Ten Cate takes over at Pana

Monday, June 16th, 2008

Panathinaikos have unveiled former Ajax boss Henk ten Cate as their new coach.

The 53-year-old Dutchman has signed a two-year contract with the Athens club. He moves to Greece after being sacked as an assistant coach with Chelsea, who he helped to the Champions League final.

He added: “Panathinaikos’ organisation, history, ambition and attitude towards football in general match those of the greatest football clubs in Europe, so I’m confident that we will achieve our goals. I’m looking forward to coming to Athens and meeting my players.”

Ten Cate inherits a team that finished third in the Super League last season. The campaign was a huge disappointment as the club had sought to mark its centenary with a league title, and coach Jose Peseiro was sacked at the end of the season.

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Mugabe defiant as poll battle goes to court

Monday, April 7th, 2008

Zimbabwe charges two foreign journalists

Lawyers representing Morgan Tsvangirai%26#39;s Movement for Democratic Change will ask a high court in Harare for an order compelling election officials to issue the results immediately, ending a delay that has raised suspicions of a tainted vote.
The MDC claims Tsvangirai defeated Mugabe and should be declared president of the economically devastated African nation, but independent observers say the MDC leader did not win an outright majority and faces a run-off against Mugabe.
The court case will begin overnight according to MDC spokesman Nelson Chamisa.
%26quot;We want an urgent release of the results, within four hours of the court order,%26quot; he said. %26quot;We%26#39;re fighting the anxiety, disappointment, speculation and rumours as a result of this delay.%26quot;
Senior officials of Mugabe%26#39;s ruling ZANU-PF party said on Friday that they would back the 84-year-old veteran in the second round of voting, ending speculation earlier in the week that they might ask him to step down.
ZANU-PF said it would challenge some of the results of the parliamentary election, which showed it lost control of the lower house. Preliminary results from the upper chamber show Mugabe%26#39;s party ahead by three seats.
The government-run Herald newspaper reported on Saturday that a provincial elections officer had been arrested in Zimbabwe%26#39;s Midlands over charges that some polling stations under him had inflated vote tallies for the MDC and recorded lower votes for Mugabe and parliamentary ZANU-PF candidates.
%26quot;ZANU-PF in the province say they are checking every ward as they suspect a wider conspiracy,%26quot; it said.
Mugabe%26#39;s officials said on Friday his party would go to court over what it alleged was bribery of electoral officials in some places, but was already preparing for a run-off.
It is not clear when the run-off would occur. Zimbabwean law requires that it be held within three weeks, but the ruling party hinted on Friday that the timing might be changed.
The hardening of the ruling party%26#39;s position has punctured the guarded optimism that had emerged among the opposition and Mugabe%26#39;s critics in the West, who hoped the ex-liberation war fighter would concede defeat.
The MDC said in advertisements placed in South African newspapers on Saturday that it wanted peace.
%26quot;At this stage we offer the hand of peace to the current regime, and will recognise and respect their rights if the transition is expedited without further ado, but this offer will not remain open indefinitely,%26quot; the MDC said.
Former colonial ruler Britain and the United States, both of whom have applied sanctions on Mugabe and his top officials, have criticised the election delay and suggested it could be the precursor to a rigged result.
Mugabe%26#39;s government is widely accused in the West of stealing previous presidential and parliamentary elections, and his removal is seen by Washington and London as necessary to rebuilding Zimbabwe%26#39;s shattered economy.
Zimbabweans are struggling with the world%26#39;s highest inflation of more than 100,000 percent, mass unemployment and chronic shortages of meat, bread, fuel and other basic goods.
Worries that tensions could explode rose on Friday when liberation war veterans, a pro-Mugabe group that has in the past intimidated government opponents and violently occupied white-owned farms, attacked the MDC for claiming victory.
%26quot;These are all provocations against us freedom fighters,%26quot; veterans%26#39; leader Jabulani Sibanda told a news conference.
He said the veterans would repel any attempt by white farmers to reclaim properties seized by Mugabe. %26quot;It now looks like these elections were a way to open for the re-invasion of this country (by the British),%26quot; he said.
The farm seizures, part of a government policy of redistributing land to poor blacks, are often blamed for the devastation of Zimbabwe%26#39;s farm sector.
Food output has fallen sharply since the seizures began in 2000 and Zimbabwe, once an exporter, now relies on food imports and handouts to feed its people.

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Young stars take big step towards Beijing glory

