All we're saying is take a deep breath before typing in your credit card details and consider your financial position before buying."

Ms Hill said bargains could lose their value if purchased with credit cards that attracted high interest.

FIVE TIPS FOR CLICK FRENZY

- Register at clickfrenzy.com.au before the sale begins

- Check the time: the sale goes live at 7pm Australian Eastern Daylight Savings Time

- Buyers will be directed to retailers' websites: look for the lock icon in the address bar for security

- The sale lasts for 24 hours: consider your purchases carefully

- Consider delivery dates at check-out to ensure pre-Christmas arrival


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Woman killed in the street

The shooting happened in West Footscray about 2.30pm today. Picture: Norm Oorloff Source: Leader

A WOMAN has been shot in the head and killed in the middle of a street in Melbourne's west.

The victim, aged in her 40s, had been involved in an argument with a man near the corner of Clive and Russell streets in West Footscray about 2.30pm yesterday when he produced a rifle and shot her dead.

A man in his 50s was arrested at the scene and was assisting police with their investigation.

Homicide squad Det Sen-Sgt Stephen McIntyre said the victim and the man in custody were known to each other but would not say how.

Police believe the pair drove in separate cars to the scene and began arguing outside the home of another man, who might also have known the pair and been involved in the argument.

That man is also helping police with their investigation.


Sen-Sgt McIntyre said several shots were fired before the deadly shot struck the woman in the head.

The centre-fire rifle was found placed on the woman's body.

"Somehow both parties have come to be in this street. There has been an altercation, a firearm has been produced and shots have been fired, which resulted in the female dying," Sen-Sgt McIntyre said.

The alleged killer remained at the scene and did not resist arrest.

Police are also investigating reports that a shot was heard on the street about 30 minutes before the shooting.

Shocked neighbours were left stranded behind police tape while forensic experts scoured the area for clues.

"This is a really quiet street. I can't believe this could happen. It's very distressing," one man said.

Some visibly distressed people attended the scene, but refused to comment when approached by the Herald Sun.

Anyone with information on the shooting should contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000

wayne.flower@news.com.au


23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

27 animals 'died while making Hobbit'

No Hobbits were harmed during the making of the film, but many animals are said to have suffered and died because of they way they were kept. Source: Supplied

ANIMAL handlers involved in the making of The Hobbit movie trilogy say the production company is responsible for the deaths of up to 27 animals, largely because they were kept at a farm filled with bluffs, sinkholes and other "death traps."

The American Humane Association, which is overseeing animal welfare on the films, says no animals were harmed during the actual filming. But it also says the handlers' complaints highlight shortcomings in its oversight system, which monitors film sets, but not the facilities where the animals are housed and trained.

A spokesman for trilogy director Peter Jackson acknowledged that horses, goats, chickens and one sheep died at the farm near Wellington where about 150 animals were housed for the movies, but he said some of the deaths were from natural causes.

The spokesman, Matt Dravitzki, agreed that the deaths of two horses were avoidable, and said the production company moved quickly to improve conditions after they died.

The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, the first movie in the planned $500 million trilogy, is scheduled to launch with a red-carpet premiere on November 28 in Wellington and will open at theaters in the US and around the world in December.

The animal rights group People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals says it's planning protests at the premieres in New Zealand, the US and the UK.

The Associated Press spoke to four handlers who said the farm near Wellington was unsuitable for horses because it was peppered with bluffs, sinkholes and broken-down fencing. They said they repeatedly raised concerns about the farm with their superiors and the production company, owned by Warner Bros., but it continued to be used. They say they want their story aired publicly now to prevent similar deaths in the future.

One said that over time he buried three horses, as well as about six goats, six sheep and a dozen chickens. Others say two more horses suffered severe injuries but survived.

Handler Chris Langridge said he was hired as a horse trainer in November 2010, overseeing 50 or so horses, but immediately became concerned that the farm was full of "death traps." He said he tried to fill in some of the sinkholes, made by underground streams, and even brought in his own fences to keep the horses away from the most dangerous areas. Ultimately, he said, it was an impossible task.

He said horses run at speeds of up to 50km/h and need to be housed on flat land: "It's just a no-brainer."

The first horse to die, he said, was a miniature named Rainbow.

"When I arrived at work in the morning, the pony was still alive but his back was broken. He'd come off a bank at speed and crash-landed," Langridge said. "He was in a bad state."

Rainbow, who had been slated for use as a hobbit horse, was euthanized. A week later, a horse named Doofus got caught in some fencing and sliced open its leg. That horse survived, but Langridge said he'd had enough.

He and his wife, Lynn, who was also working with the animals, said they quit in February 2011. The following month, they wrote an email to Brigitte Yorke, the Hobbit trilogy's unit production manager, outlining their concerns.

Chris Langridge said he responded to Yorke's request for more information but never received a reply after that.

Handler Johnny Smythe said that soon after Langridge left, a horse named Claire was found dead, its head submerged in a stream after it fell over a bluff. After that, he said, the horses were put in stables, where a third horse died.

Smythe said no autopsy was performed on the horse, which was named Zeppelin. Veterinary records say the horse died of natural causes, from a burst blood vessel, but Smythe said the horse was bloated and its intestines were full of a yellow liquid; he believes it died of digestive problems caused by new feed.

Smythe said the six goats and six sheep he buried died after falling into sinkholes, contracting worms or getting new feed after the grass was eaten. He said the chickens were often left out of their enclosure and that a dozen were mauled to death by dogs on two separate occasions.

Smythe said he was fired in October 2011 after arguing with his boss about the treatment of the animals.

A fourth handler, who didn't want to be named because she feared it could jeopardise her future employment in the industry, said another horse, Molly, got caught in a fence and ripped her leg open, suffering permanent injuries.

Dravitzki, the spokesman for Peter Jackson, said the production company reacted swiftly after the first two horses died, spending hundreds of thousands of dollars upgrading housing and stable facilities in early 2011.

"We do know those deaths were avoidable and we took steps to make sure it didn't happen again," he said.

Dravitzki said Zeppelin died of a burst blood vessel and that he knew only of three goats, one sheep and about eight chickens that had died aside from that. He said two of the goats died in a cold snap but the third, like the sheep, was old and had likely died of natural causes. He said the chicken maulings were the result of careless staff oversight.

