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Sports

Martin Taupau, Manly Sea Eagles release, Parramatta Eels, Sam Verills to join Gold Coast Titans, Bulldogs sign Andrew Davey, Franklin Pele

The Eels haven’t given up hope of landing Martin Taupau — but have until 5pm, Monday to get the deal over the line.

Meanwhile, the Titans may have found a solution to one of their biggest spine problems and the Bulldogs have added two forwards to their pack.

Read on for the latest in NRL Transfer Whispers.

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EELS’ LAST MINUTE CHASE FOR TAUPAU

The Eels arekeen onluring Manly veteran Martin Taupau to the club for the rest of the season — but time is running out.

It was revealed last week that Taupau, who comes off contract at the end of the season, requested an immediate release to join the Eels but was denied.

Eels coach Brad Arthur confirmed his interest in the 32-year-old, saying “he’d be handy for us… but that is Manly’s call,” after his side’s win over the Panthers.

And now, the club are making one last push for the star prop, according to The Sydney Morning Heraldbut have until 5pm Monday to get the deal over the line.

The Herald reports the Eels have been “desperately calling” Manly over the weekend to convince the club to release Taupau but have had no luck.

They will continue their chase on Monday in a bid to secure the 217-gamer before the August 1 deadline closes.

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TITANS TO FINALLY FILL GLARING HOLE

Roosters’ hooker Sam Verrills is reportedly set to sign with the Gold Coast Titans following the Tricolours’ acquisition of Brandon Smith.

Smith signed with the Roosters in December last year, immediately throwing Verrills’ future into the spotlight.

Now, the 23-year-old will make the move north to join the Titans and fill a much-needed hole in the Gold Coast spine according to The Daily Telegraph.

Verrills has been strong in recent weeks, inspiring Trent Robinson’s side to three straight wins.

Prior to the 2022 season, Titans coach Justin Holbrook rolled the dice and deployed the youngest spine in the competition.

The club let Jamal Fogarty walk, but have now signed Kieran Foran to fill their halfback void, and have now moved to lockdown a regular starter in the No.9 jersey.

First-choice hooker Erin Clark has shifted into lock and has been impressive in patches, opening the dummy-half slot for Verrills to potentially take over.

It comes after Holbrook granted following the Titans’ Round 19 loss that he was in the market for a dummy-half.

However, the Titans may have a fight on their hands with Phil Rothfield telling Sky Sports Radio that “St George Illawarra might come in with an offer,” for Verrills too.

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“I can do it all!” Foxx delivers try | 00:39

BULLDOGS ADD TO PACK

Bulldogs supreme Phil Gould has reportedly landed two new forwards — Franklin Pele and Andrew Davey.

Davey, who has become a first-grade regular, and Pele, who has just one NRL game under his belt for the Sharks, will make the move to Belmore according to TheDaily Telegraph.

Pele, 21, weighs more than 120kg and has a cult following at Cronulla’s feeder club the Newton Jets.

According to reports the Bulldogs are hoping to get the hulking prop fit and increase his potential minutes.

Meanwhile, 30-year-old Davey, who was a late bloomer in first grade, is set to make the switch.

Davey made his NRL debut at the Eels in 2020, becoming the fourth-oldest debutant in the history of the game at 28-years old.

After making the switch to the Sea Eagles in 2021, Davey suffered a season-ending knee injury but has been strong in 2022.

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Categories
Australia

PM says Indigenous Voice detail to come after referendum; fresh calls to work from home as winter wave continues

To one of the first major political interviews of the morning, and Northern Territory Senator Malarndirri McCarthy has fronted Nine’s Today Show.

The Labor senator was asked how confident she is in Australians voting “yes” in a referendum on whether to establish an Indigenous Voice to parliament.

NT Labor Senator Malarndirri McCarthy.

NT Labor Senator Malarndirri McCarthy.

As you might be aware, there have been more than 40 referendums held since the federation. Of those, just a handful have been successful.

Here’s what McCarthy had to say:

Out of all the referendum only eight have passed. And we do reflect on the 1967 referendum in which there was overwhelming support, over 90 per cent, to allow the Commonwealth to make laws in relation to First Nations people.

What we recognize here, too, is the difficult task. I think, as the prime minister said, we know that failure is very possible because of the statistics. But the failure to not try is even worse.

What I came away with [the] garma [Festival] was sense of hope. The fire has been burning… ever since the Uluru statement.

For a referendum to be successful in Australia, it must achieve a double majority: a majority of those voting nationwide as well as a majority of voters in a majority of states.