Sunday, April 6th, 2008

IT IS not quite right to say Australia has this week discovered
a generation of young guns to take to this year’s Beijing Olympics.
It has been more like the talent on show during the Olympic
selection trials, which end tonight, has been talked about for some
time around swimming circles and has stepped up to grab the chance
to compete in August.
In doing that, 15-year-olds such as Emily Seebohm and Cate
Campbell have performed like seasoned professionals %26#151; Seebohm,
in particular, setting a dazzling standard that had exceeded all
other Australian women in the 100 metres backstroke and for one day
surpassed all others in the world in the 50.
And Seebohm reminded people of her real age with her exuberant
displays after her wins %26#151; the most memorable being her
exclamation, “I’m going to be in the Guiness Books of World
Records” when she broke the 50 backstroke world mark on the opening
night of competition.
However, there is a host of young talent coming through just
behind the more seasoned performers. These include Matt Targett,
Kenrick Monk, new glamour girl Stephanie Rice, Bronte Barratt,
Samantha Hamill, Andrew Lauterstein, butterflier Nick D’arcy and
backstrokers Ashley Delaney and Hayden Stoeckel.
The group %26#151; some of whom had a taste of international
competition at last year’s world championships and the 2006
Commonwealth Games in Melbourne %26#151; this week showed their
potential by earning selection in the Olympic team.
Lauterstein said it had been a cut-throat process.
“Before the 100 free final, sitting next to Eamon (Sullivan), he
asked ‘are you ready to go?’ and I said ‘I guess I have to be’,”
Lauterstein said. “It all comes down to being ready. On (Wednesday)
night it was at 8.40pm.
“It’s crazy to think that years and years (of preparation) comes
down to a timeline and if you’re not ready, bad luck. It’s
cut-throat but it’s good, though. It brings out the best in some
and not in others.”
National youth coach Leigh Nugent has been responsible for
identifying and developing the talent that has been coming through
the ranks. A large portion of his focus has been on rebuilding the
men’s team that went through a period of disappointing results
following the Athens Olympics and through to last year’s world
championships, where the first signs of a revival were seen.
He was confident the current and future crops of men would
provide more sustainable success.
“The recovery that has been made has been quite significant and
rebuilding the men’s team takes so long. It’s taken these guys long
enough to get the experience and perhaps they are a little bit
older than the odd sensation who breaks through as a teenager,” he
said.
“(But) we’re looking for sustainability, not sensation
really.”
EMILY SEEBOHM
Announced herself a worldclass talent in the making when she
came fourth in the 100m backstroke at last year’s world titles at
14.
A few months earlier she had dead-heated the final of the
national titles with defending champion Tay Zimmer.
She has set some staggering times at this week’s Olympic trials
which have set her up as a genuine gold medal contender in the 100
backstroke.
That event has for so long been the domain of American superstar
Natalie Coughlin.
Seebohm twice broke the watershed 60-second barrier on her way
to winning during the week and showed great steel in the final when
she withstood the challenges of Sophie Edington and Belinda Hocking
in the fastest female 100 backstroke event in this country.
She will be 16 by the time Beijing comes around and declared
this week, “Natalie Coughlin, I’m coming”.
CATE CAMPBELL
Another 15-year-old rising star, there had been talk in swimming
circles about her for some time before she grabbed wider attention
by beating Libby Trickett (nee Lenton) in the 50 freestyle final at
the Japan Open last year in 24.
48, faster than any other Australian woman over the one lap.
The Brisbane-based Campbell, the eldest of five children, was
born and raised in Malawi of South African parents.
The family moved to Australia when she was nine to seek better
care for her handicapped brother.
She stumbled on the training squad of Simon Cusack over five
years ago when she went to the local school pool looking for a way
to meet friends as she was being home schooled.
She has now earned a berth in the 100 freestyle in Beijing after
finishing second to the world record-breaking effort of Libby
Trickett and can gain another individual spot in the 50 freestyle
final tonight.
She will also be an important member of the 4×100 freestyle
relay team.
STEPHANIE RICE
Her life has gone from talented team member to the better half
of Australia’s newest glamour couple - her partner being freestyle
sprint champion Eamon Sullivan - in just a few days.
Rice had earned respect as a quality 200 and 400 individual
medley swimmer by winning both events at the 2006 Commonwealth
Games and then winning dual bronze at last year’s world
championships.
However, she was largely seen as behind the likes of Zimbabwe’s
Kirsty Coventry and American Katie Hoff until last weekend when she
smashed Hoff’s 400IM world record.
She then backed that up by snatching the 200IM world record a
few days later.
In between those two achievements she posted a time in the 200
freestyle semifinals that showed she would be a valuable member of
the 4×200 freestyle relay team in Beijing.
ANDREW LAUTERSTEIN
Lauterstein chose to become a backstroker because he believed
that gave him the best chance to break into the Australian
team.
But that was until team officials encouraged the former
Victorian and his Gold Coast-based coach, Glenn Baker, to change to
the freestyle and butterfly ranks which needed replenishing with
the ageing of the once mighty generation of Australian
swimmers.
Since then, Lauterstein’s career prospects have shot ahead,
culminating in him earning a place in Beijing with his third
placing in the 100 freestyle final, which ensures him a place in
the 4×100 freestyle relay squad.
Last night he sealed his place by winning the 100 butterfly.
MATT TARGETT
The 22-year-old has recently returned to Melbourne after two
years in the collegiate system in America.
He came back to Ian Pope’s squad after the disappointment of
missing the world titles team last year.
The move paid off when he gained second place behind the flying
Eamon Sullivan in the 100 final thus earning him an individual race
in Beijing and, like Lauterstein, an entry into the squad for the
4×100 freestyle team.
He was also aiming for an individual swim in his pet event the
50 freestyle, which had its final last night.
Pope, who has trained Targett since he was 11 years old and
continued to liaise with him during his time in the US where former
Australian sprint champion and former Pope squad member Brett Hawke
is an assistant coach, said Targett was completely out of the
freestyle sprinters mould of eccentricity and cheekiness.
BRONTE BARRATT
Came to prominence when she last year broke Tracey Wickham’s 400
freestyle national (and Commonwealth) record which had been the
world record in Berlin in 1978.
The 19-year-old has secured her berth at Beijing in the 200 and
400 freestyle after top-two placings during the week.
Barratt was surprised by Linda MacKenzie in the 400 but the
teenager turned the tables on MacKenzie to win the 200.
Barratt’s coach, John Rodgers, believes she now has the class to
take on some of the big names among the events such as Laure
Manaudou, Natalie Coughlin, Federica Pellegrini, Kate Ziegler and
Katie Hoff.
Rodgers has never doubted her ability.
“When she was 12 I told her she would go to the Olympics and now
this is the fruition of eight years.
we’ve worked at it, got better at it, got faster and we’ve done
a lot of good work and I think she’ll go even faster.
She is (a genuine medal contender) in both and I think by the
time she gets there she’ll be an even better swimmer.”
KENRICK MONK
Came into the public spotlight in 2006 after being called up to
replace swimming superstar Ian Thorpe after he pulled out of the
Commonwealth Games team due to illness.
Monk has developed into a world-class competitor as his body
developed into racing muscle.
The 20-year-old has had a number of impressive performances
including his fourth placing in the 200 at last year’s world
titles.
He duly earned his individual berth in the 200 when second
behind Grant Hackett on Monday and will be a member of the 4×200
freestyle relay team for Beijing.
If things go to plan, he will be racing superstar Michael Phelps
in the 200 final, but he does not flinch from the challenge despite
the aura still surrounding the American superstar’s effort in
demolishing Thorpe’s world record at last year’s world
championships.
SAMANTHA HAMILL
The talented 17-yearold has already won 12 national titles and
had success at junior international meets, but has now broken
through to the senior ranks in the past week.
She was second behind the world record-breaking performance of
Stephanie Rice in the 400IM on the first night of competition.
She then pushed world champion Jess Schipper in the 200
butterfly.
National youth coach Leigh Nugent said the smallframed Hamill,
who moved from Victoria to Queensland’s Sunshine Coast a few years
ago, was tenacious.
“That’s her big plus, she’s a little girl with a big heart.
She’s got a great work ethic … got incredible determination
and is a wonderful athlete,” he said.

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Trickett celebrates with a treat

Sunday, April 6th, 2008

Spaghetti and chocolate. What better way to celebrate becoming a
world record holder and breaking through a barrier thought
impregnable not too long ago?
That was victory supper for Libby Trickett last night after
she smashed the world 100m freestyle record of German Britta
Steffen (53.30s), and became the first woman to swim under 53
seconds, with her stunning 52.88s performance.
But there was little rest for the new world record holder. She
was back in the pool this morning swimming the heats of the 50m
freestyle, and while she was only seventh fastest with a very
leisurely 26.05s, it was enough to see her advance to tonight’s
semi-finals.
“I didn’t get a lot of sleep last night, I was in bed by
midnight but I couldn’t sleep. So this morning was just about
making the semis, so I’m happy with that swim,” Trickett said.