The American Humane Association said in its report on "An Unexpected Journey" that it investigated the farm at the production company's request. Dravitzki said the company contacted the AHA after Smythe alleged mistreatment of animals.

Mark Stubis, an association spokesman, said it investigated the farm in August 2011, months after the first deaths.

"We made safety recommendations to the animals' living areas. The production company followed our recommendations and upgraded fence and farm housing, among other things," the group said.

Dravitzki said the company had already made many of the recommended changes by the time the AHA made them.

Stubis said the association acknowledges that what happens off-set remains a blind spot in its oversight.

"We would love to be able to monitor the training of animals and the housing of animals," Stubis said. "It's something we are looking into. We want to make sure the animals are treated well all the time."

Dravitzki questioned the timing of the allegations with the premiere so close but said the producers are investigating all the claims "and are attempting to speak with all parties involved to establish the truth."

He said the company no longer leases the farm and has no animals left on the property. He said he didn't know if animals will be needed for future filming in the trilogy, but added that Jackson himself adopted three of the pigs used.

Hollywood has made animal welfare a stated priority for years.

In March, HBO cancelled the horse racing series "Luck" after three thoroughbred horses died during production. The network said it canceled the show because it could not guarantee against future accidents.


23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Turnbull urged to set up own party

Liberal MP Malcolm Turnbull. Picture: Ross Schultz Source: The Australian

MALCOLM Turnbull has revealed that "thousands and thousands of people" have urged him to set up his own political party but he is sticking with the Liberals where he expects to be an "influential" member of an Abbott Government.

And Kevin Rudd has again insisted Labor's leadership question was settled in February when he lost a ballot as he lashed out at the "nonsense" of political debate which he said was more like a Punch and Judy show.

The two former leaders and, according to opinion polls, the men voters would like to see back leading their parties, came head to head on the ABC's Q&A panel program last night.

Mr Rudd said it was very difficult to sustain a mature conversation about the nation's future when  current political debate was a  "rolling Punch and Judy show where everyone knocks each other out".

But he brushed aside leadership questions saying Labor made its decision in February when Ms Gillard beat him by "two-to-one".


Mr Turnbull, who led the Liberals in 2008-09 said he would not be the next Liberal PM but voters who liked him knew if they voted Liberal they would get Mr Abbott as PM and "I will be part of his team, influential, at the cabinet table".

"Look, I'm not going to give you any BS. I've had thousands and thousands of people propose that, you know, I should set up a new political party and I've always said to them the same thing that I'm saying to you, that I'm committed to the Liberal Party," Mr Turnbull said.

"It is a broad church, we don't always agree but we are a strong, grass roots political party, that's our great strength with great diversity in it and we will do great things if we are fortunate enough to be returned to government."

He said voters who wanted Mr Rudd to return and voted Labor would not get that because he would be "not so enigmatically on the backbench".

"It remains a case of complete bafflement to me why the Labor Party doesn't put Kevin back," Mr Turnbull said.

Asked onthe program if Mr Turnbull and Mr Rudd would form a political party together, Mr Turnbull said no, but revealed "thousands and thousands of people" had urged him to create his own party but he was sticking with the Liberals as they were a broad church.

Mr Rudd joked, they couldn't have a party together because "Malcolm and I could never agree on the leadership.

In a performance where Mr Rudd praised praised Julia Gillard for taking up the battle to Tony Abbott with "force and aggression and Wayne Swan for tax reform, he also  defended his original mining super profits tax saying it was not some "mad Leftie socialist nutcase tax".

Mr Turnbull said there should be a debate on industrial relations while Mr Rudd backed a rolling review of workplace laws.


23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Meet Cameron, the 11th-floor fool

Cameron Cox lounging on the windowsill / Pic:  Instagram Source: The Daily Telegraph

Can't believe all the fuss ... schoolie Cameron Cox, 18 / Pic: Jerad Williams Source: The Daily Telegraph

A DRUNK schoolie has learnt the hardest lesson of his life after he decided to sleep off his hangover on a narrow ledge on the 11th floor of a highrise.

Somerset College graduate Cameron Cox, who said he was 18 years old, caused an internet sensation yesterday after a photograph of him lying on the Gold Coast ledge was uploaded on social media site Instagram.

The photo, taken by another schoolie on Sunday afternoon, showed Mr Cox, originally from Bankstown, positioned perilously close to the edge of the 11th floor of the Surfers Hawaiian Holiday Apartments in Surfers Paradise.

His dangerous nap came despite repeated warnings from police and Schoolies organisers about a spate of balcony deaths on the Gold Coast.

The Daily Telegraph yesterday spoke exclusively to Mr Cox, who said he was surprised by the furore.

"I didn't think anybody saw me except for the guys in the unit next to us who took the photo," Mr Cox said.

"I was drunk and climbed out there through the window for the thrill and to get some fresh air. I was out there for about half an hour until a security guard came to do a room check and I didn't want him to know I'd been out there.

"The window slides open. There's no security screens."

The photo, which went viral, led to Mr Cox being branded "dumb" and a "dope" but he said he was more concerned about how his dad would react when he found out: "I knew in past years there had been problems with balconies but I didn't think it would get this much attention. My dad might be angry when he finds out."

A young women is escorted into a paddy wagon by police. Picture: Brad Hunter Source: The Daily Telegraph

Roomate and fellow schoolie James Chard, 17, also from Somerset College, said he considered moving Mr Cox but did not want to make the situation worse: "At first we thought he'd just gone for a walk because we couldn't find him until I went into the room and saw him sitting outside.

"Nobody could convince him to come inside and we didn't want to make him move so people just watched him until he decided to come in."

Somerset College headmaster Craig Bassingthwaighte last night declined to comment on Mr Cox's behaviour. The teenager's mother is a teacher at the prestigious school.

Gold Coast Superintendent Paul Ziebarth said police would continue to monitor dangerous behaviour across the week.

"The police helicopter has been doing patrols of balconies, as well as the beach precinct,'' he said.

"Where we can we will stop the kids doing something stupid.'' 

Schoolies chairman Mark Reaburn said teens should think twice before posting pictures on social media.

"Social media is the way these kids communicate but they have to think twice before putting inappropriate pictures up - it could ruin their futures," he said.

"Most employers will get online and check someone's profile before hiring them. These kids could be ruining their chances at future jobs.'

