Categories
US

Yaser Said found guilty of capital murder in 2008 shootings of teenage daughters, Sarah and Amina

Yaser Said was convicted of capital murder Tuesday in the 2008 fatal shootings of his two teenage daughters, 18-year-old Amina Said and 17-year-old Sarah Said.

After hearing closing arguments and deliberating for three hours, the Dallas County jury reached the guilty verdict. Judge Chika Anyiam sentenced Said to life in prison without the possibility of parole. Prosecutors did not seek the death penalty in the case.

Patricia Owens, the mother of Amina and Sarah, addressed her ex-husband on the stand after the verdict. “You deserve to die now, not in prison,” Owens said. “You took my life. You took my family all in one night.”

Said was placed on the FBI’s most-wanted list after the murders and evaded arrest for more than 12 years. Said, who had worked as a cab driver, was arrested in August 2020 in Justin, Texas. He denied killing his daughters from him when he took the stand Monday, entering a not guilty plea,

Prosecutors claim Said, who is Muslim, murdered his daughters because he was upset that the girls were dating.

“He wouldn’t even let these girls go to a movie. He wouldn’t let them date,” a prosecutor said during closing statements Tuesday.

ABC News local affiliate WFAA reported that police have described the murders as “honor killings” — defined as the killing of a relative, especially a girl or woman, who is perceived to have brought dishonor on the family in certain cultures.

During the trial, prosecutors read a December 21, 2007, email Amina wrote to her history teacher 10 days before she and her sister were killed, saying their father “made our lives a nightmare” and that she and her sister wanted to run away.

“I am so scared right now,” Amina wrote, according to prosecutors. “OK, well as you know we’re not allowed to date and my dad is arranging my marriage. My dad said I cannot put it off any more and I have to get married this year.”

“He will, without any drama nor doubt, kill us,” she also wrote.

PHOTO: Yaser Said, who took the stand Monday, Aug. 8, 2022, denies killing his daughters, entering a not guilty plea.

Yaser Said, who took the stand Monday, Aug. 8, 2022, denies killing his daughters, entering a not guilty plea.

WFAA

The girls, along with their mother and their boyfriends, fled their Texas home to Oklahoma on Christmas Day 2007, four days after Amina sent the email. Witnesses said the girls returned to the Dallas area on New Year’s Eve when their mother de ella said Said convinced her to return home.

The girls’ bodies were found on New Year’s Day 2008 in a taxi cab prosecutors said Said drove.

Last Wednesday, the prosecution played the 911 call Sarah allegedly made the night of her death. During the call, a woman can be heard frantically screaming that her father had shot her and that she was dying.

During her testimony in court last Thursday Owens pointed to her ex-husband, calling him “that devil.” She testified that Said was controlling and abusive throughout their relationship, adding that she and her daughters de ella left him several times over the years, but they always returned out of fear.

Owens declined to comment on the case until her ex-husband is convicted, she told ABC News.

In a letter written to the judge overseeing the case, Said said while he disapproved of his daughters’ “dating activity,” he denied killing the girls.

“I was upset because in my culture it’s something to get upset about,” said Said through a translator. I have testified that I immigrated to the US from Egypt in 1983 and later became a US citizen.

Said told jurors that the evening his daughters were killed, he was taking them to dinner because he wanted to smooth things over and “solve the problem.”

However, Said claims he left the vehicle, fleeing into a wooded area before the girls were killed because he thought someone wanted to murder him, testifying that he spotted an unknown person in a car stalking them while they were driving to dinner.

Said said he did not turn himself in after the murders because he didn’t think he would get a fair trial.

The defense team claims that Said was targeted by law enforcement because of his Muslim faith and cultural beliefs.

“Everybody has a preference in how they discipline their kids, just like they have a preference for what kind of food they eat, what kind of people they date, what religion they want to practice,” Baharan Muse, Said’s defense attorney, said in closing arguments Tuesday. “Discipline does not mean you murdered your children. Your culture does not mean you murdered your children.”

Said’s defense team alleged prosecutors sought to “generalize” and “criminalize an entire culture, to fit their narrative.”

