Monday 31 December 2007

Aussies row in trans-Tasman glory, The Australian, 31 December, 2007.

Aussies row to trans-Tasman glory: [1 All-round Country Edition]

Stapleton, JohnThe Australian [Canberra, A.C.T] 31 Dec 2007: 5.
Organiser of the successful rowing trip, serial adventurer [Steven Gates], 39, who advertised for people to join him after having the boat specially designed in The Netherlands, said they were "completely exhausted" and only functioning at all thanks to "lots of painkillers". "The fact that everyone is still walking today is testimony to some of the drugs in our medical kit," he said.
"It was hard, scary and intense," Gates said. "It has been an epic. We are elated to be back on dry land."
The most positive of the four, physical education teacher and surfboat champion Macready, 25, described the experience as "absolutely brilliant". "I thought it would break me mentally, but it didn't," she said.

Full Text

Look who's in Sydney for the fireworks, The Australian, 31 December, 2007.

Look who's in Sydney for the fireworks: [1 All-round Country Edition]

Stapleton, JohnThe Australian [Canberra, A.C.T] 31 Dec 2007: 5.
Show highlighting
"Hey, Ruddy" and "Good on ya, [KEVIN Rudd]", locals shouted when they realised they had unexpectedly come face-to-face with their newest neighbours.
While much of the rest of the country has adopted a "wait and see" approach to Mr Rudd's prime ministership, he and his wife easily won over the staff at Garfish. "They were really good, just normal people," one waitress said. Another described Mr Rudd as "nice and polite, just a very lovely guy".
Now ensconced beside the harbour, the Rudds may have finally discovered the ultimate truth of Sydney life, as so aptly described by David Williamson in his play Emerald City: "No-one in Sydney ever wastes time debating the meaning of life -- it's getting yourself a water frontage. People devote a lifetime to the quest."

Saturday 1 December 2007

Rudd on a mission for homeless, Weekend Australian, 1 December, 2007. Page One.

Rudd on a mission for homeless: [1 All-round Country Edition]

Show highlighting
"We really have to roll up our sleeves here," he said on ABC radio yesterday. "The turn-away rate for people who are in all sorts of distress arriving at a homeless shelter, where seven out of 10 are turned away because there's simply no room at the inn, we've got to do a lot better than that."
"People in Australia still tend to see a typical homeless person as a middle-aged man with an alcohol problem, but the reality is very different," Tony Keenan, chief executive of Hanover Welfare Services tells The Weekend Australian. "The single largest group accessing our services are children. The largest group of homeless young people are women, and homeless families are a huge issue."
Mission Australia's Lincoln Hopper, in charge of Roma House, the shelter [Kevin Rudd] visited in Brisbane in June, said Rudd had "given the nation an historic opportunity to end homelessness".