Categories
Business

President raises concerns about CSE operations – Business News







  • Says SOEs will not be listed on CSE where a few can benefit
  • Calls for changes in the CSE and says if not a new institution will be set up

President Ranil Wickremesinghe yesterday raised concerns about the manner in which the country’s capital market, the Colombo Stock Exchange (CSE), operates, and asserted the need for the entire system to change.

He said that shares of State-Owned-Enterprises (SOE) will not be listed on the Colombo bourse as a part of restructuring efforts as it is controlled by a few investors.

Highlighting the market manipulation that takes place at the CSE, Wickremesing he stressed he would not list the SOEs on the CSE so that a few investors can benefit from such a move.

“The Colombo Stock Exchange (CSE) is not recognized by the London Stock Exchange. There are many questions about the stock exchange that a few people control it. And a few people rig it.

“Now can I put an SOE shares on to that?” said Wickremesinghe while questioning the credibility of the stock market operations in Sri Lanka.

The President called for changes to take place at the CSE, failing which he said a new institution will be set up.
“I don’t want any arguments on that. If we are to use the present stock exchange, we all should be satisfied that it is neutral and will benefit all,” asserted Wickremesinghe.


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Categories
Entertainment

True-blue content call over plan to flip the film script

This has changed to: “The centrality of the artist: supporting the artist as a worker and celebrating their role as the creators of culture”.

A Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development, Communications and the Arts spokesman did not address why the reference to “telling Australian stories” had been omitted, but rather described the call-out for submissions as a way to start a debate about what a national culture policy should be.

Hatherley argued it was “technically possible” to “support excellence and the special role of artists and their creative collaborators” while making Hollywood movies in Sydney.

“But that overlooks the opportunity to support Australian ideas, the development of Australian IP, and the sharing of Australian stories,” she said.

Leonie Marsh from Screen Vixens, a group of female Australian film and television producers, agreed, adding that it was critical to “define Australianess and Australian stories”.

“Otherwise it will be others, like Hollywood, that will do it for us, with potentially vested interests that don’t represent our cultural values ​​as a nation,” Marsh says.

This week Oscar-winning producer emily shermansinger-songwriter Jaguar Jonze and theater and festival director Wesley Enoch were handpicked by federal Arts Minister Tony Burke to join a 15-member panel that will guide the government on the formation of a national cultural policy.

panton hits the town

David Panton at the Mercedes-Benz launch with the night's host Erin Molan.

David Panton at the Mercedes-Benz launch with the night’s host Erin Molan.Credit:Esteban Tessa

desde Julie Bishop‘s “plus one” to solo Sydney socialite, the recently unshackled david panton leapt into the cocktail milieu with gusto at Thursday night’s epic Mercedes-Benz party to launch its new electric EQS.

Besties: Sally Obermeder and Kerri-Anne Kennerley at the Mercedes-Benz launch.

Besties: Sally Obermeder and Kerri-Anne Kennerley at the Mercedes-Benz launch.Credit:Esteban Tessa

As a parade of vintage Mercs passed by, including a priceless 1969 280SL Pagoda, it was the vintage silver fox Panton who appeared more enamored with the young ladies in his line of sight. I have assured PS that, contrary to reports, he is single.

Meanwhile, it was a happy meeting for Kerri-Anne Kennerley and sally obermeder. KAK revealed that back in 2013, when she was checking into the Mater Hospital for breast cancer surgery, she discovered Obermeder, whom she did not know, was having her surgery on the same day. “Something in me made me seek her out of her. Before I had been diagnosed I had followed her story of her, and thought she was incredibly inspiring. I just wanted to say hi,” Kennerley said.

The women became firm friends, privately sharing the highs and lows of their respective orders, and both are grateful to still be here.

Catlin’s Southern Discomfort

It wasn’t just the Macquarie Street antics capturing all the headlines this week. South of the border, the resignation of Victorian Liberal leader Matthew Guy‘s chief of staff Mitch Catlin piqued PS’s interest.

Mitch Catlin in action in the Birdcage in 2018.