Asked about how she celebrated, she replied: “I had spaghetti and a
little chocolate as well … don’t tell Stephan (Widmer, her
coach).
“Look it’s part of this sport we’re in. Even if you have
successes or disappointments, you still have more work to do.
Coming in and having to race again brings you back to reality, but
I’m very proud of my achievement last night.”
After her amazing performance, the question must be asked if
Trickett can now take a shot at the 50m freestyle world record.
That time stands at 24.09s set this week by Dutch sprinter Marleen
Veldhuis at the European Championships in The Netherlands.
Trickett’s best time stands at 24.53s, so she still has a long
way to go to get near the Dutchwoman’s mark.
“I would be so happy with a PB. and that’s the honest truth,”
she said. “I’d love to go sub-24.50s because I’ve been hanging
around that time for a couple of years now. I feel like I’m due for
a drop, but you can never tell until the day.
“My freestyle is going well, I came home faster than I ever have
before (in the 100m), which is really exciting for my back end
speed, now I have to see what my front end speed is doing.”
Fastest into the semis was Alice Mills who posted a 25.23s time,
with 15-year-old Cate Campbell next best in 25.52s.
Campbell also swam a personal best in the 100m freestyle, a
53.81s effort which secured her second place behind Trickett and an
individual swim in the event in Beijing. But her main focus is the
50m freestyle.
“Last night was really exciting, and now I’m on the team, it’s
just fun,” she said of the 50m.
Asked if perhaps she was looking at the world record mark, she
said: “I don’t like to think of the outcome of what I can do. I
like to get in and see what I can do. Once I touch the wall, I’m
like: “wow, I can do that”. I don’t think before (a race) “could I
do this?” It doesn’t work like that.”
Swimming against someone like Trickett could be imposing and
intimidating for someone so young, but it’s not a concern for
Campbell.
“Libby, she’s a great competitor don’t get me wrong, but she’s
just another person,” Campbell said. “She is the world record
holder, she’s not a super hero. She’s just another person and I
think it’s just a great experience racing against her. I’m really
lucky to have her in Australia because it pushes me faster.”
In the men’s 1,500m heats this morning, Grant Hackett
comfortably qualified fastest in a time of 15min.10.91s.
The man most likely to win the second individual berth in the
event for the Games, Craig Stevens was second quickest in
15min.14.78s, almost nine seconds ahead of the third fastest, Trent
Grimsey.
Meanwhile some of America’s leading swim coaches have bought
into the debate over the new Speedo LZR Racer suits.
“I think there are a lot of factors that go into the success of
athletes and not one of them is going to be an overriding thing, it
is just part of the equation,” Bob Bowman, the man who coaches
Michael Phelps, told the Swimnews website.

“I don’t think the suit itself is anything magic I just think that
it is very good.”
And six-time Olympic coach Richard Quick said while the suit is
obviously helpful, “It is a very difficult thing to stop
technology.
“The same thing happened with the lycra suit back in the 70s,”
he said of the spate of records. “When we put on the lycra suits
for the first time every single American record was broken, just
like that in one meet.
“So this isn’t unusual to me to see this happening. As long as
everybody gets in the same suit it is still the best athletes that
will perform better than the others.”

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Young stars take big step towards Beijing glory