The prosecution rejected the claim that Said was unjustly accused for his religious beliefs.

“If you intentionally or knowingly cause the death of another in Dallas County, we are coming for you. Period. You will be prosecuted. Period. It has nothing to do with your race or religion,” prosecutor Lauren Black said in her closing argument .

Categories
Technology

Razer offering Williams Esports edition of Enki Pro Chair

Razer offering Williams Esports edition of Enki Pro Gaming Chair


If you or a sim racer you know is in the market for a lavish gaming chair, Team Razer might have what you’re looking for. The “Ultimate Comfortable Gaming Chair” per the Razer website, or the “Throne for Esports Racing” as the promotional video puts it, the Razer Enki Pro now comes in the famous blue and black found on the Williams Esports liveries.

Retailing for £1,299, the Williams Esports Edition of the Razer Enki Pro claims to have that luxurious feeling when it’s time to sit down and game. The seat itself is a mix of Alcantara plush with leatherette-type of lining. It has 110 degrees of extended shoulder arches and a 21-inch ultra-wide seat base.

Inside and around the Enki Pro, there’s a built in lumbar arch for the back, adjustable seat positioning with up to 152 degrees of recline, and there’s also a piece of memory foam disguised as a head cushion for head and neck comfort and support.

This particular gaming chair comes in two other variants if the Williams Esports branding isn’t what you’re looking for. There is a Koenigsegg Edition that also costs £1,299, decked out in bright yellow and black Alcantara upholstery. Also, for only £999, the same Enki Pro chair comes in all black with the green Razer trim and logo.

There are wheels on the bottom of the seat, so unless you’ve got a rig that holds the wheels down, like the Next Level Racing Wheel Stand 2.0 does, or you opt to not install the wheels for whatever reason, this is going to be most useful for desk gaming/racing or casual chilling in your gaming room.

Either way, it’s quite luxurious in the pricing. What do you think about this new gaming chair, is it a must have for Williams Racing or Esports fans? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below!





Categories
Sports

Serena Williams and Australian coach Rennae Stubbs flag double standards of mothers having to choose between sport and parenthood

As Serena Williams prepares to farewell the sport she dominated for two decades, an Australian coach has revealed the lengths young players on the women’s tennis tour are going to so they can have long careers without interruption.

Williams flagged in a Vogue article titled Serena’s Farewell that she was not far away from ending her tennis career, hinting that it may be after the US Open, which starts at the end of the month.

The 23-time major winner said “something’s got to give” for a number of reasons; partly because she turns 41 at the end of September, partly because of her many business interests that are a full-time job in their own right, and partly because she wants to have a second child.

Williams, who was two months pregnant with daughter Olympia when she won her last major, the 2017 Australian Open, pointed out that while she “loved every second of being pregnant” it was unfair that she had to choose one or the other while most male athletes do not.

“I never wanted to have to choose between tennis and a family. I don’t think it’s fair,” she said, pointing to 45-year-old father of three Tom Brady, who retired as an NFL quarterback and then un-retired last off-season.

Space to play or pause, M to mute, left and right arrows to seek, up and down arrows for volume.

PlayAudio.  Duration: 7 minutes 53 seconds

Rennae Stubbs on the choice women have to make around tennis careers and parenthood

“If I were a guy, I wouldn’t be writing this because I’d be out there playing and winning while my wife was doing the physical labor of expanding our family.”

Former doubles world number one Rennae Stubbs told Radio National Breakfast that many players on the WTA tour were exploring fertility options early in their careers so they could play tennis for a decade or more without missing their window to have kids.

“I know players who want to have children, who want to have a family, have [frozen] their eggs, because they want to play until their mid-30s or 40s,” Stubbs, who coached stars Sam Stosur, Karolína Plíšková and Eugenie Bouchard, said.

“And there’s so much money in tennis now, they want to keep going and they can sustain themselves and their families.

Rennae Stubbs speaks to Karolina Pliskova while sitting on the on-court chair during a tennis match.
Rennae Stubbs (left) has coached a number of players on the women’s tour, including former world number one Karolína Plíšková (right).(Getty: Chris Hyde)

“So they freeze eggs so they can have kids later on in life. But think about Tom Brady or Roger Federer or Rafa [Nadal] now; you can have children and keep playing because you’re not the one birthing it and taking nine months to have the child and then the recovery after the child.