Mitch Catlin in action in the Birdcage in 2018.Credit:jesse marlow

As the Age reported, Catlin proposed a donor make more than $100,000 in payments to his marketing company, Catchy Media Marketing and Management, for services described as “supporting business interests”.

But Catlin, who is more at home pimping celebrities, is also well known around that other Melbourne institution, Flemington’s birdcage enclosure during the spring racing carnival.

After the 2018 Melbourne Cup, it was conveniently leaked to the press that Catlin had been retained in a “top secret” operation to rebuild then embattled Today host Karl Stefanović‘s image. Stefanovic apparently “opened his own wallet to secure the services of marketing guru Mitch Catlin”.

Liza Minnelli in the Birdcage in 2009.

Liza Minnelli in the Birdcage in 2009. Credit:rebecca hallas

Um, guru? Catlin was best known for walking celebrities – from Liza Minelli and elle macpherson to Nicole Kidman and a cardboard cut-out of kim kardashian (no joke) – into marquees at the Melbourne Cup.

Catlin’s gig with Stefanovic was short-lived, and he’d pretty much disappeared from PS’s radar until this week’s revelations surfaced.

Jewels fit for a margarine queen

Woollahra has become the bling capital of Australia as two of Queen Street’s leading auction houses put some of the most extravagant and intriguing jewels in the country up for sale.

One of Joan Crebbin's pieces up for auction at Bonhams.

One of Joan Crebbin’s pieces up for auction at Bonhams.Credit:Bonham’s Australia

Bonhams is previewing pieces ahead of next week’s Australian Jewels auction. The collection includes items from the late Joan Crebbin‘s estate, who with her also deceased husband Dick Crebbinwere arguably the “king and queen of margarine”, their company Marrickville Holdings making the Miracle and ETA brands of the spread.

The couple were also arts patrons, lived in a Walter Burley Griffin-designed home in Castlecrag and avid jewelery collectors. Bonhams is offering 64 lots of Crebbin’s jewellery. She died two years ago, aged 94, but she had started collecting the jewels in the 1950s, including avant-garde pieces by Andrew Grim, Rod Edwards and Gerald Benney.

A few doors along Queen Street and Leonard Joel auction house is going for size rather than backstories in its Important Jewels sale, which is expected to fetch up to $8.5 million collectively.

A ruby ​​and diamond ring, featuring a 5.29 carat ruby ​​from Burma, selling for $700,000 to $900,000, at Leonard Joel's Important Jewels auction.

A ruby ​​and diamond ring, featuring a 5.29 carat ruby ​​from Burma, selling for $700,000 to $900,000, at Leonard Joel’s Important Jewels auction.

Among the highlights is a rare natural cut-cornered square modified brilliant-cut diamond weighing 21.13 carats, which could fetch up to $900,000, the same price expectation for an equally rare 5.29 carat Burmese ruby ​​and diamond ring. PS understands both pieces have come from international vendors.

Little’s creative big talent

He was best known as television personality jeanne “Ooooh aaah! Dahhhling!” Little’s husband, but three years after he died, former Sydney decorator Barry Little‘s archive has been included in the Caroline Simpson Library and Research Collection, joining the works of Leslie Walford and Marion Hall Best.

Barry Little with his wife Jeanne and their daughter Katie, at home in the early 1970s.

Barry Little with his wife Jeanne and their daughter Katie, at home in the early 1970s.
Credit:Courtesy of Katie M Little

The collection of scrapbooks documenting his many projects was donated by his daughter Katie Little.

Eccentric Jeanne Little in her egg hat.

Eccentric Jeanne Little in her egg hat.

In the 1960s and ’70s, Sydney’s leading interior designers were household names, their opinions on design sought after by the media and their photos appearing in the social pages.

Barry Little served as president of the Society of Interior Designers of Australia (SIDA) for five years between 1971 and 1976.

Both he and Jeanne worked out of their own dedicated rooms in their Paddington home. While Jeanne’s frenetic workshop was strewn in fabric, sequins, chicken wire and pots of glue to create her eccentric wardrobe, Barry’s was a study in serenity featuring bespoke carpets made in Hong Kong and Japanese temple blinds.