Sunday, April 6th, 2008

IT IS not quite right to say Australia has this week discovered
a generation of young guns to take to this year’s Beijing Olympics.
It has been more like the talent on show during the Olympic
selection trials, which end tonight, has been talked about for some
time around swimming circles and has stepped up to grab the chance
to compete in August.
In doing that, 15-year-olds such as Emily Seebohm and Cate
Campbell have performed like seasoned professionals %26#151; Seebohm,
in particular, setting a dazzling standard that had exceeded all
other Australian women in the 100 metres backstroke and for one day
surpassed all others in the world in the 50.
And Seebohm reminded people of her real age with her exuberant
displays after her wins %26#151; the most memorable being her
exclamation, “I’m going to be in the Guiness Books of World
Records” when she broke the 50 backstroke world mark on the opening
night of competition.
However, there is a host of young talent coming through just
behind the more seasoned performers. These include Matt Targett,
Kenrick Monk, new glamour girl Stephanie Rice, Bronte Barratt,
Samantha Hamill, Andrew Lauterstein, butterflier Nick D’arcy and
backstrokers Ashley Delaney and Hayden Stoeckel.
The group %26#151; some of whom had a taste of international
competition at last year’s world championships and the 2006
Commonwealth Games in Melbourne %26#151; this week showed their
potential by earning selection in the Olympic team.
Lauterstein said it had been a cut-throat process.
“Before the 100 free final, sitting next to Eamon (Sullivan), he
asked ‘are you ready to go?’ and I said ‘I guess I have to be’,”
Lauterstein said. “It all comes down to being ready. On (Wednesday)
night it was at 8.40pm.
“It’s crazy to think that years and years (of preparation) comes
down to a timeline and if you’re not ready, bad luck. It’s
cut-throat but it’s good, though. It brings out the best in some
and not in others.”
National youth coach Leigh Nugent has been responsible for
identifying and developing the talent that has been coming through
the ranks. A large portion of his focus has been on rebuilding the
men’s team that went through a period of disappointing results
following the Athens Olympics and through to last year’s world
championships, where the first signs of a revival were seen.
He was confident the current and future crops of men would
provide more sustainable success.
“The recovery that has been made has been quite significant and
rebuilding the men’s team takes so long. It’s taken these guys long
enough to get the experience and perhaps they are a little bit
older than the odd sensation who breaks through as a teenager,” he
said.
“(But) we’re looking for sustainability, not sensation
really.”
EMILY SEEBOHM
Announced herself a worldclass talent in the making when she
came fourth in the 100m backstroke at last year’s world titles at
14.
A few months earlier she had dead-heated the final of the
national titles with defending champion Tay Zimmer.
She has set some staggering times at this week’s Olympic trials
which have set her up as a genuine gold medal contender in the 100
backstroke.
That event has for so long been the domain of American superstar
Natalie Coughlin.
Seebohm twice broke the watershed 60-second barrier on her way
to winning during the week and showed great steel in the final when
she withstood the challenges of Sophie Edington and Belinda Hocking
in the fastest female 100 backstroke event in this country.
She will be 16 by the time Beijing comes around and declared
this week, “Natalie Coughlin, I’m coming”.
CATE CAMPBELL
Another 15-year-old rising star, there had been talk in swimming
circles about her for some time before she grabbed wider attention
by beating Libby Trickett (nee Lenton) in the 50 freestyle final at
the Japan Open last year in 24.
48, faster than any other Australian woman over the one lap.
The Brisbane-based Campbell, the eldest of five children, was
born and raised in Malawi of South African parents.
The family moved to Australia when she was nine to seek better
care for her handicapped brother.
She stumbled on the training squad of Simon Cusack over five
years ago when she went to the local school pool looking for a way
to meet friends as she was being home schooled.
She has now earned a berth in the 100 freestyle in Beijing after
finishing second to the world record-breaking effort of Libby
Trickett and can gain another individual spot in the 50 freestyle
final tonight.
She will also be an important member of the 4×100 freestyle
relay team.
STEPHANIE RICE
Her life has gone from talented team member to the better half
of Australia’s newest glamour couple - her partner being freestyle
sprint champion Eamon Sullivan - in just a few days.
Rice had earned respect as a quality 200 and 400 individual
medley swimmer by winning both events at the 2006 Commonwealth
Games and then winning dual bronze at last year’s world
championships.
However, she was largely seen as behind the likes of Zimbabwe’s
Kirsty Coventry and American Katie Hoff until last weekend when she
smashed Hoff’s 400IM world record.
She then backed that up by snatching the 200IM world record a
few days later.
In between those two achievements she posted a time in the 200
freestyle semifinals that showed she would be a valuable member of
the 4×200 freestyle relay team in Beijing.
ANDREW LAUTERSTEIN
Lauterstein chose to become a backstroker because he believed
that gave him the best chance to break into the Australian
team.
But that was until team officials encouraged the former
Victorian and his Gold Coast-based coach, Glenn Baker, to change to
the freestyle and butterfly ranks which needed replenishing with
the ageing of the once mighty generation of Australian
swimmers.
Since then, Lauterstein’s career prospects have shot ahead,
culminating in him earning a place in Beijing with his third
placing in the 100 freestyle final, which ensures him a place in
the 4×100 freestyle relay squad.
Last night he sealed his place by winning the 100 butterfly.
MATT TARGETT
The 22-year-old has recently returned to Melbourne after two
years in the collegiate system in America.
He came back to Ian Pope’s squad after the disappointment of
missing the world titles team last year.
The move paid off when he gained second place behind the flying
Eamon Sullivan in the 100 final thus earning him an individual race
in Beijing and, like Lauterstein, an entry into the squad for the
4×100 freestyle team.
He was also aiming for an individual swim in his pet event the
50 freestyle, which had its final last night.
Pope, who has trained Targett since he was 11 years old and
continued to liaise with him during his time in the US where former
Australian sprint champion and former Pope squad member Brett Hawke
is an assistant coach, said Targett was completely out of the
freestyle sprinters mould of eccentricity and cheekiness.
BRONTE BARRATT
Came to prominence when she last year broke Tracey Wickham’s 400
freestyle national (and Commonwealth) record which had been the
world record in Berlin in 1978.
The 19-year-old has secured her berth at Beijing in the 200 and
400 freestyle after top-two placings during the week.
Barratt was surprised by Linda MacKenzie in the 400 but the
teenager turned the tables on MacKenzie to win the 200.
Barratt’s coach, John Rodgers, believes she now has the class to
take on some of the big names among the events such as Laure
Manaudou, Natalie Coughlin, Federica Pellegrini, Kate Ziegler and
Katie Hoff.
Rodgers has never doubted her ability.
“When she was 12 I told her she would go to the Olympics and now
this is the fruition of eight years.
we’ve worked at it, got better at it, got faster and we’ve done
a lot of good work and I think she’ll go even faster.
She is (a genuine medal contender) in both and I think by the
time she gets there she’ll be an even better swimmer.”
KENRICK MONK
Came into the public spotlight in 2006 after being called up to
replace swimming superstar Ian Thorpe after he pulled out of the
Commonwealth Games team due to illness.
Monk has developed into a world-class competitor as his body
developed into racing muscle.
The 20-year-old has had a number of impressive performances
including his fourth placing in the 200 at last year’s world
titles.
He duly earned his individual berth in the 200 when second
behind Grant Hackett on Monday and will be a member of the 4×200
freestyle relay team for Beijing.
If things go to plan, he will be racing superstar Michael Phelps
in the 200 final, but he does not flinch from the challenge despite
the aura still surrounding the American superstar’s effort in
demolishing Thorpe’s world record at last year’s world
championships.
SAMANTHA HAMILL
The talented 17-yearold has already won 12 national titles and
had success at junior international meets, but has now broken
through to the senior ranks in the past week.
She was second behind the world record-breaking performance of
Stephanie Rice in the 400IM on the first night of competition.
She then pushed world champion Jess Schipper in the 200
butterfly.
National youth coach Leigh Nugent said the smallframed Hamill,
who moved from Victoria to Queensland’s Sunshine Coast a few years
ago, was tenacious.
“That’s her big plus, she’s a little girl with a big heart.
She’s got a great work ethic … got incredible determination
and is a wonderful athlete,” he said.

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Trickett celebrates with a treat

Sunday, April 6th, 2008

Spaghetti and chocolate. What better way to celebrate becoming a
world record holder and breaking through a barrier thought
impregnable not too long ago?
That was victory supper for Libby Trickett last night after
she smashed the world 100m freestyle record of German Britta
Steffen (53.30s), and became the first woman to swim under 53
seconds, with her stunning 52.88s performance.
But there was little rest for the new world record holder. She
was back in the pool this morning swimming the heats of the 50m
freestyle, and while she was only seventh fastest with a very
leisurely 26.05s, it was enough to see her advance to tonight’s
semi-finals.
“I didn’t get a lot of sleep last night, I was in bed by
midnight but I couldn’t sleep. So this morning was just about
making the semis, so I’m happy with that swim,” Trickett said.