A teenager and an older man push and shove each other over a disagreement in Main Beach Park, Byron Bay. Picture: Brad Hunter Source: The Daily Telegraph


23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Man hunt launched over Sarah's death

Facebook friends of missing Victorian Sarah Cafferkey are hoping the body of a woman found is not hers.

A MAN considered a person of interest in the murder of Sarah Cafferkey is a convicted killer who once escaped from jail .

The 47-year-old, who recently moved into Point Cook, is at the centre of a nationwide hunt as police piece together the last moments of Ms Cafferkey's life.

The force has appealed to the person of interest to hand himself in.

Friends in shock, disbelief

Charlie Bezzina: What we know

Ms Cafferkey's body was found in a Point Cook house after the homicide squad executed a warrant to search it on Saturday night.

A satellite image taken in October of a yellow car in the driveway where a body was found.

The 22-year-old Bacchus Marsh woman went missing on November 9, her car found in Maribyrnong days later but police did not hold fears for her safety until Friday.

The homicide squad has focussed on posts made via Facebook to Ms Cafferkey, which include him messaging: "Love the pics....Looking good Heartbreaker lol" and "Catch up when you get free time...."

The Herald Sun can reveal the person of interest has a violent history and recently split from his girlfriend.

In 1986 he was convicted of murder after stabbing an 18-year-old woman to death - a crime for which he was sentenced to a minimum 13 years jail.

He also staged a breakout from Pentridge Prison in 1990, but was caught in a Coburg backyard after 30 minutes bleeding from cuts caused by razor wire. He was found hiding under a trampoline.

Police are hunting a suspect in the death of 22-year-old Sarah Cafferkey.

Facebook pages reveal the man dubbed his former home in Werribee a "rape dungeon".

Police yesterday confirmed Miss Cafferkey's case was considered a murder investigation. Her body has been formally identified.

Police have not revealed how Ms Cafferkey was killed after a post mortem was conducted yesterday. But a yellow Commodore has been linked to the investigation.

The Herald Sun understands police investigating the case set up a crime scene around a stripped down yellow sedan on the Western Hwy near Bacchus Marsh on Friday.

It is believed the car belongs to the person of interest.

Forensic police inspect the Point Cook home today after the grim find. Picture: Andrew Tauber

Images of a yellow car parked in the driveway of the house where Ms Cafferkey's body was found can be seen from aerial images of the property taken last October.

Interactions with Ms Cafferkey are among several leads police are following.

Meanwhile, Det-Inspector Michael Roberts of the homicide squad has ruled out an ex-boyfriend of Ms Cafferkey's as a person of interest.

The father of another man who lived at the property where the body was found said his son had been through a "considerable ordeal".

Denis Weily, dad of Point Cook man Adam Weily said: "Adam has been through a considerable ordeal. He's been referred to a psychologist due to the high degree of trauma."

Investigations are continuing following the discovery of human remains at a house in Melbourne

"It's been extremely traumatic for all involved and we are 12,000 km away in Tanzania and can't help or do anything."

A staff member at El Zorro Transport where Adam works as a national transformation manager said: "He's not here.

"I don't know when he'll be back. I'm just taking messages for him and emailing them through to him. He phoned this morning to say he wouldn't be in."

Anyone with information is urged contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.
 

- with Chris Gillett

A neighbour described Ms Cafferkey as a "good girl just trying to find her way".

anthony.dowsley@news.com.au       


23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

MTV Europe Music Awards fashion

Written By Unknown on Senin, 12 November 2012 | 23.18

Kim Kardashian trips on the stage at the MTV music awards

HOST Heidi Klum stole the limelight from the true winners on the night in a red carpet dress that left nothing to the imagination.

PICTURES: MTV Awards best and worst dressed

WATCH: Kim Kardashian takes a stumble on stage

Heidi Klum at the MTV Europe Music Awards winners.

The presenter and model who recently split from husband Seal, shocked in a Versace gown which was just one of the many outfits she chose for the awards night which was held in Frankfurt, Germany and had a circus theme.

Klum also teamed up with popular Korean artist Psy for a cheeky performance of his record-breaking hit "Gangnam Style", which won Best Video.

Carly Rae Jepsen wins at the MTV Europe Music Awards. PIcture: Splash

Psy, whose song has been viewed more than 670 million times on YouTube, promised his next album would have more English songs on it.

Canadian singer Carly Rae Jepsen was the big winner of the night going home with two gongs and even managing to fit in a crowd surf during her performance. Others performing included Taylor Swift, Muse, No Doubt, Alicia Keys, Pitbull and The Killers.

Taylor Swift at the MTV Europe Music Awards. Picture: Splash

Full list of winners

Best Song - Carly Rae Jepson - Call Me Maybe

Best Song - Carly Rae Jepson - Call Me Maybe

Best New Act - One Direction

Best Female Act - Taylor Swift

Best Male Act - Justin Bieber

Best Pop Act - Justin Bieber

Best Live Act - Taylor Swift

Best Hip Hop - Nicki Minaj

Best Rock Act - Linkin Park

Best Electronic Act - David Guetta

Best Alternative Act - Lana Del Rey

Best Video - Gangnam Style (Psy)

Best Look - Taylor Swift

Biggest Fans - One Direction

Best Worldwide Act - Han Geng

Best World Stage - Justin Bieber

Best Push - Carly Rae Jepson

Global Icon - Whitney Houston


23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Government wants you to work from home

This week is National Telework Week, aimed at increasing awareness of the benefits of working from home. Picture: Thinkstock Source: news.com.au

PRIME Minister Julia Gillard has committed to having 12 per cent of public servants regularly working from home by 2020.

The announcement comes at the beginning of National Telework Week, which is aimed at increasing awareness and encouraging Australian employers to boost the number of people who work from home with help from the roll out of the National Broadband Network.

Ms Gillard today made a presentation at the Telework Congress in Melbourne via video-conference from Canberra to announce the increase in government teleworkers, up from the current figure of about 4 per cent.

Deloitte telework research also released today has found telework will add an extra $3.2 billion a year to GDP, which is the equivalent of an extra 25,000 full-time jobs, by 2020-21.

"With the rollout of the NBN ramping up, its affordable and reliable broadband means that telework will become an increasingly viable option for people living in regional Australia," a spokesperson for the Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy said.

But teleworking is hardly a new concept - workplace experts have been promoting what they say are major productivity and cost benefits since last century.