As for Jeannie’s famous collection of hilariously over-the-top gowns, those still surviving are in storage, though her daughter is confident that they will eventually end up with the Powerhouse Museum.

Many of the gowns, hats and accessories were made of perishable objects, like the Easter bonnet which featured sausages and mash scattered with peas which she wore on The Mike Walsh Show.

Jeanne Little with Mike Walsh in a dress made of toast.

Jeanne Little with Mike Walsh in a dress made of toast.

Jeanne asked Mike if the sausages were still warm. “I only cooked them this morning in case you felt like one. Everyone likes a sausage. Do you want one darling?

She made jackets out of tin foil and dresses covered in balloons, or pale pink prawn crackers and milk bottle caps.

“I still have about a dozen of her dresses she made for television, including one that is covered in Christmas decorations which I stupidly wore, not realizing she had wired the holly onto the gown … I was in agony,” Katie told PS .

“They have both left a great creative legacy that really captured an era.”

Your essential guide to the best things to see and do in and around the city. Sign up to our Culture Fix newsletter here.

Categories
Sports

First-round pick attracting interest from Victorian clubs

Miles Bergman is attracting interest from a number of Victorian clubs, reports SEN’s Michelangelo Rucci.

The 20-year-old has found himself in the senior team throughout the last several weeks after recovering from shoulder surgery and playing SANFL earlier in the year.

He was a first-round draft pick out of the Sandringham Dragons back in 2019. Despite signing a two-year extension back in 2020 and with a year to run on his current deal, Rucci predicts he’ll be tempted by a move home.

“We know there’s going to be an enormous trade market, but it’s not just going to be players falling out of contract,” Rucci told SEN SA’s The Run Home.

“Miles Bergman is under contract until 2023, the end of next season. But he has – what I’ve been told – fair interest from a few Victorian clubs to lure him back to Melbourne.

“He was a first-round draft pick, number 14 for Port Adelaide in 2019, has a Rising Star nomination last year and had a difficult past 12 months with COVID.

“If he gets tempted to move, Port are going to have some interesting talks with clubs about what they want back.

“I don’t think (he will be at Port next year).”

Bergman’s best game of the season came against Melbourne in Round 18 when he booted two goals and took eight marks from 16 disposals.

The Power are already up against it to keep wingman Karl Amon from departing Alberton at the end of the year, however the club is reported to have expressed an interest in out-of-contract Bulldog Josh Dunkley.

Sports-News Port Adelaide





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Categories
Australia

Federation University’s decision to ax arts program draws criticism from critical thinkers

Reducing access to humanities degrees will reduce critical thinking among the population and disadvantaged regional students, academics have warned, as Federation University prepares to ax its Bachelor of Arts (BA) program from 2023.

Making the decision less than two years after the former federal government doubled fees for humanities degrees, the university blamed the cut on declining enrollments from international and domestic students.

“Student commencements have failed from 87 in 2018 to just 27 in 2022,” acting vice-chancellor Professor Wendy Cross said.

“The Federation will continue to offer many of the courses that were part of the BA program … and we will redeploy staff where possible.”

A picture of Federation University's Ballarat campus.
The Federation operates two main campuses, in Churchill and Ballarat, as well as other smaller locations.(Supplied: Federation University)

A ‘short-sighted’ move

The move was labeled “short-sighted” by Ballarat-based professional historian Lucy Bracey.

“Cutting off access to this, not only does it limit future students — it particularly disadvantages regional students,” Ms Bracey said.

A woman in glasses smiles at the camera
Professional historian Lucy Bracey believes the fostering of critical thinking is at risk.(Supplied)

She said undertaking a degree in humanities taught young people critical thinking.

“You learn to evaluate sources, to learn to research,” Ms Bracey said.

“You learn to look at what you’re reading, [and] think about who created the source [and] why it was created.

“Critical thinking is allowing you to not just accept what you’re reading in the newspaper or told on the TV.”

Job-ready Graduates to be reviewed

The former federal government decided in 2020 to hike fees dramatically for humanities degrees under its Job-ready Graduates package, which simultaneously reduced the cost of science, engineering, nursing, health, teaching and maths degrees.

