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Lawmaker's first resolution backs teacher degree change

Deadline looms for project list

Education on the rise in area

Hospital hailed for patient safety

Home burns on Bettis Tribble Gap

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MY 511 Transit Status for omsssignal
March 27, 2011 - 12:00 AM

Home to Work
(12th St. Oakland City Center)

24th St. Mission:  << No data available >>
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SF Airport then Millbrae:  <2, 21 min
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ABC NewsMail - afternoon edition

ABC News

 

 Afternoon Edition. Sun 27 Mar 2011


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 Top StoriesMore Top Stories > 

Barry O'Farrell walks with newly elected MPs at Parramatta Ferry Wharf in Sydney.

O'Farrell hails new political landscape
New South Wales premier-elect Barry O'Farrell is basking in the Coalition's huge majority after last night's historic election win and has promised to fix the state's problems with a proven ministerial team.

Workers evacuated as radiation levels climb
The operator of Japan's crippled Fukushima nuclear plant says the radioactivity in the water at the No. 2 reactor is 10 million times the usual level.

Libyan rebels claim key town
Rebels battling Moamar Gaddafi's regime say they have retaken the eastern town of Brega just hours after recapturing the strategic city of Ajdabiya in eastern Libya.

Who is Barry O'Farrell?
The ABC takes a look back at NSW Premier-elect Barry O'Farrell's past and his climb to power.

Man dies after tattoo parlour shooting
A man has died after being shot at a tattoo parlour in Sydney's north-west last night.


 The DrumMore from The Drum > 

NSW premier Kristina Keneally makes her concession speech and announced she will not contest the leadership during a Labor Party function at the Randwick Labor Club east of Sydney, March 26, 2011.

Labor brought down by the stink of human tendency
Could Labor have won? Yes. But not under these new rules of politics, which decree politicians must be, at all times, hypocritical, gulping fools. I never believed the words Â'the biggest swing in Australian historyÂ' and Â'Barry OÂ'FarrellÂ' belonged in the same sentence and I held out hope. I believed a world in seismic uproar would help the incumbent government. But I was wrong and I owe five hundred bucks, I think, in wagers.

Make no mistake: this is a battle to the death
The carbon tax debate has become a mere cipher in the titanic struggle between Julia Gillard and Tony Abbott as they fight to tear each other's innards out. The personal has become the political. It is now clear that the loser of this battle will also lose their leadership or, in the case of Gillard, the Prime Ministership. It is now simply that important.

Labor's love affair with JWH
You might have missed it this week through all the hate-speak, but there was a lot of love for J. Winston Howard flowing around the Government benches this week. The Prime Minister - the very same La Gillardine who popped the former PM's head on a pike as she ran his Work Choices out of town - simply cannot, these days, get him off her mind.

Plotting a balanced course in a climate of angry grievance
Through the latter Howard years I went to rallies on Parliament's lawn, well attended by the Australian Greens, where banners vilifying the Prime Minister were routine. Wednesday's anti carbon tax rally was a reasonably well-behaved crowd, but it was deeply angry and its anger wasn't just focused on the Government.

Holding up Gunns through secret deals
Was Bill Kelty appointed by the Federal government to help Tasmanians out of the decades long conflict over the forests, or to perpetuate it by breathing life back into the dying monster of the pulp mill?


 WorldMore World Stories > 

Workers evacuated as radiation levels climb
The operator of Japan's crippled Fukushima nuclear plant says the radioactivity in water that has accumulated at the No.

Woman claims rape by Libyan military
A Libyan woman who claimed she had been raped and tortured by government soldiers has burst into a Tripoli hotel where foreign journalists are staying to draw attention to her ill-treatment.

Uncertainty as Japan's radiation levels surge
The Japanese government says it does not know when its nuclear crisis will end as radiation levels surge near the stricken Fukushima power plant.


 Science & TechnologyMore Science & Technology Stories > 

Wallabies marooned by floods
Up to 500 wallabies have been marooned on an island in the middle of Lake Argyle in the east Kimberley.

Top scientist tells UNE grads economic future in their hands
The Chief Scientist of New South Wales, Professor Mary O'Kane, says Australia faces a grim future if it does not produce, and retain, more scientists.

Farmers urged to sacrifice land for carbon study
Landowners in the northern agricultural region of Western Australia are being asked to sacrifice areas of their property for research on the carbon sequestration of plants.


 EnvironmentMore Environment Stories > 

Earth Hour circles the globe
Hundreds of landmark buildings and millions of ordinary homes have switched off their lights as the annual Earth Hour moved around the globe.

Record Sydney switch-off kicks off Earth Hour
Australia's Opera House was the first of many global landmarks to go dark on Saturday as Earth Hour got underway with hundreds of millions of people around the world set to switch off their lights.