So why are employers reluctant to make it the norm?

Future of Work Foundation chairman Charles Brass said: "People have been talking about teleworkers and the death of offices and death of CBDs for over 20 years."

But he said problems with workers feeling isolated at home meant teleworking "hasn't been the phenomenal change that was anticipated".

"Nowadays working at home does mean a very lonely experience with huge social implications, which is why many employers and employees are finding it difficult to take it on," he said.

Is it good for the bottom line?

Yvette Blount, coordinator at the Australian Telework Research Network, said telework hasn't been taken up widely because many organisations don't think about the business case for doing it.

"It can't just be because 'it makes our employees feel better'," Dr Blount said.

"But if an organisation can say telework is adding to our bottom line, it's much easier to implement."

Benefits of telework include customers being able to access employees for longer hours, and reductions in employee absenteeism, she said.

Middle managers are resistant

Telework is more easily adopted in fast-moving industries like tech, media and design.

But it is likely to become the norm in some unexpected industries and for some unexpected job roles, such as healthcare, education and middle management.

Telework Australia director Bevis England said while highly mobile company executives often think telework is "a great idea", middle managers are opposed to it.

"They have a problem with managing people they can't see," he said.

"It does perhaps get a bit harder for managers to manage remote staff when the outcomes of their jobs are not easily identifiable or measurable.

"In a lot of white collar tasks we don't understand what the specific outputs are because it's a more general [goal] we are working towards."

Dr Blount said managers who have teleworkers, and who telework themselves, tend to have better teams because they make more of an effort to communicate.

"You just have to make sure that the manager is in the office for team meetings, and make sure employees know how to contact the manger if a decision needs to be made," she said.

Telework to spread to more jobs

Tim Fawcett, head of government affairs and policy at computer networking company Cisco Australia said healthcare was an area where telework would become much more widespread.

"I think we're going to see a real takeoff," he said.

A spokesperson for the Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy said Medibank Private has 1000 people already teleworking from home, providing an after-hours GP service.

"Medibank love the service – they've seen productivity go up and sick days go down. It's a win-win," he said.

Mr Fawcett said it was inevitable telework would become the norm in the tertiary education sector, even though online universities have existed for some time.

"Without a doubt, when you think of the cost pressures coming onto universities," he said.

"Why does a lecturer have to come into deliver a lecture they can deliver online?" he said.

Mr Fawcett said teleworking in all levels of government would eventually become the norm as it has in the US, where under federal law eligible government employees must be allowed to telework.

"If you're a public servant now, the overwhelming number of workers would be knowledge-based workers," Mr Fawcett said.

"In the local government area there's potentially a lot of opportunity."


23.18 | 0 komentar | Read More

Watch Australia's solar eclipse live

Solar eclipse live: watch as Far North Queensland is plunged into darkness Source: News Limited

  • First eclipse in Australia since 2002, last until 2028
  • Crowds will line beaches and hillside lookouts in FNQ
  • All of eastern Australia will experience partial eclipse

THOUSANDS of locals, tourists and eclipse chasers in Far North Queensland are hoping for clear skies as they prepare for Australia's first total solar eclipse in a decade.

For three hours tomorrow morning the sun, moon and our planet align to create one of the most spectacular sights on Earth.

If skies are clear, eclipse junkies from around the world will see the sun blotted out by the moon at 06:39 local time.

One-in-a-lifetime: Edge Hill State School students prepare for the solar eclipse. Source: The Cairns Post

By a remarkable celestial coincidence, the sun is 400 times wider than the moon, but also 400 times farther away, so for those on the coastline between Cairns and Port Douglas tomorrow, the discs will appear to match in size.

Casting a shadow 150km wide, the eclipse begins over the Kakadu National Park in the Northern Territory, moves eastwards across the Gulf of Carpentaria and then crosses Queensland shortly after dawn.

More than 50,000 tourists from Europe, Asia and the US have traveled to the far north to enjoy two minutes of "totality" – weather dependent.

Hotels are completely full, cruise liners are moored offshore and forty hot air balloons will take to the sky above the Atherton Tableland.

Solar eclipse FNQ: in the final seconds before totality, beads of sunlight shine through valleys on the surface of the moon. Source: Supplied

According to the Bureau of Meteorology, conditions won't be ideal for eclipse viewing, with patchy cloud and isolated showers.

So eclipse chasers such as the Astronomical Association of Queensland's Terry Cuttle are keeping their fingers crossed.

Mr Cuttle saw his first solar eclipse in 1976 in New South Wales. This will be his 12th total solar eclipse.

"It's just a fantastic experience, it's the most amazing spectacle," he said.

"There are all sorts of ominous, dark things that happen … it's like nothing you have seen before."

"Things start to look really odd and in the last two or three minutes (before totality), it really accelerates. It's like switching from day to night.

"You can imagine what people thought hundreds of years ago. Every society dreamt up some explanation."

Solar eclipse map: the path of totality across Far North Queensland. Maximum eclipse viewed along the red line. Source: Supplied


Amateur enthusiasts are being joined by scientists from around the world who will be researching the eclipse's impact on north Queensland's prolific bird and animal life, as well as one of the deepest mysteries of solar physics: coronal heating.

Solar eclipse FNQ: at totality viewers will see a black disc with the suns glowing corona stretching around it. Source: Supplied

The sun's corona or outer atmosphere is a million degrees celsius warmer than its 6000 degrees surface, and the few brief minutes of totality are a very rare opportunity for researchers to work out why.

After a 14,500km celestial trek across the Pacific Ocean, the eclipse will end 800km west of Chile.

A partial eclipse will be visible right down Australia's east coast, across New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, eastern Indonesia and the southern part of Chile and Argentina, according to Britain's Royal Astronomical Society.

As the sun re-emerges from behind the moon, 700 runners will begin the Solar Eclipse Marathon in Port Douglas.

In a nod to the far north's hippy past, an eclectic mix of DJs, techno and folk acts are performing at the week-long Eclipse Festival, near the remote Palmer River Roadhouse.

The eclipse is the first to occur in Australia since Ceduna in South Australia was plunged into darkness ten years ago.

Australian eclipse watchers will have to wait until 2028 for the next total solar eclipse visible from Australian shores.
 