A federal Department of Education spokesperson said a “review” into the program would begin in the second half of this year.

“The government will appoint eminent Australians to conduct a universities accord, which will work with universities to consider things like affordability and accessibility,” the spokesperson said.

Student in library
The Job-ready Graduates package will be reviewed this year.(pexels.com)

Arts apart from the ‘ecosystem’

Queensland University of Technology Professor Sandra Gattenhof was the chief investigator for the Australian Research Council linkage project, The Role of the Creative Arts in Regional Australia: a Social Impact Model.

“From our research it shows that any kind of arts engagement, whether it be the small crafting groups, to big events, to things like courses at regional university … they’re all part of an ecosystem,” Professor Gattenhof said.

“And the minute you take one bit of the ecosystem out, it means… the connections that are within that community begin to fragment.”

She said arts and humanities played a vital role within regional areas to create greater social inclusion.

“Often when we talk about regional community, we often talk about statistics — regional trade and tourism statistics,” Professor Gattenhof said.

“But we forget that arts, culture, and creativity, in and of itself, is a wellbeing indicator.

“If you have that in your community, your community is what we call, ‘thriving’.”

University students walk through campus, some looking at their phones.  The photo is blurry, making faces unidentifiable.
Federation University has blamed low enrollments for ending its Bachelor of Arts program.(ABC News: Mark Leonardi)

A disappointing anniversary

This year marks the 150th anniversary of Victoria’s Education Act, which made education free, secular, and compulsory for young students.

Ms Bracey said it was disappointing to see a reduction in student opportunities in 2022.

“There’s a current thinking in society that is, if you’re not doing something that has an immediate job outcome at the end of it… it’s not worth doing,” she said.

“And there’s so many things wrong with that.

“There are over 500 professional historians, working across Australia, who all have an arts degree background.”

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Categories
US

Dan Newhouse, Republican congressman who voted to impeach Trump, wins primary, CNN projects


Washington
CNN

Republican Rep. Dan Newhouse and Democrat Doug White will advance to the general election out of the top-two primary in Washington’s 4th Congressional District, CNN projects.

Newhouse is one of the 10 Republican House members who voted for then-President Donald Trump’s impeachment in January 2021 following the attack on the US Capitol. Trump had endorsed Republican challenger Loren Culp in the district.

Washington holds open primaries in which all candidates, regardless of party, appear on the same ballot, with the top two finishers advancing to the November general election.

Despite facing anger from his own party over his impeachment vote, Newhouse had a number of factors going his way this week: The incumbent handily outspent his challengers, the field was large and fractured, and Washington state’s open primary system allowed people to vote for any candidate, regardless of affiliation.

Newhouse’s victory is a loss for Trump, who made defeating the 10 House Republicans who joined Democrats to impeach him a central goal to his post-presidency. By moving on from the primary, Newhouse is likely to keep his congressional seat from him. His district of him, which stretches from Washington’s borders with Oregon and Canada, overwhelmingly leans toward Republicans.

Aside from White and Culp, the field also included former NASCAR driver Jerrod Sessler and state Rep. Brad Klippert.

Local Republican operatives, many of whom censored and criticized Newhouse after his impeachment vote, worried that many people had moved on from impeachment and caused Republicans to focus on other issues as they went to the polls on Tuesday. Newhouse also seized on his agriculture expertise, using it to appeal in the largely rural district and draw some of the focus away from impeachment.

This story has been updated with additional background information.

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Categories
Business

Cost of living crisis: Sydneysiders rush to eastern suburbs petrol station while fuel prices are cheap

Australia’s cost of living crisis has been laid bare after Sydney residents rushed to a local petrol station upon hearing that prices were much lower than normal.

By the time most arrived, however, the price had fluctuated and was back to a more expensive level.

On Saturday morning, just past 9am, a thoughtful resident spotted that petrol prices were unusually cheap at a service station in Randwick, in Sydney’s east.

She took a quick snap and shared it a local community group, prefacing the image with “Cheap petrol Clovelly Rd.

“I don’t drive but plenty of cars buying.”

It was as low as 115.8 and 129 cents per liter (unleaded and premium unleaded respectively) but just an hour later, the prices had jumped to 161 and 175 cents per liter.