Asked about how she celebrated, she replied: “I had spaghetti and a
little chocolate as well … don’t tell Stephan (Widmer, her
coach).
“Look it’s part of this sport we’re in. Even if you have
successes or disappointments, you still have more work to do.
Coming in and having to race again brings you back to reality, but
I’m very proud of my achievement last night.”
After her amazing performance, the question must be asked if
Trickett can now take a shot at the 50m freestyle world record.
That time stands at 24.09s set this week by Dutch sprinter Marleen
Veldhuis at the European Championships in The Netherlands.
Trickett’s best time stands at 24.53s, so she still has a long
way to go to get near the Dutchwoman’s mark.
“I would be so happy with a PB. and that’s the honest truth,”
she said. “I’d love to go sub-24.50s because I’ve been hanging
around that time for a couple of years now. I feel like I’m due for
a drop, but you can never tell until the day.
“My freestyle is going well, I came home faster than I ever have
before (in the 100m), which is really exciting for my back end
speed, now I have to see what my front end speed is doing.”
Fastest into the semis was Alice Mills who posted a 25.23s time,
with 15-year-old Cate Campbell next best in 25.52s.
Campbell also swam a personal best in the 100m freestyle, a
53.81s effort which secured her second place behind Trickett and an
individual swim in the event in Beijing. But her main focus is the
50m freestyle.
“Last night was really exciting, and now I’m on the team, it’s
just fun,” she said of the 50m.
Asked if perhaps she was looking at the world record mark, she
said: “I don’t like to think of the outcome of what I can do. I
like to get in and see what I can do. Once I touch the wall, I’m
like: “wow, I can do that”. I don’t think before (a race) “could I
do this?” It doesn’t work like that.”
Swimming against someone like Trickett could be imposing and
intimidating for someone so young, but it’s not a concern for
Campbell.
“Libby, she’s a great competitor don’t get me wrong, but she’s
just another person,” Campbell said. “She is the world record
holder, she’s not a super hero. She’s just another person and I
think it’s just a great experience racing against her. I’m really
lucky to have her in Australia because it pushes me faster.”
In the men’s 1,500m heats this morning, Grant Hackett
comfortably qualified fastest in a time of 15min.10.91s.
The man most likely to win the second individual berth in the
event for the Games, Craig Stevens was second quickest in
15min.14.78s, almost nine seconds ahead of the third fastest, Trent
Grimsey.
Meanwhile some of America’s leading swim coaches have bought
into the debate over the new Speedo LZR Racer suits.
“I think there are a lot of factors that go into the success of
athletes and not one of them is going to be an overriding thing, it
is just part of the equation,” Bob Bowman, the man who coaches
Michael Phelps, told the Swimnews website.

“I don’t think the suit itself is anything magic I just think that
it is very good.”
And six-time Olympic coach Richard Quick said while the suit is
obviously helpful, “It is a very difficult thing to stop
technology.
“The same thing happened with the lycra suit back in the 70s,”
he said of the spate of records. “When we put on the lycra suits
for the first time every single American record was broken, just
like that in one meet.
“So this isn’t unusual to me to see this happening. As long as
everybody gets in the same suit it is still the best athletes that
will perform better than the others.”

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Young stars take big step towards Beijing glory

Sunday, April 6th, 2008

IT IS not quite right to say Australia has this week discovered
a generation of young guns to take to this year’s Beijing Olympics.
It has been more like the talent on show during the Olympic
selection trials, which end tonight, has been talked about for some
time around swimming circles and has stepped up to grab the chance
to compete in August.
In doing that, 15-year-olds such as Emily Seebohm and Cate
Campbell have performed like seasoned professionals %26#151; Seebohm,
in particular, setting a dazzling standard that had exceeded all
other Australian women in the 100 metres backstroke and for one day
surpassed all others in the world in the 50.
And Seebohm reminded people of her real age with her exuberant
displays after her wins %26#151; the most memorable being her
exclamation, “I’m going to be in the Guiness Books of World
Records” when she broke the 50 backstroke world mark on the opening
night of competition.
However, there is a host of young talent coming through just
behind the more seasoned performers. These include Matt Targett,
Kenrick Monk, new glamour girl Stephanie Rice, Bronte Barratt,
Samantha Hamill, Andrew Lauterstein, butterflier Nick D’arcy and
backstrokers Ashley Delaney and Hayden Stoeckel.
The group %26#151; some of whom had a taste of international
competition at last year’s world championships and the 2006
Commonwealth Games in Melbourne %26#151; this week showed their
potential by earning selection in the Olympic team.
Lauterstein said it had been a cut-throat process.
“Before the 100 free final, sitting next to Eamon (Sullivan), he
asked ‘are you ready to go?’ and I said ‘I guess I have to be’,”
Lauterstein said. “It all comes down to being ready. On (Wednesday)
night it was at 8.40pm.
“It’s crazy to think that years and years (of preparation) comes
down to a timeline and if you’re not ready, bad luck. It’s
cut-throat but it’s good, though. It brings out the best in some
and not in others.”
National youth coach Leigh Nugent has been responsible for
identifying and developing the talent that has been coming through
the ranks. A large portion of his focus has been on rebuilding the
men’s team that went through a period of disappointing results
following the Athens Olympics and through to last year’s world
championships, where the first signs of a revival were seen.
He was confident the current and future crops of men would
provide more sustainable success.
“The recovery that has been made has been quite significant and
rebuilding the men’s team takes so long. It’s taken these guys long
enough to get the experience and perhaps they are a little bit
older than the odd sensation who breaks through as a teenager,” he
said.
“(But) we’re looking for sustainability, not sensation
really.”
EMILY SEEBOHM
Announced herself a worldclass talent in the making when she
came fourth in the 100m backstroke at last year’s world titles at
14.
A few months earlier she had dead-heated the final of the
national titles with defending champion Tay Zimmer.
She has set some staggering times at this week’s Olympic trials
which have set her up as a genuine gold medal contender in the 100
backstroke.
That event has for so long been the domain of American superstar
Natalie Coughlin.
Seebohm twice broke the watershed 60-second barrier on her way
to winning during the week and showed great steel in the final when
she withstood the challenges of Sophie Edington and Belinda Hocking
in the fastest female 100 backstroke event in this country.
She will be 16 by the time Beijing comes around and declared
this week, “Natalie Coughlin, I’m coming”.
CATE CAMPBELL
Another 15-year-old rising star, there had been talk in swimming
circles about her for some time before she grabbed wider attention
by beating Libby Trickett (nee Lenton) in the 50 freestyle final at
the Japan Open last year in 24.
48, faster than any other Australian woman over the one lap.
The Brisbane-based Campbell, the eldest of five children, was
born and raised in Malawi of South African parents.
The family moved to Australia when she was nine to seek better
care for her handicapped brother.
She stumbled on the training squad of Simon Cusack over five
years ago when she went to the local school pool looking for a way
to meet friends as she was being home schooled.
She has now earned a berth in the 100 freestyle in Beijing after
finishing second to the world record-breaking effort of Libby
Trickett and can gain another individual spot in the 50 freestyle
final tonight.
She will also be an important member of the 4×100 freestyle
relay team.
STEPHANIE RICE
Her life has gone from talented team member to the better half
of Australia’s newest glamour couple - her partner being freestyle
sprint champion Eamon Sullivan - in just a few days.
Rice had earned respect as a quality 200 and 400 individual
medley swimmer by winning both events at the 2006 Commonwealth
Games and then winning dual bronze at last year’s world
championships.
However, she was largely seen as behind the likes of Zimbabwe’s
Kirsty Coventry and American Katie Hoff until last weekend when she
smashed Hoff’s 400IM world record.
She then backed that up by snatching the 200IM world record a
few days later.
In between those two achievements she posted a time in the 200
freestyle semifinals that showed she would be a valuable member of
the 4×200 freestyle relay team in Beijing.
ANDREW LAUTERSTEIN
Lauterstein chose to become a backstroker because he believed
that gave him the best chance to break into the Australian
team.
But that was until team officials encouraged the former
Victorian and his Gold Coast-based coach, Glenn Baker, to change to
the freestyle and butterfly ranks which needed replenishing with
the ageing of the once mighty generation of Australian
swimmers.
Since then, Lauterstein’s career prospects have shot ahead,
culminating in him earning a place in Beijing with his third
placing in the 100 freestyle final, which ensures him a place in
the 4×100 freestyle relay squad.
Last night he sealed his place by winning the 100 butterfly.
MATT TARGETT
The 22-year-old has recently returned to Melbourne after two
years in the collegiate system in America.
He came back to Ian Pope’s squad after the disappointment of
missing the world titles team last year.
The move paid off when he gained second place behind the flying
Eamon Sullivan in the 100 final thus earning him an individual race
in Beijing and, like Lauterstein, an entry into the squad for the
4×100 freestyle team.
He was also aiming for an individual swim in his pet event the
50 freestyle, which had its final last night.
Pope, who has trained Targett since he was 11 years old and
continued to liaise with him during his time in the US where former
Australian sprint champion and former Pope squad member Brett Hawke
is an assistant coach, said Targett was completely out of the
freestyle sprinters mould of eccentricity and cheekiness.
BRONTE BARRATT
Came to prominence when she last year broke Tracey Wickham’s 400
freestyle national (and Commonwealth) record which had been the
world record in Berlin in 1978.
The 19-year-old has secured her berth at Beijing in the 200 and
400 freestyle after top-two placings during the week.
Barratt was surprised by Linda MacKenzie in the 400 but the
teenager turned the tables on MacKenzie to win the 200.
Barratt’s coach, John Rodgers, believes she now has the class to
take on some of the big names among the events such as Laure
Manaudou, Natalie Coughlin, Federica Pellegrini, Kate Ziegler and
Katie Hoff.
Rodgers has never doubted her ability.
“When she was 12 I told her she would go to the Olympics and now
this is the fruition of eight years.
we’ve worked at it, got better at it, got faster and we’ve done
a lot of good work and I think she’ll go even faster.
She is (a genuine medal contender) in both and I think by the
time she gets there she’ll be an even better swimmer.”
KENRICK MONK
Came into the public spotlight in 2006 after being called up to
replace swimming superstar Ian Thorpe after he pulled out of the
Commonwealth Games team due to illness.
Monk has developed into a world-class competitor as his body
developed into racing muscle.
The 20-year-old has had a number of impressive performances
including his fourth placing in the 200 at last year’s world
titles.
He duly earned his individual berth in the 200 when second
behind Grant Hackett on Monday and will be a member of the 4×200
freestyle relay team for Beijing.
If things go to plan, he will be racing superstar Michael Phelps
in the 200 final, but he does not flinch from the challenge despite
the aura still surrounding the American superstar’s effort in
demolishing Thorpe’s world record at last year’s world
championships.
SAMANTHA HAMILL
The talented 17-yearold has already won 12 national titles and
had success at junior international meets, but has now broken
through to the senior ranks in the past week.
She was second behind the world record-breaking performance of
Stephanie Rice in the 400IM on the first night of competition.
She then pushed world champion Jess Schipper in the 200
butterfly.
National youth coach Leigh Nugent said the smallframed Hamill,
who moved from Victoria to Queensland’s Sunshine Coast a few years
ago, was tenacious.
“That’s her big plus, she’s a little girl with a big heart.
She’s got a great work ethic … got incredible determination
and is a wonderful athlete,” he said.