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'Grave fears' for missing women

Police in Melbourne are appealing for public assistance to help find two missing women

Missing woman Sandra Pevitt, inset, and her silver Hyandai. Source: Herald Sun

Katie Dircks was last seen on Friday night. Source: Herald Sun

POLICE are appealing for missing woman Sandra Pevitt to make contact after it was revealed she accessed her bank account two days after she was last seen.

The search continues for 45-year-old Ms Pevitt after she vanished five days ago.

Ms Pevitt, of Werribee, was reported missing but detectives have since discovered she accessed her bank account from a Tarneit shopping centre on Friday.

It is not known how much money she took from the account.

Werribee CIU detective Sen-Constable Dave Reynolds said police had CCTV footage of Ms Pevitt "frequenting local shopping centres".

There were also indications she had been using her silver Hyundai car, he said.

On footage taken at a Tarneit shopping centre, Ms Pevitt was alone and appeared to be "just going about her business".

Police are still reviewing other CCTV footage but did not release details of where it came from.

But Sen-Constable Reynolds said police were still very concerned for Ms Pevitt's physical, mental and emotional state as she had not contacted family or friends.

"It is very much out of character for Sandra to not make contact with family and friends," he said.

He appealed to Ms Pevitt, or anyone who knew her whereabouts, to contact police.

More coverage at Wyndham Leader

Ms Pevitt left her Werribee home at 8.30am on Wednesday and had told a family member she was going to see a doctor that day.

She did not see the doctor and she has not been seen since.

Her sister, Leanne Snaize, said there had been nothing to indicate anything was wrong.

Sandra Pevitt's partner Paul Czech and sister Leanne Snaize. Picture: Mike Keating Source: Herald Sun

She said her sister loved her nieces and nephews and was deeply missed.

"She walks in the room and you know Sandra's there. Sandra makes the party," Mrs Snaize said.

Ms Pevitt's partner, Paul Czech, said there was no explanation. He said she was a sensitive person with a great sense of humour.

"Obviously everybody's desperately worried. Everybody has been trying every avenue they can possibly try (to find her). We miss her terribly," he said.

Mr Czech urged Ms Pevitt to get in touch.

"She's loved. Please, make contact with somebody," he said.

Ms Pevitt is 167cm tall, of medium build with brown shoulder-length straight hair, brown eyes and wearing frameless glasses.

She was last seen wearing blue jeans, a grey sports top, brown and white knitted jacket and white runners with a pink trim.

Her vehicle, a 2010 Hyundai i30 wagon, is registered XVL-284.

Meanwhile,  an Elwood woman missing for several days has been found safe and well.

Katie Dircks, 30, had not been seen since Friday but was found today in Tasmania.

- with James Twining, Jon Kaila and Mark Buttner


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'Ugh. I think this interview's done'

Melissa George in a scene from the TV show Hunted. Source: Supplied

THE Morning Show wasn't the only victim of Melissa George's Home and Away-related wrath this past week.

See what happened on The Morning Show

No Home and Away meltdown on UK chat show

mX's Jane Watkins copped a dial tone to the ear when she spoke to the actor.

Read the transcript here.

mX: What have you been up to while you're back in Australia?

Melissa George: I am doing a movie on Monday (today) with Joel Edgerton.

mX: What can you tell us about that movie?

Melissa George: It's called Felony and I believe if you look it up you can get the proper synopsis.

mX: What about your spy drama TV show Hunted? It premieres here this month on SBS, but it's been on air for a while in the UK, right?

Melissa George: Yes. It's been out in America and the UK for a while.

mX: And how would you describe the show?

Melissa George: It's set in the espionage world of security, of a high-security fund, and we don't know if we're working for the good guys or the bad guys.

mX: Has playing a character working with the CIA on Alias been much help in preparing for Hunted?

Melissa George: (Alias character) Lauren Reed was nowhere near (Hunted character) Sam Hunter. The physicality really helped. I got taught a fight technique called Keysi that's taught to Bond, Bourne and Batman. The three Bs. I'm one of the first females to get taught this.

mX: Has the fight training given you a new, emboldened swagger when you walk down the street?

Melissa George: Oh, more, much more. When I'm in New York City, it's like I want to pick a fight.

Melissa George through the years

Melissa George through the years

Melissa George through the years

Melissa George through the years

Melissa George through the years

Melissa George through the years

mX: Your character uses a lot of code words in Hunted? I was wondering if we could throw some words and phrases at you and you could explain what they mean to you.

Melissa George: OK.

mX: What about the term ''authorised removal''?

Melissa George: As an example, (Hunted character) Keel will authorise removal of a certain person and that means, basically, go kill them. My boss in the show could use it on me but he knows I could use it on him, too, with my own bare hands.

mX: What does ''Byzantium'' mean to you?

Melissa George: That's the name of the security firm that hires her.

mX: And ''Lex Shrapnel''?

Melissa George: Lex Shrapnel is a wonderful actor who plays one of the characters in the show.

mX: That's his real name, not his spy alias?

Melissa George: Nah, that's him. That's his real name. Lex Shrapnel is one of my dearest, dearest friends. I love this guy. He's so great.

mX: What about the word ''mole''. It's not used on Hunted the same way an Aussie would say it?

Melissa George: Very different, but maybe it has a similar feeling.

mX: And what about Alf Stewart's catchphrase ''ya flamin' great galah''?

Melissa George: Oh, c'mon. Whatever.

mX: Do you get a lot of Home & Away questions when you're back in Australia?

Melissa George: Ugh, pass. I think this interview's done. Thank you. (Phone dial tone.)


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Desperate Ken's unreal estate offer

Ken Slamet outside the house he is desperately trying to sell in St Ives. Picture: Tim Hunter.
 

NO cash for a deposit? Bad credit rating? Can't get a loan? Don't worry, you can still buy a luxury pad in upmarket St Ives.

Ken Slamet will take your car, boat or whatever's lying around as a deposit for his father-in-law's home.

The 25-year-old is so desperate to sell he has tacked signs to telegraph poles and worn a sandwich board around St Ives offering the five-bedroom home on a rent-to-buy scheme.

"It's like Radio Rentals. You rent for a while, and if you like it by the end of a period, you can choose to buy it or walk away," Mr Slamet said.

The signs have attracted a lot of calls from recent migrants who can't get loans or high-income earners with a poor savings record.

"Even a 10 per cent deposit requires $150,000 in your bank account," Mr Slamet said. "Who's got that money lying around for a rainy day?"