For example, if 63 per cent of Australians vote “yes” to a Voice to parliament, and there is a majority of people voting “yes” in four out of six states, then the upcoming referendum would be successful.

Categories
US

Republicans race to stop Greitens in Missouri Senate primary

Republicans are making a final push to shut out former Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens in the state’s closely watched GOP Senate primary, fearing that him clinching the GOP nomination on Tuesday could put an otherwise safe Republican seat at serious risk in November.

In the final days before the Aug. 2 primary, an anti-Greitens super PAC is running TV ads highlighting allegations of domestic violence against the disgraced former governor. Top Republican donors — including Pete Ricketts, the ultra-wealthy governor of Nebraska — are pouring money into the effort, hoping to deal one final blow to Greitens’s campaign.

There are signs that the effort to weaken Greitens is working. Once seen as the front-runner in the race, the former governor has sunk into third place in recent polls and has been replaced at the front of the pack by Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt.

“What you’ve seen here is really a challenge of trying to beat [Greitens] down,” one Republican strategist involved in the Missouri Senate race said. “Equally to what we’ve seen with Greitens getting knocked down to around that 20 point range is the massive rise of Schmitt. And that combination is what’s really changed the outcome of the race so far.”

One survey released last week by The Hill and Emerson College showed Greitens running 17 points behind Schmitt and 5 points behind Rep. Vicky Hartzler (R-Mo.) in the primary. That’s a staggering change from the same poll conducted in June that found Greitens leading Schmitt by 6 points.

Greitens, who resigned as governor amid scandal only 1 1/2 years into his first term, has brushed off his recent polling deficit, calling the surveys “fake” and accusing his opponents of pushing out inaccurate data in an effort to weaken him. He has also compared the attacks against him to those faced by former President Trump, calling the allegations false.

“Here’s what we’re hearing from a lot of people who’ve seen time and time again the way President Trump was falsely attacked, they’ve seen how I have been falsely attacked,” Greitens told reporters in Kansas City, Mo., on Monday. “A lot of these grassroots patriots are standing up and they’re that much more determined to fight for me.”

Of course, Greitens has been underestimated before. Polling in the lead-up to his 2016 win de él in the Missouri gubernatorial race showed a much tighter contest between him and former state Attorney General Chris Koster (D) than what actually played out on Election Day.

But Greitens, a onetime rising star in the GOP, has fallen from political grace in the years since he won the Missouri governor’s mansion.

Not long into his term as governor, he ran up against allegations that he carried on an affair with his hairdresser and threatened to blackmail her with nude photos he had taken of her if she revealed their relationship. Greitens has acknowledged the affair but has denied the blackmail allegations.

He later faced felony charges related to the alleged blackmail scheme, as well as for accusations that he improperly took a donor list from a nonprofit he had founded to use in his gubernatorial campaign.

Greitens resigned in June 2018 as GOP leaders in the state legislature met to consider whether to pursue his impeachment. The criminal charges against Greitens have been dropped, and he has repeatedly said he has been exonerated.

The latest blow to Greitens’s personal image came this spring when his ex-wife, Sheena Greitens, testified under oath that the former governor had assaulted her and their 3-year-old son. Those allegations have been among the hardest-hitting in the effort to weaken Greitens’s momentum in the Senate race.

Greitens’s personal and professional baggage has stirred deep worries among Republicans both in Missouri and in Washington, giving way to fears that his nomination to succeed retiring Sen. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.) would create an opening for Democrats to recapture the seat in a state that has otherwise moved firmly in the GOP’s direction over the years.

Senate Republicans also can’t afford to take any chances this year. While they’re targeting a handful of vulnerable Democratic incumbents in states like Arizona, Georgia and Nevada, Democrats also have opportunities to flip GOP-held Senate seats in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Ohio, among other states.

Whoever wins the Republican nomination next week will likely go on to face either Lucas Kunce, a former Marine running as a progressive, or Trudy Busch Valentine, a philanthropist and heiress to the Busch family beer fortune, in November.

Missouri Republicans have been burned before by controversial candidates.

The late former Rep. Todd Akin (R-Mo.) famously saw his political career collapse in 2012 after claiming that women’s bodies have a way of avoiding pregnancies in cases of “legitimate rape.” That remark ultimately helped sink his bid to oust former Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.) and left him isolated from many top Republicans.

Of course, there’s still a wild card in the race: Trump. The former president hasn’t endorsed in the primary, though earlier this month he ruled out supporting Hartzler, saying that she doesn’t have “what it takes to take on the radical left Democrats.”