“There’s no question that it’s way more difficult for women. No question about it.”

It is not only globe-trotting tennis players who have made the decision, with WNBA stars Sue Bird and Breanna Stewart, English Super Netball player Geva Mentor and USWNT forward Sydney Leroux speaking openly about their egg retrieval processes.

In a post on the Reproductive Health and Wellness Center’s website about UFC fighter Carla Esparza freezing her eggs, the Orange County-based IVF and fertility experts wrote that the procedure is becoming increasingly “popular with young professional women who lead busy, active lifestyles and don ‘t want to run the risk of waiting too long before starting their family for fear of egg viability.”

“Women in the professional athletic field often face the risk of fertility issues frequently, as the nature of intense athletic professions may put women at a higher likelihood of irregular ovulation,” the website reads.

.

Categories
Australia

CEO of Warrnambool aged care home takes leave following bullying, intimidation claims

An aged care home that failed numerous safety standards and raised the ire of the community is recruiting an interim CEO.

Warrnambool’s Lyndoch Living today confirmed it was actively recruiting while current CEO, Doreen Power, takes leave.

It comes amid a WorkSafe inquiry that is underway after allegations of bullying and intimidation of staff and residents were leveled against Ms Power.

Last week south-west MP Roma Britnell used parliamentary privilege to accuse Ms Power of acting with “subterfuge and arrogance”.

Ms Britnell told the Legislative Assembly the aged care provider’s board should remove her.

“The aged care provider has had more than 200 staff leave over the past couple of years amid claims of bullying and intimidation from the upper management that’s created a toxic workplace,” Ms Britnell said.

“I believe Ms Powell is the source of many of these problems, especially the toxic workplace environment.

“I fear residents’ wellbeing is now at risk.”

Woman with brown hair speaks to crowd with microphone.
Liberal MP Roma Britnell speaks at a community rally against Lyndoch earlier this year.(Supplied: Roma Britnell)

Community unrest has been growing since Ms Power’s tenure began in Warrnambool in 2015.

In recent years, a community action group called “Keep Lyndoch Living” was formed and amassed over 700 members.

According to its Facebook site, the page was created to “give people in the Warrnambool region a space where they can safely discuss the future prosperity of our primary community-based aged care facility, Lyndoch Living.”

Group member Jim Burke said the situation had continued to deteriorate.

The group wants the federal government to remove the board and chief executive and appoint an administrator.

“They need to sort out a more representative board that is accountable to the community. At the moment they elect themselves.”

More than 100 local applications for membership from community members were denied in 2021 with no explanation.

Letter in black and white denying Lyndoch membership to Mr Burke.
More than 100 applications for membership to Lyndoch from community members have been denied.(Supplied: Jim Burke)

Prior to her seven-year Warrnambool stint, Ms Power was CEO of Plenty Valley Community Health for two years between 2012 and 2014, and CEO of Seymour Health from 2007 to 2014.

Ms Power has been contacted by the ABC for comment.

Lyndoch Living board president Susan Cassidy said Julie Bertram — the current director of innovation and organizational development — would lead the executive team until an interim CEO was appointed.

“We assure the Lyndoch and broader communities that our priority is the care and safety of our residents and staff, as we face continued challenges caused by workforce shortages in our region,” she said.

“We thank each and every one of our staff members for their dedicated service.”

Audit finds non-compliance

Lyndoch Living has failed numerous safety standards in three consecutive aged care commission audits.

The Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission told the ABC an unannounced audit in April this year at Lyndoch’s hostel and nursing home found the hostel non-compliant in seven areas, and the nursing home non-compliant in five areas.

Areas of noncompliance included falls, choking and unexplained weight loss.

From July 19 to 22 the commission conducted a second unannounced site visit to Lyndoch’s May Noonan Center and is compiling a report now.

“The Commission is closely monitoring the services,” a spokesman for the Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission said.

“If we assess at any point that consumers are being placed at immediate and severe risk of harm, we will not hesitate to act urgently and without delay to protect consumers.”