The house at 228 Warrimoo Ave has been on the market through an agent for more than 100 days, pulling in ridiculously low offers, Mr Slamet said.

"Rather than negotiating the price, we're trying to negotiate the way people buy it, by offering finance."

He is proposing a buyer would pay $2297 a week for the home until they owned enough of the property to refinance with a bank and pay out the final amount.

"The people that have called haven't even asked for the full price of the house," he said. "They're seeing it more as an opportunity to own a house with weekly payments."

A year of rent-to-buy payments would offer Mr Slamet breathing space.

President of the Real Estate Institute of NSW Christian Payne said it was tricky.

"What if his valuation doesn't stack up? You can't take his word for the value of the property," he said.

Both vendors and buyers determine the value of a home based on emotion, and the figures don't always match up, Mr Payne said.

Depending on the deposit, Mr Slamet is seeking between $1.5 million and $1.6 million for the house his wife grew up in.

"It's a trade-off for someone to get in the door," he said.

Government and consumer watchdog organisations warn against rent-to-buy schemes.

Pitfalls can include:

The rent that is charged is often in excess of the market rent.

The price paid for the home is often in excess of the market value.

The biggest danger is the 'buyer' is legally not the homeowner. Their most important right, having their name on the title of the property, is denied to them under a rent-to-buy arrangement. This means that the buyer can meet all their payments but if anything goes wrong from the seller's end, the buyer can lose everything.

If the seller falls behind in loan payments, their lender can repossess the home and kick out the buyer. If the buyer gets behind in their payments, the seller can then kick out the buyer and keep their money.

In the United States, rent-to-buy schemes are often known as 'lease options'. There have been instances where sellers have 'turned over' the same property to a dozen or more buyers.

Source: Jenman Ethics in Real Estate

 


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Sica allegedly had sex with nine-year-old

A NINE-year-old girl started documenting her almost four-year intimate sexual relationship with convicted triple murderer Massimo "Max" Sica in a series of coded diary entries, a court has been told.

Brisbane District Court judge Michael Shanahan was told the girl even showed the allegedly damning diaries to Sica's dad, Carlo, before destroying them to protect the killer she claimed to be in love with.

The court was told Sica is alleged to have had sex with the girl on numerous occasions, including in his parent's matrimonial bed, in a public park while delivering take-out meals from one of his parents' restaurants and after celebrating the girl's 12th birthday with cake.

Sica, now aged 42, yesterday pleaded not guilty to 21 sex offences, including two counts of rape and one of maintaining a sexual relationship with a child between November 15, 2004, and September 10, 2008.

Prosecutors said Sica, then aged 35 to 39, was also charged with nine counts each of unlawful carnal knowledge and indecent dealing of a child under 16.

Judge Shanahan was told Sica's alleged sexual relationship with the girl lasted from when she was nine until she was 13.

Prosecutor Todd Fuller, SC, said the alleged relationship was revealed when the girl told school friends she was in love with an older man with whom she was having sex.

In July, a Brisbane Supreme Court jury found Sica guilty of the 2003 murder of the Singh siblings Neelma, 24, Kunal, 18, and Sidhi, 12. He received a minimum 35-year jail term.

Publication of Sica's previous offending would normally be prohibited during a trial for unrelated offences, however Sica sought and won an application to have the trial heard before a judge only and not before a jury.

Details of Sica's past could be prejudicial if the matter was heard by an impartial jury, but are not likely to have any impact on a judge.

Judge Shanahan has adjourned the trial until tomorrow.


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Holden, Ford join forces for survival

Written By Unknown on Senin, 05 November 2012 | 23.18

This undated handout photo received 02 Jun 2009 shows workers fitting parts to Holden motor car on the general assembly line at GM Holden's Elizabeth factory in South Australia. Australian carmaker GM Holden on 02 Jun 2009 gave assurances its future was safe despite the bankruptcy of US parent General Motors, adding it had no plans to shed jobs. RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE NO SALES NO COMMERCIAL USE AFP PHOTO / HO / GM CORP Source: AFP

HOLDEN and Ford have put aside their rivalry to save collapsed parts supplier Autodom, whose factories should be up and running today after last Thursdays shutdown.

The carmakers have agreed to take on Autodoms estimated $6.5 million debt and underwrite the operation of the company while receivers restructure the business after being appointed late last night.

An official announcement is expected this morning.

Autodom's previous management is understood to have been dismissed, and the company will likely be broken up into smaller parts.

Holden spokesman Craig Cheetham told News Limited that the carmakers "have acted together in the broader interest of the Australian motor industry and its continued ability to build cars and keep people in work".

"Quite clearly, it illustrates our commitment to ensuring that the automotive industry, and the multiplier effect it has on employment across Australia, are important to the country's future," he said.

Holden and Ford will not have control of the parts supply operations, but their quick action will ensure there is little or no disruption to their factories in Adelaide and Melbourne respectively.

Holden says workers at its Elizabeth factory are due back today.

"If (Autodom) goes back to work in the morning and we get the parts through, it looks like we might make it with very little disruption," Mr Cheetham said last night.

Ford said its employees would be back to work on Wednesday after a compulsory company holiday yesterday and the Melbourne Cup public holiday in Victortia today.

"We have told our employees to be back at work on Wednesday," spokeswoman Sinead Phipps said last night.

Ford says this is the closest it has worked with Holden on such a critical issue.

"Weve worked together on smaller projects, but I'm not aware we've done anything like this before," Ms Phipps said. "It was in both our interests to find a resolution."

Holden gets most Autodom parts from it's Woodville facility in Adelaide, while Ford obtains most from facilities in Gisbon and Dandenong on the outskirts of Melbourne.

However, it is likely that the various Autodom operations will be separated by the receivers and each sold as a going concern.

Meanwhile, Holden says it is too early to say how many people have expressed interest in the redundancy program it announced late last week.

"We announced the program Friday and its a rostered day off today, so it's too early to gauge interest," Mr Cheetham said.

Holden factory workers at Elizabeth have two weeks to apply for 170 voluntary redundancies that will take effect before Christmas.


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My childhood hell, by Peaches Geldof

Dickensian childhood: Peaches Geldof said she and her siblings went to school the day after their mother's accidental overdose. Source: Getty Images

AT seven, her idyllic childhood was ripped apart when her parents divorced. By 11, her beloved mother was dead from a heroin overdose.