Greitens has some influential allies on his side. Kimberly Guilfoyle, the fiancée of Trump’s eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., is serving as a national co-chair of Greitens’s Senate campaign, and the couple has continued to lobby Trump for his endorsement in the lead-up to the primary despite Greitens’s recent drop in the polls.

But Greitens isn’t the only candidate seeking Trump’s endorsement. Each of his top rivals — Schmitt, Hartzler and Rep. Billy Long (R-Mo.) — Have courted the former president, hoping to win his support from him in the primary. Schmitt is the only candidate to have held a fundraiser for his campaign at Mar-a-Lago, Trump’s private club in Palm Beach, Fla.

One former Trump campaign aide, however, said that the former president isn’t likely to endorse in the race before Tuesday.

“I think at this point, the primary is kind of all over the place,” the former aide said. “The polling is changing, there are a lot of competing voices. The president doesn’t want to get behind a losing horse, so I think he’s probably fine to wait and see and endorse after Tuesday.”

But Trump can be unpredictable in his political moves. In a July 9 interview with the conservative One America News Network, he left the door open to endorsing Greitens, even as he noted that Democrats would be eager to go up against such a controversial candidate.

“He’s the one the Democrats legitimately want to run against,” Trump said, later adding: “Eric is tough and he’s smart. A little controversial, but I’ve endorsed controversial people before.”

Categories
Entertainment

Kim Wilde looks back: ‘I was inspired by photos of Lauren Bacall’ | Music

Kim Wilde in 1985 and 2022
Kim Wilde in 1985 and 2022. Later photograph: Pål Hansen. Styling: Andie Redman. Hair and makeup: Alice Theobald @ArlingtonArtists using Delilah and Bumble and Bumble. Archive photograph: Anton Corbijn/Contour by Getty

Born in 1960 to rock’n’roll star Marty Wilde and the Vernons Girls’ Joyce Baker, Kim Wilde’s pop career spans 40 years, 20 Top 40 hits and 20 million single sales. Wilde was 20 when she released her debut hit, Kids in America: a track co-written by her father and brother Ricky that laid the groundwork for her to become one of Britain’s most successful female solo acts of the 1980s. In 1998, Wilde went off-grid, retraining as a landscape gardener before presenting horticultural shows on the BBC and Channel 4, winning a gold medal at Chelsea flower show and releasing two gardening books. She returned to the stage in 2001, and Kim Wilde: the Greatest Hits Tour is at venues across the UK from 10 September.

The very gorgeous Anton Corbyn took this photo of me aged 25 and standing outside Rak Records, Mickie Most’s label. I’ve gone for a 60s look – wearing striped trousers and a white belt from Kings Road in London, which is where I bought most of my clothes from. I was very inspired by Hollywood photos of Lauren Bacall, and loved the images of her looking absolutely terrifying. I thought: “That’s a great pose to do in front of the camera.”

I was having a brilliant time back then. Even though I was spending a lot of time in airport queues and checking into hotels, or hanging out backstage at TV studios and doing a lot of miming, I was living the dream. I’d wanted to be on Top of the Pops from the first moment I watched it, and to meet these enigmatic pop stars, my idols and people whose records I was buying, like Heaven 17 and ABC, was fabulous. However, no matter how successful I got, I never felt part of the scene. In fact, I felt like a bit of an impostor – mostly because my goal was never to be a pop star, but to write songs and be an accomplished musician. I wasn’t wrapped up in fashion to any great extent. At first I just wanted to be a session singer and to get some money – I learned that the more harmonies you did on someone else’s song, the more cash you got. But once I found myself there, I thought: “OK then, this is what I’ll do.”

Although to the public I probably had this image of being young, gorgeous and available, I didn’t feel that way at all. Kids in America was an incredible way to start my career, but I still experienced all the same insecurities anyone does in their 20s. Besides, I didn’t believe that my beauty was particularly great. The way I looked didn’t make me feel prettier or better about myself. I never presumed that one’s image was a passport to romantic happiness; in fact the two never seemed to go hand in hand.

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I didn’t take fame too seriously either. I wasn’t in that bedroom when the kid put the poster up of me, so it always felt like a very distant concept. When this photo was taken, I was still living at home. I had a baby sister whose nappy I was changing after Top of the Pops. Life was very normal. I wasn’t to be found at the latest nightclub hanging out with famous people. Quite the opposite: for most of the early days I was still gossiping with the girls I went to school with.