Ms Britnell’s federal counterpart, Liberal MP Dan Tehan, said the commission had received 43 complaints about Lyndoch since July last year.

Minister for Disability, Aging and Carers Colin Brooks told the ABC he has written to the Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission about Lyndoch Living.

“I am aware of the community’s concerns regarding Lyndoch and have written to the commission to ask for their continued support in working with Lyndoch,” Mr Brooks said.

.

Categories
US

Nebraska woman charged with helping daughter have abortion

OMAHA, Nebraska (AP) — A Nebraska woman has been charged with helping her teenage daughter end her pregnancy at about 24 weeks after investigators uncovered Facebook messages in which the two discussed using medication to induce an abortion and plans to burn the fetus afterward.

The prosecutor handling the case said it’s the first time he has charged anyone for illegally performing an abortion after 20 weeks, a restriction that was passed in 2010. Before the US Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June, states weren’t allowed to enforce abortion bans until the point at which a fetus is considered viable outside the womb, at roughly 24 weeks.

In one of the Facebook messages, Jessica Burgess, 41, tells her then 17-year-old daughter that she has obtained abortion pills for her and gives her instructions on how to take them to end the pregnancy.

The daughter, meanwhile, “talks about how she can’t wait to get the ‘thing’ out of her body,” a detective wrote in court documents. “I will finally be able to wear jeans,” she says in one of the messages. Law enforcement authorities obtained the messages with a search warrant, and detailed some of them in court documents.

In early June, the mother and daughter were only charged with a single felony for removing, concealing or abandoning a body, and two misdemeanors: concealing the death of another person and false reporting. It wasn’t until about a month later, after investigators reviewed the private Facebook messages, that they added the felony abortion-related charges against the mother. The daughter, who is now 18, is being charged as an adult at prosecutors’ request.

Burgess’ attorney didn’t immediately respond to a message Tuesday, and the public defender representing the daughter declined to comment.

When first interviewed, the two told investigators that the teen had unexpectedly given birth to a stillborn baby in the shower in the early morning hours of April 22. They said they put the fetus in a bag, placed it in a box in the back of their van, and later drove several miles north of town, where they buried the body with the help of a 22-year-old man.

The man, whom The Associated Press is not identifying because he has only been charged with a misdemeanor, has pleaded no contest to helping bury the fetus on rural land his parents own north of Norfolk in northeast Nebraska. He’s set to be sentenced later this month.

In court documents, the detective said the fetus showed signs of “thermal wounds” and that the man told investigators the mother and daughter did burn it. He also wrote that the daughter confirmed in the Facebook exchange with her mother that the two would “burn the evidence afterward.” Based on medical records, the fetus was more than 23 weeks old, the detective wrote.

Burgess later admitted to investigators to buy the abortion pills “for the purpose of instigating a miscarriage.”

At first, both mother and daughter said they didn’t remember the date when the stillbirth happened, but according to the detective, the daughter later confirmed the date by consulting her Facebook messages. After that he sought the warrant, he said.

Madison County Attorney Joseph Smith told the Lincoln Journal Star that he’s never filed charges like this related to performing an abortion illegally in his 32 years as the county prosecutor. He didn’t immediately respond to a message from the AP on Tuesday.

The group National Advocates for Pregnant Women, which supports abortion rights, found 1,331 arrests or detentions of women for crimes related to their pregnancy from 2006 to 2020.

In addition to its current 20-week abortion ban, Nebraska tried — but failed — earlier this year to pass a so-called trigger law that would have banned all abortions when the US Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade.

A Facebook spokesman declined to talk about the details of this case, but the company has said that officials at the social media giant “always scrutinize every government request we receive to make sure it is legally valid.”

Facebook it will fight back against requests that it thinks are invalid or too broad says, but the company said it gave investigators information in about 88% of the 59,996 times when the government requested data in the second half of last year.

.

Categories
Technology

Microsoft celebrates 15 years of OneDrive with a redesign and new features

Microsoft’s marking OneDrive’s 15th anniversary with a new landing page, called OneDrive Home, and it should make it easier to keep tabs on your work. Instead of arriving on the My files tab when you first open OneDrive, you’ll find yourself on the new Home page that resembles that dashboard in the online version of Office.