The original poster promised to notify her community if she spotted low prices again.

The current average price for regular unleaded fuel in Sydney is at 169.1 cents per liter, according to the NRMA’s weekly fuel report.

It comes as Australia has been caught in the throes of a cost of living crisis as inflation, rising interest rates and supply chain issues have made it harder to get ahead financially.

In the last quarter, transport costs rose 13.1 per cent as the price of fuel rose to record levels for the fourth quarter in a row.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has previously said he would not extend the 50 per cent fuel excise cut, due to expire September 28, due to the cost to the budget bottom line.

To extend it for another six months would cost the government $3 billion.

Last month, data found that Australians were spending nearly three-quarters more on petroleum each month than they were less than a year ago.

In June, the average monthly spend on petroleum in Australia was $192.63, an increase of $82.05 (74.19 per cent) from September 2021.

These heavy prices have made Australians become more strategic and considered with their driving habits, with more than 60 per cent now shopping around for cheaper fuel.

—With NCA Newswire

Read related topics:sydney

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Categories
Entertainment

GARY NUMAN: Asperger’s is my superpower – It was behind his hit singles

When Gary Numan says something’s weird, you know it’s very weird. This is a man whose idea of ​​a ‘quite normal’ family life is living in Los Angeles in a house that looks like a castle with trapdoors and secret passages, complete with a 20ft bronze dragon in the garden where others might have a garden gnome.

The pop icon is talking about how his second facelift involved having his skin hoiked skyward to such a degree that he has to shave behind his ear.

‘I have to kind of pull my ear forward,’ he says, demonstrating. So he has stubbled in places it shouldn’t be? ‘Yeah. I haven’t shaved today so I can feel it. Isn’t that weird?’

Weird still is that he says he’s ‘not that bothered’ about cosmetic surgery, having only had two facelifts (and five hair transplants). It’s his wife Gemma who’s the true addict. She’s had, well, everything, up to and including full body lifts.

Gary Numan with his wife Gemma and their three daughters in the garden of their LA home

Gary Numan with his wife Gemma and their three daughters in the garden of their LA home

‘Gemma’s well into it. She’s had everything done from her earlobe to her little toe de ella. I had this lift done about a year and a half ago.

‘I might have another one, but it gets a bit silly after a while. People tell me I don’t look 64, and I say, “It’s fake. It’s all fake!”’

Does it make him feel younger though? ‘Nah,’ he says. ‘You still grunt when you stand up.’

There was always something not-quite-of-this-world about Gary Numan. That was part of the appeal.

When he first appeared on the British pop scene in the late 70s, the ‘godfather of synth’ seemed to have stepped out of an alien spaceship (although in fact he’d worked in a WH Smith near Heathrow before fame came calling). He had bleached hair, heavy eyeliner (applied by his mum, but he did n’t shout about that), and his voice was once famously described as ‘pitched between Gene Pitney and a Dalek’.

He had his first UK number one with Are ‘Friends’ Electric?, and by the age of 21 he was worth an estimated £6m.

His army of fans called themselves Numanoids. I have even married one. Gemma decided at school that she was going to be Mrs Gary Numan when she grew up.

Gary in his heyday, performing at the Warfield Theater in San Francisco in 1980

Gary in his heyday, performing at the Warfield Theater in San Francisco in 1980

They didn’t get together until she was 24, but they’ve been inseparable ever since.

‘This is going to sound corny, given that it’s 30 years and four days since our first date, but I miss her even when she’s in a different part of the house,’ he says. ‘She’s everything I am not – which is most things, really.’

Gemma shields me from a world I find it difficult to be a part of. She shields me from humanity

Then, in April 1981 at the height of his popularity, he announced his retirement. It was, he says today, ‘a terrible mistake – and one I’ve spent 40 years trying to correct’.

Within two years he’d started a comeback. Who knew it would be a 40-year comeback though?

This year he achieved an ambition he says required near superhuman obsession: a symbolic return to Wembley Arena (now renamed the OVO Arena Wembley), four decades after he last played there. In May he strode onto that stage once more, but not before his wife had coaxed him into it.