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Iraqis get nothing but disappointment five years after Iraqi war

Wednesday, March 19th, 2008

BAGHDAD , March 19 (Xinhua) — As the fifth anniversary of Iraqi war drew imminent, Iraqi people still strive for survival rather than enjoying a free and just life as they expected before the war.

Before the U.S.-led war against Saddam Hussein’s reign in 2003, the U.S. administration depicted a rosy future with freedom and justice of Iraq.

However, five year passed, Iraqis see nothing but daily killings, bombings and abductions only.

While the Iraqi government itself was somewhat worn out by the limitless wait, Iraqi people is becoming sophisticated in waiting for a seemingly visionary better life amid U.S. occupation.

They have learned how to wait for long hours for getting fuel, how to wait near a numerous number of security checkpoints for passing, how to wait months in the same government offices forgetting passports or other documents, how to wait for the next morning without light.

A day before the fifth anniversary of the Iraqi war, Xinhua reporters went to streets on Wednesday to hear what the Iraqis are thinking now.

Five years of the U.S. occupation will lapse soon without me spending even one day in comfort. We are waiting for the day when we can see the withdrawal of the U.S. forces from our country. It will be then the most beautiful day to us since we will have the real freedom of not seeing the unidentified bodies scattered in the streets of Baghdad and other areas, of not seeing the horrible U.S. tanks and vehicles in our streets, and of not hearing the thunderous daily explosions in our cities, an old man called Abu Ali said, gulping a long sip of cigarette.

The Iraqis endure bitter waiting, paying back for their leaders’ mistakes, the old man deeply signed with a heavy smoke blown out, referring to the toppled former president Saddam Hussein.

Abbas Ali, a 23-year-old porter at a popular market in Karbala,100 km south of Baghdad, said he was one of those who have been deceived by the notion of democracy and freedom.

I am so frustrated after discovering that we have got only lies. After the U.S. invasion I became so glad because I have heard about many rosy promises. Then I thought that my poor living conditions will turn bright. Unfortunately, after five years, my hope went in vain, the young guy complained.

Umar Dhahi, a middle-aged man, ridiculed the changes over the past five years. Who said nothing is changed in Iraq? People have been killed, the infrastructures have been destroyed, thousands of Iraqi children were now orphaned, and thousands of women became widows, he reeled off.

The rest of the Iraqis should be patient since everything will be changed, Dhahi said sarcastically.

The Iraqi women spend their days in painful wait as well. Some of them wait for the coming of their sons in the U.S. and Iraqi jails, while others wait for their children to come back safe without facing explosions on their way to and from schools.

I am waiting bitterly day and night for the releasing of my son from a U.S. prison in southern Iraq. He was detained two years ago. I also wait for other sons to come back safe from their schools, since I don’t want them to be killed or injured by an attack, Um Yaser, an Iraqi housewife, said in great worry.