Peaches Geldof has spoken for the first time about her heartache, telling Elle magazine she is determined to give her baby son Astala the stable family life she never had.

The 23-year-old said she had never got over the divorce of her mother Paula Yates and father Sir Bob Geldof. And although she admitted turning to drink and drugs as a teenager, she said the memory of her mother always stopped her spiralling out of control.

Paula Yates with ex-husband Bob Geldof in 1993. Source: Supplied

Geldof says: "My parents had gone through a very public, bitter divorce and I was very much old enough to see what was going on. People talked about us and I knew it was horrendously bad.

"I was completely aware of the whole situation, the transition of my mother who was amazing, who wrote books on parenting, who gave us this idyllic childhood in Kent; and who then turned into this heartbroken shell of a woman who was just medicating to get through the day.

"On top of that, there was my father who was very embittered and depressed about it and for us children, an environment that was impossible, veering between a week with my mother that was complete chaos, and then with my father, which was almost Dickensian. homework, dinner, bed because he was trying in his own way to combat what was going on at my mother's.

"It was like living on a permanent see-saw and very scary and sad. Those feelings have always stayed with me, they just never went away.''

Michael Hutchence and Paula Yates with baby Heavenly Hiraani Tiger Lily in Sydney in 1997. Picture: Jeff Darmanin Source: News Limited

Geldof was six when her mother left Sir Bob for INXS singer Michael Hutchence. Her parents divorced in 1996.
Hutchence was found hanged in a Sydney hotel room in 1997, and three years later Yates died from an accidental heroin overdose.

Geldof said: "I remember the day my mother died, and it's still hard to talk about it. I just blocked it out. I went to school the next day because my father's mentality was 'keep calm and carry on'.

"So we all went to school and tried to act as if nothing had happened. But it had happened. I didn't grieve. I didn't cry at her funeral. I couldn't express anything because I was just numb to it all.

"I didn't start grieving for my mother properly until I was maybe 16.''


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Two down, three to go on Big Brother

Big Brother contestant Zoe. Picture: Channel 9 Source: Supplied

BIG Brother's bizarre love triangle has come to an end, as Zoe Westgarth, 23 and the object of her obsession, Michael Beveridge, 26 have both been shown the door.

That leaves Gold Coast beautician Layla Subritzky, 26, Melbourne law student Estelle Landy, 24, and Melbourne accounts manager Benjamin Norris, 32, each with a one-in-three chance of winning $250,000 in Wednesday night's finale. It's looking like it will go down to the wire with the frontrunners currently separated by less than one percentage point.

While fun-loving country girl Zoe always was an unlikely winner, especially after a week in which she constantly complained about frontrunner Estelle's supposed "betrayal", Michael had been the long standing favourite to win until Sunday.

But viewers either cooled on the redhead's constant bum-crack displays or, more likely, weren't impressed by his hypocritical surprise late fling with former foe Estelle, who he despised for the first ten weeks and called "the fakest human being alive".

Many have suggested the Brisbane advertising copywriter was just trying to ride off of Estelle's popularity.

"I wasn't doing it for strategy," he protested after eviction. "I just never gave her a chance (before)."

The tension in the house over the romance boiled over in recent days after Zoe - who Michael has never shown any interest in - started giving the couple death stares.

"I've spent the last eight weeks obsessing over him," the Warren teaching student warned Estelle. "Stick with (former housemate) Ryan." Michael replied: "Take it easy, psycho!"

Estelle has leapfrogged the other contestants to become the bookies' favourite to win the finale at $1.75 on Sportsbet. She was well ahead of Benjamin on $3.50 and Layla on $4.00. The betting plunge on Estelle came after viewer votes were unveiled on Sunday night's show, leaving her with a comfortable lead.

The finale, which starts at 7pm on Wednesday, is expected to rate in excess of 1.5 million for Nine. The network has already announced the show will return in 2013.

 Blog here with Zoe (noon, AEDT) and Michael (12.30pm AEDT)


 


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Melanoma wonder drug out of reach

Two new life-extending drugs may be made available to people with an advanced form of skin cancer in the UK.

Anna Harper and daughter Emily. The Melbourne mum was given just weeks to live, but now 90 per cent of her cancer is gone. Picture: Andrew Tauber. Source: Herald Sun

ANNA Harper was given two months to live in February after being diagnosed with a rapidly spreading melanoma but, after treatment with a new drug, 90 per cent of her cancer has disappeared.

The Melbourne mother of two was treated with a medicine that is subsidised for use in the UK , but has twice been knocked back for subsidy in Australia, even though we hold the dubious honour of being the skin cancer hotspot of the world.

More than 10,000 people are diagnosed with skin cancer in Australia each year, 1200 die from the disease and the chance of getting melanoma here is 48 in 100,000, compared with 17 in 100,000 in the UK.

American-made drug Yervoy uses the body's immune system to fight off advanced skin cancer.

It has been registered for use in Australia but costs $120,000 for each treatment.

And subsidy knockbacks prompted drug company Bristol Myers Squibb to axe its patient access scheme, which provided Yervoy for free - and which enabled Mrs Harper to get the drug.

The Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee will consider a third submission for a subsidy this week.

Graeme Webb, whose melanoma has spread to his lungs, bowel and pelvis is desperate to try the $120,000 treatment to buy more time with his wife Katie and two small sons Lawson, two and Fletcher, six months, but can't afford it.

"I'm certainly not wanting to put my family in a situation where I'm selling the house to access a drug," the Perth father said.

The drug has put the issue of whether society can afford highly expensive medical treatments back on the agenda.

Professor of Melanoma Biology at the University of Sydney, Peter Hersey, says the 30 per cent of advanced melanoma patients who benefit from Yervoy have their survival rate doubled.

Half the patients using standard chemotherapy treatments survive for 6-9 months with advanced melanoma, while with Yervoy their expected survival rate is 18-19 months, he said.

Some are even alive five years after starting the treatment.

"The problem is we can't tell which patients will respond, that's why we've had difficulty convincing the PBAC of its benefit," he said.

"If it costs less than $50,000 or less to save a year of life it's almost automatically approved, if it's $70,000 it's more difficult to prove and Yervoy is way above that," he said.

"Yervoy and another treatment Vemurafenib which works in 40 per cent of melanoma patients who have a gene mutation are the first drugs to show a survival advantage in melanoma," Professor Henry said.