Now a new documentary that follows his progress captures footage of Gemma comforting him as he shakes backstage, almost paralyzed with fear. ‘I was overwhelmed,’ he admits today.

‘I was losing it. She calmed me down, as she’s always done. I wouldn’t have been able to do it without her de ella – any of it.’

Gary Numan Resurrection on Sky Arts is an extraordinary insight into an extraordinary man, acknowledged as an influence on stars such as Prince and Lady Gaga. The film gives the most moving account yet of what it means to live on Planet Numan.

Much of it tells the story of his lifelong relationship with Asperger’s syndrome (a form of autism), a condition that contributed towards his expulsion from school, was a major factor in his retirement and, to this day, puts him at odds with the rest of the world.

How has he conquered it, or perhaps embraced would be a more accurate description? It’s easy, he says: he married Gemma.

‘Gemma shields me from humanity. She’s the buffer between me and the rest of the world. She shields me from a world I find it difficult to be a part of.’

I went through young adulthood thinking the reason I had no friends was because I was unlikeable

Born Gary Webb in Hammersmith in 1958, the son of a British Airways bus driver based at Heathrow, he was clearly a bright kid. He won a grammar school place but by his teens he had been identified as a troublemaker. His headteacher described him as the most disruptive pupil he’d ever dealt with.

At the age of 14 he was referred to Dr Eva Frommer, a psychiatrist who controversially used drugs to treat depression in children.

She put Gary on Valium and Nardil, which he says left him in a ‘zombified’ state. She also mentioned something called Asperger’s, but no formal diagnosis was made.

‘I don’t know that I was ever officially diagnosed. I’ve read since that the diagnostic criteria wasn’t finally established until the 80s.

‘I think it was seen as a new thing then. To be honest, I didn’t care. I just saw it as a nice day out in London with my mum.’

His parents freaked out though and stopped him seeing Dr Frommer. ‘My mum took exception to the Asperger’s because she saw it as a reflection of their parenting of her.

‘There was no mention of it again. Funnily enough I never joined the dots until I met Gemma, who knew a bit about it because her brother had it.

‘I went through young adulthood thinking I didn’t have friends because I was unlikeable.’

He was always obsessive about things he was interested in – airplanes, sound, that point when sound crossed into music. He would go on to excel in all this, famously becoming a pilot and forming an aerobatic display team.

But it was his experimental electronic music that would make him famous. He did try the traditional band route, but his band mates clearly found his behavior odd.

‘I was thrown out. They didn’t tell me. I just turned up and they had another singer. I started following them round like a puppy, but they didn’t want to know.

‘Things like that were traumatic, but I just came to the conclusion I was quite unlikeable.’.

He has started to channel his feelings into his music. But he was not a poppy sort of pop star, and as success beckoned he struggled with the industry.

He’d get overwhelmed at functions, and had no clue how to talk to record company executives. He still doesn’t.

‘I go to functions now only rarely, but I’m baffled by them. Gemma’s brilliant though.

‘She can sit at any table and talk to anyone about anything, all day. I’ve learned the mechanics of communication from her.’

He’d seen Gemma at gigs ‘for years’ before asking her on a date, but the chances of them becoming a couple must have been low? I have nods.

‘Having a relationship with a fan is difficult because all the things fans see are carefully chosen. They have the poster where you look incredibly handsome, but that’s the 300th picture that was taken and in the other 299 you look a bit s***.’

What of his ‘issues’? He says they were obvious. ‘I have problems with communication, talking to strangers, eating out.

‘We’d be going to a restaurant and I’d pick a fight on the way so we ended up going home. Eventually she said, “Why do you do this? Why are you so unhappy when we leave the house?”’

It sounds as if she was the first girlfriend to question his behavior rather than walking out. ‘Ella She was the first one who did n’t put it down to me being a moody s***. She gave me coping mechanisms.

‘She didn’t change my personality, she gave me the tools to express it. When I get Aspergersey, she tells me.’

By the time they hooked up Gary’s career was all but gone and he was £600,000 in debt. He’s been back earning for many decades now, but he still feels their relationship is unbalanced.