Like the Office web app, OneDrive Home contains a list of your files, organized by how recently you accessed them. Above the list are filters that let you sort your documents by Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and PDF file types.

It’s easier to understand the new changes once you see them.
Image: Microsoft

There’s also a new “Activity” column to the right of the “Owner” file field that tells you when someone leaves a comment, @mentions another user, or assigns you a task within a shared document. On the left side of the Home view, Microsoft’s adding a new Quick access section, where (just like on Windows) you can find and pin your most frequently accessed spaces.

Unfortunately, these changes aren’t live right now — Microsoft says OneDrive Home will be available in “the coming months.” From what it looks like, though, the new Home page could serve as a central hub that should help you stay organized while collaborating remotely.

Aside from its OneDrive web app, Microsoft is also rolling out its photo story feature for the OneDrive mobile app (essentially OneDrive’s equivalent to Instagram stories) to users in Australia. The feature’s not reaching users in the US or other regions until later this year.

Categories
Sports

‘Greatest player’: Billie Jean King leads tennis tributes to Serena Williams | Serena Williams

Billie Jean King, the former women’s world No 1, has led tributes within tennis to Serena Williams, describing her as the sport’s “greatest player” following the 23-time grand slam singles champion’s announcement that she is retiring.

In a column for Vogue, the 40-year-old Williams described her intention to finish her playing career as an “evolution” away from tennis and indicated she could step away after the upcoming US Open.

“When Serena steps away from tennis, she will leave as the sport’s greatest player,” said King, the winner of 12 grand slam singles titles, including six at Wimbledon. “After a career that has inspired a new generation of players and fans, she will forever be known as a champion who won on the court and raised the global profile of the sport off of it.”

Speaking to USA Today, the former men’s world No 1, John McEnroe, said of Williams: “She should do whatever she wants. She’s an icon. Her place de ella in American society has gone to a place where she deserves it after everything she’s accomplished, everything she’s done.

“I don’t know the answer whether she wants to play again, I don’t think she needs to play again. Ella she’s at that level where Michael Jordan, LeBron James and Tom Brady are. Ella she’s like one of the all-time greatest athletes in the history of any sport – male or female. It seems to be a great place in her life. She she’s added a lot.

“Anyone who saw the movie [King Richard] realizes where they came from and where she is now is unbelievable so she can spend the rest of her life going ‘not bad huh?’”

Meanwhile, Coco Gauff, the current world No 11, hailed Williams as the very reason she took up the sport in the first place. “I grew up watching her. That’s the reason why I play tennis,” said Gauff after her first-round victory at the Canadian Open in Toronto on Tuesday. “Tennis being a predominantly white sport, it definitely helped a lot. Because I saw somebody who looked like me dominating the game. It made me believe that I could dominate too.”

Paying her own tribute to Williams, Emma Raducanu, the US Open champion, said: “She definitely changed the game. There’s not really been someone who has dominated like her in the women’s game. So I think she did change the game a lot in that respect.”

Pam Shriver, the former world No 3, added: “She [Williams] you have impacted tennis on the court and off the court. She’s taken tennis off the sports pages and into pop culture. She bridges people of all generations, diversity of background. She’s become a great spokesperson, a philanthropist and she’s matured before our eyes.”

Categories
Australia

Nuclear bomb tests at Maralinga triggered Hedley Marston to study fallout over Australia

Hedley Marston could be charming, genial and witty but he was not above fulmination, especially where fulminations of a different kind were concerned.

In the mid-1950s, the CSIRO biochemist emerged as arguably the most significant contemporary critic of Britain’s nuclear weapons testing program, which was launched on Australia’s Montebello Islands almost 70 years ago in October 1952.

Despite the imminent anniversary Marston remains an obscure figure, but his biographer Roger Cross believes that it should change.

“He appears to be totally unknown to the Australian public and, of course, to South Australians — he was a South Australian after all,” Dr Cross said.