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The prerequisite for improving hospital care is a team effort

Monday, March 17th, 2008

William Wolfenden wants to take hospital management back to
pre-Medicare days, when doctors were the only health professionals
worthy of consultation, to ensure their lofty position in the
hierarchy (Letters, March 8-9). The management of hospitals by
doctors, for doctors, did not work in the 20th century. Why should
it work now?
Dr Wolfenden blames the failure of hospital management by
administrators rather than doctors for the decline in hospital
care. I would like to know whether he set out on his life’s path to
be an expert physician, which he no doubt is, or an accomplished
administrator with expertise in financial planning, human
resources, hotel services, evidence-based medicine and
accreditation, or whether he completed a master’s in health service
management.
In the Bathurst Hospital shambles it appears NSW Health did not
consult any health professional or architect, just the finance
department. Dr Wolfenden rightly decries the lack of consultation
with doctors, yet there has been no mention of the failure to
consult nurses.
There are few aspects of a hospital that do not affect nursing.
Who knows better than nurses the space requirements, traffic
patterns, bathroom and toilet usage and design environments that
are sympathetic for patients, their families and hospital workers,
and that ensure better health outcomes at less cost? While doctors
may spend 20 minutes a day with their patients, nurses are there
constantly.
When will health departments learn that the prerequisite for
quality health care, whether in acute care hospitals, the community
or aged facilities, is a team effort? No speciality has the abiding
authority on good patient care and healthy outcomes. This requires
doctors, nurses, physiotherapists, occupational therapists,
nutritionists, cleaners, pharmacists, architects and policymakers
to work towards a common goal, not to fiercely defend their vested
interests to the exclusion of all others.
Let us look forwards, not backwards, to better partnerships for
health service delivery and put the patient first, not last, on the
planning agenda.
Maryan Heffernan Narrabeen
Taking from the most vulnerable is unconscionable
It was with shock and disappointment that we heard of the
proposal to stop funding carer bonuses. We know they were never
part of forward estimates, but they were a recognition of the
contribution made by carers, as well as a much-needed financial
benefit for many living below the poverty line.
It would take more than $30 billion a year for governments to
replace carers’ services. While not in the paid workforce, people
with disabilities and their carers are no less “working families”
than those referred to by the Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd, and his
colleagues during the election campaign - just not so well off and
with no superannuation.
Laraine Toms President, Carers NSW, Sydney
Before a final decision is made by the Rudd Government on
whether to snatch back the carer bonuses, perhaps his minister
might like to spend 24 hours in my household to see the
difficulties and associated costs involved in caring for two
disabled family members. That research would confirm that carers
should be generously supported, if only to save both the federal
and state governments billion of dollars.
Stan Fildes Mona Vale
Two interesting articles in Saturday’s Herald. The first
reveals that Kevin Rudd proposes to slash payments to pensioners
and their carers. The second states that he is increasing aid to
Papua New Guinea. Thank you for explaining his priorities.
Paul Atroshenko Waverley
Wayne Swan has managed to be both fiscally irresponsible and
mean: handing out more than $30 billion in tax cuts at a time of
higher inflation and rapidly rising interest rates, while cutting
the carers’ benefit to save a few hundred million dollars.
George Finlay Balaclava (Vic)
Is this the “compassionate” ALP I’ve voted for all my life?
Surely there are a million other cuts the Government could make
other than on those least able to help themselves. What about the
great lurk of negative gearing? Or the overly generous benefits
former politicians help themselves to? As for the promised tax
cuts, which offer no benefit for those on a pension, they should be
deferred for at least three years or dropped altogether.
I realise cuts have to be made, but slashing and burning the
most vulnerable is unconscionable.
Jennifer Owen Baulkham Hills
As a carer for my war veteran partner, I was counting on that
$1600 to help us pay the winter bills and put shoes on the feet of
our son. My partner lost his ability to support his family in the
service of his country. Is this how you are planning to treat the
families of the men you send to Afghanistan?
Margot Clifford Kaleen (ACT)
Labor prime ministers have historically surrounded themselves
with complete idiots. With the proposed axing of the carers’ bonus,
Kevin Rudd has gone one better: he has surrounded himself with
complete bastards.
Matt Petersen Randwick
If the elderly and carers are to lose entitlements, can we
assume that John Howard’s endangered orang-utans will have to make
sacrifices as well?
Joe Dwyer Rose Bay
Cool heads must prevail in the face of provocation
The murder of eight students in Jerusalem by an Arab Israeli was
sickening, as was the gloating from certain Palestinian quarters
(”After the slaughter, sickening jubilation”, March 8-9).

However, Israelis such as the Prime Minister’s spokesman, Mark
Regev, should not get too self-righteous. For every Israeli who
dies in this conflict, 40 Palestinians are killed. In 1994 the
US-born Israeli Baruch Goldstein slaughtered 29 Arabs and wounded
150 in a shooting rampage in a mosque. To this day his grave,
complete with a shrine-like landscaped prayer area and a plaque
praising his actions, is a pilgrimage site for right-wing
Israelis.
Andrew Worssam Bondi
Mordechai Sher (Letters, March 8-9) claims Hamas is not
apportioned any blame for the humanitarian crisis in Gaza. That is
plainly wrong, as Hamas is often denounced by governments and
non-government organisations. In fact, it is frequently held up as
the only problem. “Remove Hamas,” they shout, “and all will be
better.”
Sorry, but as deplorable as Hamas is, it is a product of the
situation. Desperate people resort to desperate measures, so the
more Israel tries to tighten its grip on Gaza, the more
Palestinians will slip through its fingers. Only better conditions
for all Palestinians - and that means, among other things, an end
to the blockade of Gaza - will see to the removal of Hamas and an
end to the rocket attacks and suicide bombings.
James Kite Drummoyne
Alan Ramsey’s column denotes that April Fool’s Day has arrived
early this year (”Don’t mention the war as Israel lauded”, March
8-9): “It was also one of those extremely rare occasions that the
easily intimidated Australian Parliament, ever mindful of Jewish
financial support of party coffers, has debated the Middle East at
all.”
Curse those Zionist paymasters! I always thought it was property
developers who duped us into focusing on our own backyard.
Peter Ness Bardwell Valley
Alan Ramsey alleges without evidence that wealthy Jews unduly
influence Australia’s Middle East policy. In reality, the small
number of Jewish businessmen who make major donations to political
parties appear to be motivated by business interests as much as by
specifically Jewish concerns. None have gone on record as linking
their donations to Middle East policy. To be sure, Jewish communal
bodies lobby on behalf of Israel. However, there is no evidence
that Jewish organisations per se have ever donated to Australian
political parties.
Philip Mendes Kew (Victoria)
For 60 years Australia has indeed been a supporter of Israel,
but also a constructive champion of the peace process. If Ramsey
had read previous bipartisan motions relating to Israel, he would
see that they have also consistently called for the right of
Palestinians to self-determination. What we need to focus on are
tangible and supportive measures to eradicate the type of hatred
Saturday’s paper depicted, not finger-pointing rants.
David Faktor Bondi
Tokenism rampant
Can Verity Firth “wean NSW off its energy addiction” (”Can this
woman turn us off?”, March 8-9)?