‘She gives me much more than I give her,’ he says.

Their lifestyle sounds a bit ‘woowoo’ Los Angeles (they moved there in 2012) and she clearly has a complicated relationship with her body. Theirs has not been the easiest of marital paths either.

They have three daughters – Raven, 18, Persia, 16, and Echo, 15 – but had several rounds of IVF and lost a daughter pre-term. Gary wrote a song about that.

‘I don’t ever write when I’m happy,’ he says. So Gary Numan needs to be miserable? ‘No, but I need to have worries.’

His Asperger’s is not one of those worries any more. It’s taken him his whole adult life, but he’s finally come to terms with his condition, and even sounds quite attached to it.

‘The positives far outweigh the negatives,’ he says, arguing that he sees it as a ‘neuro diverse superpower’, as long as he has Gemma by his side. ‘Otherwise,’ he admits. ‘I’d be lost.’

  • Gary Numan Resurrection airs on Saturday 13 August at 9pm on Sky Arts and NOW.

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Categories
Sports

Daniel Golubovic keen for a steak after storming home to pip Cedric Dubler for decathlon silver

“Dan was going to have to go out hard if he was going to get it,” said Dubler (8030 points), who knew he had third place locked up no matter what happened in the 1500m. “It’s just too quick for me. I just ran out of gas. My lungs are still burning. Even if I wanted to try and help him for the first few laps, I would have completely blown up. I told Dan from the start that was Dan’s to go after. He is definitely capable of running by himself.”

Golubovic was ecstatic after the race.

“Man, we had a dig,” said Golubovic after a season-best effort. “Lindon ran one heck of a race. I’m stoked, I’m tired and I’m ready for a nice big steak.

“I didn’t want to get too excited and run way too quick. We almost did but we hung in there. I knew it was going to be close.”

Dubler began the evening session with a 39-point lead over Victor with two events remaining – the javelin and the 1500m – thanks to a clearance of 5m in the pole vault earlier in the day that propelled him to the top of the standings.

However, one throw into the javelin, Dubler’s lead had evaporated by a substantial margin.

One of Dubler’s weaker disciplines is the javelin, while Victor had targeted the penultimate event as a way to chip away at the deficit.

Dubler’s best throw of 51.84m was way off Victor’s mark of 65.16m and that meant the Australia had to produce something special in the three-and-three-quarter lap race.

Perhaps he needed the fresh version of himself from 2021 to will him along, as he did for Moloney.

“That was an experience,” Dubler said. “It was kind of uncharted territory in the world of decathlon. I never expected in my career I would back up under four weeks. All of today, the fatigue set in.

“I’ve been calling [Victor] a beast for weeks because he keeps on going.”

In other action on the track, Sam Carter won a bronze medal in the men’s 1500m (T53-54), while Steve Solomon qualified for the men’s 400m final after initially thinking he had missed out.

Steve Solomon is final-bound.

Steve Solomon is final-bound.Credit:Getty

Solomon, a two-time Olympian, clocked 46.30s to finish fourth in the first of three heats.

“I’m really happy with how I finished the race,” Solomon said straight after the race. “There’s not much more I can do than that. I’ll go back and do some work and come back next year. It’s been exhausting. I’m going to take a break now and get a chance to settle.”

As Solomon spoke to reporters, his voice trailed off as he saw that heat two wasn’t as quick as he expected.

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Fidgeting even more, Solomon knew that if third place in heat three went over 46.30s, he was through. It was 46.33 and he was.

“Holy smokes … how good,” said Solomon as he sprinted away with a spring in his step to begin preparations for a final on Sunday (7.45pm, AEST).

Get all the latest news from the Birmingham Commonwealth Games here. We’ll be live blogging the action from 4pm-10am daily.

Categories
Australia

Moreton Bay Regional Council push flood-risk disclosure for Queensland property buyers

Queensland councils want to mandate flood risk disclosures for property buyers, with one south-east mayor describing the move as “common sense”.

Moreton Bay Regional Council Mayor Peter Flannery said his council would take the proposal to the Local Government Association of Queensland conference in October.

“Personally, I think this is common sense and some property buyers are entitled to know prior to purchase,” Mr Flannery said.