Marston’s reservations about the nuclear program were far from spontaneous; indeed, his strongest concerns about him were n’t voiced until several years after the first test, when he recorded a radioactive plume passing over Adelaide.

The source of that plume was Operation Buffalo, a series of four nuclear blasts in 1956, and Marston was especially outraged by the fact that the general population was not warned.

A black and white portrait of Australian biochemist Hedley Marston, sitting at his desk.
Marston was highly regarded within the scientific community, and counted the likes of Mark Oliphant among his friends.(Creative Commons: CSIRO)

“Sooner or later the public will demand a commission of inquiry on the ‘fall out’ in Australia,” he wrote to nuclear physicist and weapons advocate Sir Mark Oliphant.

“When this happens some of the boys will qualify for the hangman’s noose.”

What made Marston’s fury difficult to dismiss, especially for those inclined to deride opposition to nuclear testing as the exclusive preserve of ‘commies’ and ‘conchies’, was the fact that he was no peacenik.

Detractors might have damned him as an arriviste, but never as an activist: his cordial relations with Oliphant and other scientific grandees demonstrate that Marston was, in many respects, an establishment man.

Dr Cross has described Marston’s elegant prose as “Churchillian”, and the adjective is apposite in other ways.

While the roguish Marston might not have gone as far as the British wartime leader’s assertion that, during conflict, truth is so precious “that she should always be attended by a bodyguard of lies”, he had, in a 1947 letter to the editor, publicly defended scientific secrecy:

“Under present conditions of fear and mistrust among nations it is obvious that military technology must be kept secret; and to achieve this end it should be conducted in special military laboratories where strictest security measures may be observed.”

But by late 1956, Marston’s alarm at radioactive fallout across parts of Australia was such that he was privately demanding greater disclosures to the general public.

One color and one black-and-white image of nuclear explosions at an outback location.
Two of the four Operation Buffalo nuclear detonations at Maralinga, in outback SA, in October 1956.(Creative Commons)

Much of his ire was aimed at the Atomic Weapons Tests Safety Committee — a body established before the Maralinga tests, but after blasts had already occurred at Emu Fields* and the Montebello Islands.

“He was the only senior Australian scientist to express concerns and, because of his character, the concerns that he expressed were very forthright,” said Dr Cross, whose biography of Marston, aptly entitled Fallout, inspired the documentary Silent Storm.

“When the safety committee after each explosion said there was absolutely no effect on Australians, I believed that they were lying.”

Space to play or pause, M to mute, left and right arrows to seek, up and down arrows for volume.
One of the 12 nuclear blasts that occurred in Australia in the 1950s.(Supplied: ABC Library Vision)

‘If the wind changes, we need to go’

The experiments that led Marston, whose reputation largely rested on his expertise in sheep nutrition, to reach this conclusion were two-fold.

In the more protracted one, I analyzed the presence of radioactive iodine-131 — a common component of nuclear fallout — in the thyroids of sheep.

“One group he kept penned up under cover eating dried hay, which had been cut some time before. The other group, he put outside eating the grass,” Dr Cross said.

“I have tested the thyroids in each group – the ones on the hay only had background amounts of iodine-131.

“But the ones in the fields had a tremendously high concentration of this radioactive isotope, both north and south of the city.”

In a paper published in the Australian Journal of Biological Sciences, Marston speculated on the implications for the nation’s food chain.

A map from the 1985 Royal Commission into British Nuclear Tests in Australia.
A fallout map from the 1985 royal commission, which stated that while fallout at Maralinga Village from the October 11, 1956, test was “considered to be ‘negligible from a biological point of view’ it does suggest difficulties with the forecast prior to the test “.(Royal Commission into British Nuclear Tests in Australia)

For the other experiment, Marston conducted air monitoring in Adelaide.

He was especially alarmed by what he found for the period following the Maralinga test of October 11, 1956.

“There was a wind shear and at least part, maybe the best part, of that cloud, blew in a south-easterly direction and that took it towards Adelaide and the country towns in between,” Dr Cross said.

“The safety committee — who must have known of the wind shear — had done nothing about warning Adelaide people perhaps to stay indoors.”