In a word, no. In the Iemma-Costa clique the main game is: a)
build a new coal-fired power station in time to prevent the
electoral death that would result if the power faltered for one
moment in the air-conditioned mansions of Baulkham Hills; and b)
avoid any energy conservation measures serious enough to scare
bidders for a privatised electricity industry.
So they appoint an unknown 34-year-old, in Parliament for less
than a year, to lead the charge on climate change. Talk about
tokenism. No doubt they will keep her busy writing policies that
the big departments will do nothing to implement.
Geoff Dawson Narrabundah (ACT)
Sparing the child
Mirren Palmer (Letters, March 8-9) is right that private schools
are often more successful at dealing with disruptive students. The
method they use is called expulsion. Unfortunately this is not
readily available to public schools. They have an obligation to
make sure all children, including disruptive ones, have access to
an education.

Mary Lawson Mortdale
The worst kind of example
In the article “It’s a crime: how footy heroes go bad” (March 8-9)
the reporter writes that “behind the drunken antics and rape
allegations, there is a darker history of links between sportsmen
and serious crime”. Rape is not a serious crime? With attitudes
like this, how are those same “heroes” ever going to get the
message about their treatment of women? And what about the example
set to other men who want to emulate their “exploits”?

Trish Wiltshire Worrigee
I was dismayed, to say the least, that on International Women’s
Day your editorial likened fake virgin olive oil to two
celebrities, branding them “blond, cheap and unsavoury” (”Virgin
oil upturned”, March 8-9). Misogynist behaviour is not likely to
decrease when the Herald implicitly encourages it.
Elaine Diffey Glebe
A sadly foreseeable tragedy
I was very sad to read of the death of Peter Eagle, but not
surprised (”Man killed on his way to Superboat Grand Prix”,
smh.com.au, March 8). The harbour has become unbearable on some
days with the increasing number of powerful motor boats. As the
owner of an older-style wooden yacht I avoid parts of it, such as
Bradleys Head, where power-boat skippers seem to love to roar
around the point, presuming no one else could be there. Without
commenting on the circumstances of Eagle’s crash, so many owners of
these boats seem to lack basic seamanship, courtesy or common
sense. When will NSW Maritime realise the risk these types of boats
are creating and introduce a reasonable speed limit (I suggest 12
knots) so that everyone can enjoy the harbour?

Philip Bull Marrickville
Sydney Harbour is a busy commercial and recreational waterway,
especially at weekends. To close it for a day of races by so-called
superboats is disgraceful. Let them race where they will cause no
danger or disruption to others. Lake Eyre, for example.
Neil Radford Balmain East
Don’t blame the doctors
Geoff Dunsford (Letters, March 8-9) needs to explain how doctors’
bills are driving the increase in health fund premiums. Health
funds have their own nominated fee that they will pay for each
service provided by a doctor. But if a doctor’s fee exceeds the
health fund fee, most of the funds pay out much less than the
nominated fee. Furthermore, health fund indexation of the benefits
paid for doctors’ fees has been a lower percentage for the past few
years than the increase in premiums the government has granted
them.

Dr Andrew Wright Neutral Bay
The right man for the role at NIDA
As a past chairman of the board of the National Institute of
Dramatic Art for 13 years (1975-88) and a current member of its
foundation board, I entirely agree with the signatories of the
letter to the present chairman that Aubrey Mellor be appointed the
artistic director (”Battle over arts and minds divides NIDA”, March
8-9). It would then be in NIDA’s best interest to advertise for an
“energetic and inspiring chief executive” to be the administrative
head.

Malcolm Chaikin Rose Bay
It would be a tragic farce for NIDA to dismiss Aubrey Mellor. He
is a rare genius, a great teacher and a great director. Only a fool
could ignore the statement by Cate Blanchett, Judy Davis, Geoffrey
Rush, George Miller et al that Mellor is the finest acting teacher
in the country. NIDA is federally funded. Peter Garrett should take
decisive action to prevent mediocrity triumphing over genius.
Ric Davidson Avalon
Worthies of elsewhere
No, Adam Cook (Letters, March 8-9), Germaine Greer should not get
an official Australian honour. Permanent residence in Australia
should be a basic requirement for that. Those worthies who live
elsewhere, including Greer, Rolf Harris, Clive James, Greg Norman,
John Pilger and Geoffrey Robertson, should look to their homelands
of choice for a gong.

Brendan Linnane Dernancourt (SA)
Delusion rights
I can’t understand why Alan Ramsey (”Sideshow takes on delusions of
grandeur”, March 8-9) and letter writers are getting so hot under
the collar about John Howard’s speech last week. Surely it is the
right of every former prime minister to be in denial about why the
electorate gave them the heave-ho. Just look at Paul Keating for
the past 12 years.

Peter Dieleman Waratah
Long way west
“Motorists driving from Sydney Airport to the inner west, using the
Eastern Distributor and the Cross City Tunnel, will pay just under
$10 in tolls,” according to your report (”Tolls up in Sydney, free
ride in Melbourne”, March 8-9). Anyone doing so deserves to pay
$10. I suggest a long-term saving by investing in a street
directory.

Duncan Barrett Camperdown
Too big for the fridge
Surely Del Kathryn Barton’s picture was painted by her kids (”A
mother load of happiness”, March 8-9). I suppose it was too big to
fit on the fridge so she entered it in the Archibald.

Eddie Fingret Dover Heights
I’ve got no idea about art and portraiture, and it appears that
the trustees of the Archibald Prize share my inadequacy.
Graham Anderson Bundanoon
Journey of faith
Oh ye of little faith, Cardinal Pell (”The priest, his fake cancer
and an almighty apology”, smh.com.au, March 9). Surely Father
Richard Abourjaily’s “delusional” condition could also have been
miraculously cured at Lourdes.

Allan Lloyd Lamb Island (Qld)
Scattered chums
So, can we think of Mr Downer and his reluctant chums as “The
Things That Scatter”?

Phil Norris Longueville

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Finding space

Sunday, March 16th, 2008

Promote Dunstan subcommittee members Louise Joyce, Carole Haig and Rory Butler are delighted with the response from businesses this year after several years of lack-lustre interest.
%26quot;When you think of all the other things that are happening in the area over Easter, to produce 55 stalls including 18 wineries is really heartening,%26quot; Ms Joyce said.
Last year the organisers were caught out by the number attending the festival.
As a result they have doubled the number of glasses ordered. For $10, the glass will allow people to purchase a taste or a glass from the various stalls.
Those not wanting to try the wine pay just $5 entry.
One disappointment for the organisers is the unavailability of Olivers%26#39; grounds.
%26quot;The new owners had no problem with us using them, in fact they were delighted to be included, but it turns out they don%26#39;t take over until after the event and the present owner has said no for security reasons.%26quot; Dogs owners are asked to leave their pets behind. The event will be held from 11am to 5pm.

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