“This might be as simple as mandatory disclosures of flood and other natural hazard risks during the property conveyancing process or other due diligence searches.

“I think this is an important and easy change for the state government, and I’m confident of getting the support of Queensland’s other councils.”

So far, more than 4,250 residents have registered their interest to have their homes raised, rebuilt or voluntarily bought back under the state’s $741 million Resilient Homes Fund, announced after the February floods.

Of the 443 home owners registered for a voluntary buy-back, 70 per cent live in Brisbane and Ipswich.

Brisbane Lord Mayor Adrian Schrinner threw his support behind Moreton Bay’s proposal.

“You wouldn’t buy a home without first getting a pest inspection, yet flooding risks can be so much destructive and costly than termites,” Mr Schrinner said.

“It makes sense that buyers should be fully aware of any flood or natural disaster risks before buying.”

Proposed seller disclosure program

Deputy Premier and State Development Minister Steven Miles says Queensland “has to do better” to account for the impacts of climate change.

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US

Trump slams reconciliation deal, touts endorsements at rally while taking jabs at Republican foes

Former President Trump used his rally in Waukesha, Wis., on Friday evening to criticize Democrats’ sweeping climate, tax and health package while touting his track record of recent endorsements.

While Trump was in the Badger State to boost several of his endorsed candidates ahead of the Aug. 9 primary, including gubernatorial candidate Tim Michels (R) and Adam Steen, running in the 63rd Assembly District race against Wisconsin Assembly Speaker Robin Vos (R) , the former president used the rally to take jabs at his opponents.

“The radical Democrats now intend to impose the biggest tax hike in American history, the exact opposite of what I did,” Trump asserted, referring to the reconciliation deal. “And they are working feverishly to pile on more regulations at levels never seen before. You’re going to have regulations like nobody’s ever seen before.”

He name-checked Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), claiming he got “taken for a ride” by Sen. Joe Manchin (DW.Va.), who made a surprise announcement with Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (DN.Y.) last week that they had reached a deal on climate, health and tax reforms.

“Joe Manchin has totally sold out West Virginia, what he’s done to that state is disgraceful. And I told the old broken crow, Mitch McConnell, that this was going to happen,” Trump said.

Manchin had earlier in July appeared to pour cold water on the prospects of a deal after data was released showing inflation at 9 percent annually.

When the deal was announced, after the Senate with GOP support passed a bill to boost domestic semiconductor production and fund scientific research, some Republicans expressed frustration about the agreement, saying they would have blocked the chips and science bill if they knew Democrats were pressing forward with provisions on taxes and climate in a reconciliation package.

Manchin claimed he and Schumer had not misled their colleagues.

The former president touted the recent successes of Arizona candidates Kari Lake (R) in the GOP gubernatorial primary and Blake Masters in the Republican Senate primary as well.

He also mentioned Michigan gubernatorial candidate Tudor Dixon (R) and former Department of Housing and Urban Development official John Gibbs (R), who defeated Rep. Peter Meijjer (R-Mich.), one of 10 House Republicans to vote in favor of impeaching Trump.

Trump called Michels, who is running against former Lt. Gov. Rebecca Kleefisch (R) in the gubernatorial primary next Tuesday, an “incredible success story” and touted his construction company.

He called Steen — a candidate he endorsed as part of a larger revenge tour against Republicans who he believes crossed him following the election and the Capitol riot — to “true patriot.” Vos, Steen’s opponent, drew Trump’s ire after he refused efforts to overturn the 2020 election.

As Trump took a few jabs at Kleefisch, he also appeared to subtly hit back at those who endorsed her, including former Vice President Pence.

“Tim’s opponent in the primary is Rebecca Kleesfisch, a career politician and a political insider. She known her for a long time. She’s the handpicked candidate of the failed establishment, the RINOs … the Washington swamp, and she’s running a campaign of falsehoods and lies,” he alleged, using the acronym for “Republican in name only.”

The former president even waded into House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s (D-Calif.) trip to Taiwan, one of several stops she made in her travel to East Asia amid heightened tensions between China and the self-governing island, asking why she would travel to Taiwan.