A middle-aged man in a white coat testing substances in a laboratory.
Australian biologist John Stewart Charnock worked with Marston at the time of his studies into fallout.(Supplied)

Among Marston’s assistants at this time was John Stewart Charnock, who later discussed aspects of his work with daughter Cathryn.

“One of the jobs that dad was asked to do was to stand on the roof of the CSIRO building here in Adelaide,” Ms Charnock said.

“Marston asked him to … capture dust to see if there was any fallout.

“He was very aware of some of the risks that were facing people that people didn’t know about.”

A woman wearing glasses and a green cardigan, smiling.
Cathryn Charnock was born years after the tests, but remembers her father describing some of his work.(ABC Radio Adelaide: Daniel Keane)

Ms Charnock said that, following one test, her father had even considered leaving the city.

“Dad was supposed not to tell anybody, but he did ring my mother and say if the wind changes, it’s going to be in Adelaide and we need to pack the car and we need to go,” she said.

A newspaper article on nuclear testing at Maralinga.
An article from The Canberra Times of September 17, 1957, reporting on nuclear testing at Maralinga.(Supplied: Trove)

Despite Marston’s reservations, the nuclear program carried on regardless.

Less than a year after the Operation Buffalo tests, Maralinga was hosting Operation Antler.

In September 1957, newspapers around Australia reported on an upcoming “second test” that would, weather permitting, proceed as part of a “spring series”.

If it hadn’t been for the presence of the words “atomic” and “radioactive”, a reader might easily have inferred that what was being described was as commonplace as a game of cricket.

*This article is the first in a two-part series, the second of which will focus on the tests at Emu Fields.

.

Categories
US

Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler concedes primary defeat to Trump-endorsed challenger Joe Kent

Six-term US Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler conceded defeat to Donald Trump-endorsed challenger Joe Kent on Tuesday after new vote totals confirmed she would place third in the primary.

The concession was further proof of the political price paid by Republicans who dared to impeach Trump over his role in stoking the January 2021 assault on the US Capitol. Of the 10 House Republicans who joined Democrats in that vote, Herrera Beutler was the seventh to retire or be ousted in a primary.

Kent, an Army combat veteran and first-time candidate, will face Democrat Marie Gluesenkamp Perez in November. She placed first in the primary with about 31% of the vote to 23% for Kent and 22% for Herrera Beutler.

In a prepared concession statement just after 5 pm, Herrera Beutler thanked voters of Southwest Washington’s 3rd Congressional District for supporting her for many years, and cited accomplishments that included working to help the local fishing industry and passing a law to help low-income children get specialty medical care.

“Ever since I was first elected to this seat I have done my very best to serve my home region and our country. Though my campaign came up short this time, I’m proud of all we’ve accomplished together for the place where I was raised and still call home,” Herrera Beutler said in a statement.

Herrera Beutler did not mention Kent or Trump but made an apparent reference to her vote to impeach Trump over the Capitol attack.

Referring to “unexpected and difficult” moments, Herrera Beutler said, “I’m proud that I always told the truth, stuck to my principles, and did what I knew to be best for our country.”

Trump issued a statement Tuesday night celebrating Herrera Beutler’s defeat.

“Joe Kent just won an incredible race against all odds in Washington State. Importantly, I have knocked out yet another impeacher, Jaime Herrera Beutler, who so stupidly played right into the hands of the Democrats,” Trump said. “Joe is a wonderful guy, who bravely served our Country as a Green Beret. He has a truly bright future.”

Kent’s campaign did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

He ran a campaign marked by loyalty to Trump — echoing the former president’s false claims about the 2020 election — promoting an “America First” agenda including a near-total shutdown on immigration and refugees. He also has vowed to move immediately to impeach President Joe Biden if elected and to launch investigations of Democrats.

On social media and in appearances on Fox News, Kent loudly criticized the FBI search warrant executed at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate, where agents were reportedly looking for classified documents illegally taken by the ex-president.

“Now, more than ever, we must unite to save our nation. The enemy is organized & on the attack, we have to be ready to fight back,” Kent tweeted on Monday.