Earth Hour labelled a waste of time
The chairman of Western Australia's largest sustainability program says Earth Hour is tokenistic and a waste of time.



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To ABC Online Home Page
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This service may include material from Agence France-Presse (AFP), APTN, Reuters, CNN and
the BBC World Service which is copyright and cannot be reproduced.

ABC NewsMail - morning edition

ABC News

 

 Morning Edition. Sun 27 Mar 2011


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 Top StoriesMore Top Stories > 

'We must resolve to work harder': Kristina Keneally during her concession speech

Disunity let us down: Keneally
Outgoing New South Wales Premier Kristina Keneally has accepted responsibility for her party's loss and says she will not be staying on as Labor leader.

Masked anarchists clash with London police
Hundreds of masked protesters have clashed with police in London's main shopping district, disrupting traffic and occupying a department store.

Libyan rebels reclaim Brega
Rebels battling Moamar Gaddafi's regime say they have retaken the eastern town of Brega just hours after recapturing the strategic city of Ajdabiya in eastern Libya.

NSW Labor's leadership quandary
Kristina Keneally's decision to step down as Labor leader has triggered a race to see who will replace her from the ALP's depleted ranks.

Sydney's west becomes a Labor wasteland
Labor has suffered a humiliating swing to the Liberal Party in another of its traditional heartlands in western Sydney.


 The DrumMore from The Drum > 

Composite pic of Prime Minister Julia Gillard and Opposition Leader Tony Abbott, both pictured in early 2011.

Make no mistake: this is a battle to the death
The carbon tax debate has become a mere cipher in the titanic struggle between Julia Gillard and Tony Abbott as they fight to tear each other's innards out. The personal has become the political. It is now clear that the loser of this battle will also lose their leadership or, in the case of Gillard, the Prime Ministership. It is now simply that important.

Labor's love affair with JWH
You might have missed it this week through all the hate-speak, but there was a lot of love for J. Winston Howard flowing around the Government benches this week. The Prime Minister - the very same La Gillardine who popped the former PM's head on a pike as she ran his Work Choices out of town - simply cannot, these days, get him off her mind.

Plotting a balanced course in a climate of angry grievance
Through the latter Howard years I went to rallies on Parliament's lawn, well attended by the Australian Greens, where banners vilifying the Prime Minister were routine. Wednesday's anti carbon tax rally was a reasonably well-behaved crowd, but it was deeply angry and its anger wasn't just focused on the Government.

Holding up Gunns through secret deals
Was Bill Kelty appointed by the Federal government to help Tasmanians out of the decades long conflict over the forests, or to perpetuate it by breathing life back into the dying monster of the pulp mill?

The earthquake-tsunami-meltdown-Gaddafi factor in the NSW election
Antony Green is predicting a 'disaster not catastrophe' that puts Kristina Keneally within four per cent of holding on. Still, I predict Keneally will narrowly lose.


 WorldMore World Stories > 

Hikers killed in Swiss Alps avalanche
Four people have been killed and one is missing after a group of French high altitude hikers was swept away by an avalanche in the Swiss Alps.

Masked anarchists clash with London police
Hundreds of masked protesters have clashed with police in London's main shopping district, disrupting traffic and occupying a department store.

Afghan children killed in NATO strike
Western forces in Afghanistan have accidentally killed seven civilians, including three children, in an air attack.


 Science & TechnologyMore Science & Technology Stories > 

Wallabies marooned by floods
Up to 500 wallabies have been marooned on an island in the middle of Lake Argyle in the east Kimberley.

Top scientist tells UNE grads economic future in their hands
The Chief Scientist of New South Wales, Professor Mary O'Kane, says Australia faces a grim future if it does not produce, and retain, more scientists.

Farmers urged to sacrifice land for carbon study
Landowners in the northern agricultural region of Western Australia are being asked to sacrifice areas of their property for research on the carbon sequestration of plants.


 EnvironmentMore Environment Stories > 

Record Sydney switch-off kicks off Earth Hour
Australia's Opera House was the first of many global landmarks to go dark on Saturday as Earth Hour got underway with hundreds of millions of people around the world set to switch off their lights.

Earth Hour labelled a waste of time
The chairman of Western Australia's largest sustainability program says Earth Hour is tokenistic and a waste of time.

Wind sickness doctor fronts Senate inquiry
A doctor who pioneered a controversial study into what she calls "wind turbine syndrome" has told a Senate inquiry that residents living near wind farms will get sick.



To change your preferences, please enter your email address and click 'Login' here or to unsubscribe click here.

To ABC Online Home Page
© 2009 ABC | Privacy Policy

This service may include material from Agence France-Presse (AFP), APTN, Reuters, CNN and
the BBC World Service which is copyright and cannot be reproduced.