"The history of treating melanoma patients is once it's spread from the skin has been fairly dismal, nothing had an effect at all on survival until trials of Yervoy," he said.

Mrs Harper said that "for me its been life saving".

"If it hadn't worked, I wouldn't be here or I'd be sick in hospital," she said.

Yervoy patients require just four treatments a month apart. However, the drug has serious side effects with some patients dying from toxicity or bowel perforations.


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A hundred million reasons to dream

Monique Gardner with her daughters, Mink, 3, Petra, 2, and baby Matisse, 4 months / Pic: Craig Greenhill Source: The Daily Telegraph

IT'S the impossible dream families across Australia are hoping will come true for them today - lower interest rates, a win in the Melbourne Cup and a share in a record Oz Lotto jackpot.

"It's like everyone says, we would help the family, buy a house, travel the world and just set the girls up," Mrs Gardner said of the potential win."I go and buy my gossip magazine and then I pick up my lottery."

The first Tuesday in November is also the one day of the year that Mrs Gardner tries her luck with a bet on the Melbourne Cup.

But rather than study the form, she opts for a mystery trifecta.

What would you do if you won $100 million? Tell us below

"I don't even walk into a TAB unless it's Melbourne Cup," she said.

"I find the TAB really intimidating because I'm not a gambler but that's probably the one day when you can walk in and know everyone's in the same boat."

Ultimately, the Gardner family is hoping for a winner in some form today, even if it is just lower interest rates after the Reserve Bank meets.

"I'm not very optimistic when it comes to interest rates, I'm more optimistic about winning the lotto."


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Calendar reveals nature's sky show

A page from the Bureau of Meterology's 2013 calender. A thunderstorm threatens the Gold Coast. Picture: Ann Van Breemen Source: Supplied

A page from the Bureau of Meterology's 2013 calender. Lightning illuminates a cumulonimbus cloud over Corio Bay, Victoria. Picture: James Collier Source: Supplied

A page from the Bureau of Meterology's 2013 calender. The shadows of cumulus clouds dapple the parallel dunes of the Simpson Desert, in the NT. Picture: Steve Strike Source: Supplied

A page from the Bureau of Meterology's 2013 calender. A wall of dust - a massive dust storm rolls over the Arkaroola Wilderness Sanctuary in the northern Flinders Ranges of South Australia. Picture: Peter MacDonald Source: Supplied

A page from the Bureau of Meterology's 2013 calender. The ethereal beauty of a mist bow and fog at Mount Anne in Tasmania. Picture: Grant Dixon Source: Supplied

A BOLT from the blue, rolling red dust and immense, fluffy white clouds colour the pages of the latest Australian Weather Calendar.

Now in its 29th year, the popular calendar from the Bureau of Meteorology combines striking images with detailed information about each weather event.

When an isolated, intense thunderstorm cell developed suddenly over Avalon Airport near Port Phillip Bay in Victoria, James Collier from Newtown was "in the right place at the right time".

"I'm a mad keen photographer," Mr Collier said.

"We don't get a lot of storms down here, so if I get the chance I'll try and get out and get a few lightning shots.

"That shot was a case of being in the right place at the right time, because it was quite a small, isolated thunderstorm but it was letting off a lot of sheet lighting as well as a few big bolts."

In South Australia, storm chaser Helen Simpson from Burra, saw the shape of an anvil in the clouds.

Meanwhile Peter MacDonald, from Hawker, witnessed a massive dust storm rolling over the Arkaroola Wilderness Sanctuary in the northern Flinders Ranges. He said he was almost mesmerised and left it too late to run away, so everything from his camera to his car had to be carefully cleaned afterwards.

The theme for this year's calendar is "Data from the Void".

Every month contains detailed information about an aspect of the bureau's monitoring network, such as satellites, deep-diving ocean gliders and real-time tide gauges.

The calendar is available from tomorrow online here and at Bureau of Meteorology offices.


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Buyers baulk at online shopping tax

Convience: Patricia Tanks, pictured with her daughter Sofia and son Rocco, finds online shopping easier. Picture: Mark Calleja. Source: The Courier-Mail

ONLINE shoppers are angry they could be forced to pay tax on goods bought from overseas websites but retailers say it will help revive their struggling industry.

Under recommendations in the Federal Government's goods and services tax review, the suggested changes could result in Australian online shoppers being hit with GST costs when buying goods from international websites.

Online shopper Patricia Tanks, 43, said she regularly shopped online for "convenience".

"There are some things that you can't buy here and there's not as much variety as overseas," she said.

"I don't buy online because it's cheaper, I do it because it's convenient, I'm a mother of three children."

Shoppers don't pay GST on goods bought for less than $1000 on overseas internet purchases.

Shopper Estelle Oliveri said the introduction of GST on goods bought overseas wouldn't put her off buying from international websites.

"I wouldn't be happy about it," she said.

"If I desperately wanted it, I would buy it regardless."

A 2011 review found if the tax-free threshold on internet goods were lowered from $1000 to $100, it would cost about $500 million for the Federal Government to implement and has been deemed far too expensive to do.

But Australian Retailers Association executive director Russell Zimmerman said changes needed to be made.

"It needs to be a level playing field, retailers that are retailing online in Australia have to pay the GST as do bricks and mortar retailers," he said.

"Where those products are coming in from overseas, that's where it's hurting the Australian retailer."

Mr Zimmerman said GST charges on overseas goods would help improve the nation's unemployment levels and boost the economy.

"The industry employs something in the area of 1.2 million people, so from that perspective the consumers are supporting the jobs," he said.

"We are protecting some of those jobs for our kids and grandkids and ensuring the retail industry can survive."

New figures released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics yesterday showed retail spending rose 0.5 per cent in September.

CommSec economist Savanth Sebastian said if the tax threshold was lowered for overseas online sales, it would be a good result for the Australian economy.

"It makes the environment more competitive and fair across local retailers as well as the online retailers and that's a good outcome," he said. "Yes it means more money into the Government's coffers, but that money can certainly be used in other parts of the economy."

Treasurer Wayne Swan yesterday told radio the Government was not considering changing the GST because it would hit struggling Australians hard.

Retail magnate Gerry Harvey, who has been a strong advocate in introducing a tax on overseas goods, said he did not want to speak on the issue.

He said he was attacked after fighting for changes to be made in 2010.


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