Herrera Beutler, R-Battle Ground, had led Kent on election night, but slipped in subsequent vote counts, finally falling behind Kent on Monday. After new counts Tuesday in Clark and Thurston counties, Kent kept his hold on second place, leading Herrera Beutler by 928 votes out of more than 200,000 that were cast in the race.

Kent advanced to the general election despite a flood of attack ads fueled by more than $4 million in outside PAC spending aimed at helping to get Herrera Beutler incumbent past the primary despite the widespread anger among GOP voters over her impeachment vote. Some of that money came from a newly created super PAC that timed its spending to avoid revealing its donors until after the primary.

An ex-Green Beret combat veteran and Gold Star husband, Kent first met Trump at Dover Air Force Base in 2019, after Kent’s wife, Navy cryptologist Shannon Kent, was killed by a suicide bomber in Syria while fighting the Islamic State terrorist group.

Trump endorsed Kent last year, calling him “a warrior for the America First agenda” and attacking Herrera Beutler for supporting “the Democrats’ impeachment scam.”

Gluesenkamp Perez lives in rural Skamania County and co-owns a Portland auto-repair shop with her husband. She has been involved in the state Democratic Party and ran unsuccessfully for Skamania County Board of Commissioners in 2016.

In a statement Monday after Kent passed Hererra Beutler for second place, Gluesenkamp Perez said the November race will be “a national bellwether for the direction of our country.”

Calling Kent a white nationalist for his ties to extremist groups, she said his “unapologetic extremism and divisive approach demonstrate he is unfit for public office.”

The race may still be headed for a mandatory recount, though those almost never change the outcome. A machine recount is required if the gap between the No. 2 and No. 3 candidates is less than half of 1% and less than 2,000 votes.

Categories
Technology

Repco Roars Into 100th Birthday With New Campaign Via Thinkerbell

To celebrate 100 laps around the sun, Repco has filled its “Driven by Passion for 100 Years” campaign to the brim with hidden car history, via Thinkerbell.

Whether it’s finding Brian’s ’94 Supra, the fabled Peter Brock Energy Polarizer, the rock that ended DJ’s Bathurst, or Brabham’s legendary engine – every asset is a game of ‘I-SPY’ for any and every car lover.

This celebration of iconic bits of car history, racing moments, and pop culture has been carefully crafted to remind Australia and New Zealand of Repco’s deep connection to auto culture. From winning F1 championships to helping you fix your first car – Repco’s been riding shotgun through it all.

The hidden references are loaded throughout all campaign assets across TV, Print, Radio, Social and Instore – which culminate in an interactive game – challenging enthusiasts to test their skills with an online experience.

Jim Ingram, national chief creative tinker at Thinkerbell, said: “Whether you’re buying an air freshener for your new car, or a replacement four-barrel carby for your old one, anyone who shops at Repco shares a passion for all things auto . And it’s been fun creating a centenary campaign that’s riddled with hidden moments of passion, some obvious and some that will challenge even the most rusted on car nut.”

Kym Sutherland, general manager, marketing at Repco, said: “Repco’s been there for all car enthusiasts for a hundred years now. Whether it’s yours, or someone else’s that you’re working on, we understand that passion – it’s how we got started in the first place.”

CREDITS

Client: Repco

Scott Whiteley – Executive General Manager Marketing and CX, Automotive
Kym Sutherland – General Manager, Marketing
Priscilla Sugrue – Brand Manager

Creative Agency: Thinker Bell
Matias Reyes – Creative Tinker
Julia Keller – Thinker
Cale Berry – Creative Tinker
Gideon Nedas – Lead Thinker
Jess Evernden – Lead Production Tinker
Jaime Morgan – General Manager – South
Dom Counahan – Exec Brand Thinker
Jim Ingram – National Chief Creative Tinker
Sam Whatley – Lead Creative Tinker
Josh Parmenter – Lead Creative Tinker
Adam Ferrier – Chief Thinker

Media Agency: Initiative

Aaron Farrelly – Group Director
Bec Olsson – Partnerships Manager

Production Co: The Producers

Mitch Kennedy – Director
Victoria Conners – Exec Producer

Original Composition: Ack Kinmonth

Sound: BangBang

Digital Agency: Kojo