Largely that you have to do with my dad. While he never sat me down and gave me the 10 point guide to fame, I just observed the way he handled himself. He always worked really hard, but he didn’t believe success gave him the right to be more important than anyone else. El’s biggest love of his life was rock and pop, and growing up he was constantly playing music of every kind: from classical to Pet Sounds and Mike Oldfield to Elvis and Crosby, Stills and Nash. Music was our family’s religion.

My parents were young – they were only 20 when they had me and Ricky – and were having more parties than I was. They were probably having a hell of a lot more sex than I was, too. The biggest shock to them was when I came back with blond hair, while at art college. They said I looked great and I thought: “How annoying is that?” There wasn’t much to rebel against. The 80s was a wild time for a lot of people – especially if you were doing a lot of drugs. But that lifestyle never appealed to me. I knew how to drink champagne copiously, but that was it. Besides, I just always felt really privileged and lucky to be in the situation that I was in – to produce a record with my brother and go out on stage to perform.

I decided to change my life when I turned 30: my career had been incredibly successful, I had platinum records under my belt, but I felt lost. Instead, I decided to get married and become a mother. I moved into gardening; signing up to Capel Manor College to do a part-time gardening course. It was a fairly small class of 20 – and while everyone had a handle on who I was, my previous profession was irrelevant: everyone was more interested in our shared passion for plants and their Latin names. It was a life-changing experience, and wonderful to slip into an anonymity where “Kim Wilde” didn’t matter any more. I morphed into this earthy version of myself, not a trace of lipstick – although I mostly kept the blond hair.

When my children got a bit older I was seduced into going on an 80s revival tour. There was part of me that was really inquisitive as to what it would be like to hang out with the Human League, Nik Kershaw and Clare Grogan. I thought it could be fun, even though I reckoned I’d hate it and was frightened no one would want to see me on stage – a married woman with two kids who’s not a size eight anymore. “It’s all over!” I imagined they’d think when they saw me up there. Instead, I was staggered to see a huge audience who didn’t care that I was no longer the 21-year-old version of myself.

At 62, I’ve never felt more of a pop star, and I appreciate that I’ve had my own careful journey to arrive at this rather audacious place where I am now. I always had a strong sense of my identity, but I am now brave enough to wear these costumes; to walk out in front of a crowd dressed in a Barbarella outfit while holding a space-age laser gun. It’s not just the elaborate outfits either – I feel as if I’m finally growing into myself. I’m better at standing my ground; I don’t blanche every time someone calls me an icon; and I find the stage the most natural place in the world to be. I would never have said that in the middle of the 80s! The girl in the photo certainly would have found that concept impossible.

Sometimes I see young artists with all the confidence I have now, but at the start of their career. While I recoil and think “How did you do that? Quien eres?” I’m happy my life has held back some weird and lovely surprises. I’m not going to be running around this planet for that much longer, and I don’t have time to sit around pondering about impostor syndrome any more. I want to jump in and be as bold as I can be. After all, my dad is still touring and he’s 83.

Categories
Australia

Cybercrime is evolving — here’s how a cybersecurity expert recommends you keep safe

Paul Haskell-Dowland has been in the cybersecurity education and research domain for two decades — and he is on a mission to teach the rest of us how to stay safe online.

It’s a significant job for the Professor of Cyber ​​Security Practice at Edith Cowan University.

The cost of cybercrime in Australia is incredibly high, although the figure is likely even greater than the reported data suggests.

A man in a business shirt sits at a desk in a room full of computers looking at a world map on the screen.
Cybercriminals operate in very sophisticated environments.(Supplied: Paul Haskell-Dowland)

“It was estimated [a couple of years ago] that the global cost of cybercrime … was going to hit the $1 trillion mark, and I believe it has passed that,” he said.

“It’s very hard to get an accurate indication of these figures, because so much of the cybercrime goes unreported.”

Professor Haskell-Dowland, who is also Associate Dean for Computing and Security, said for many people, their only insight into the world of cybercrime was what was portrayed in the media in movies like Hackers, and even the Diehard franchise.

“If we go back a few years and think about the Hollywood impression of cybersecurity, it was criminals in darkened rooms, sitting behind a keyboard, usually with a hoodie and tapping away at a computer and hacking into systems,” he said.

“We’ve had that glamorized view of cybercrime or cybersecurity for many, many years.”

Criminals increasingly sophisticated

Professor Haskell-Dowland said this portrayal was not entirely accurate and, in reality, cyber threats come from far more organized operations, which are “incredibly well-resourced”.

“This is a global network of cybercriminals, engaging in very significant levels of crime,” he said.

“We’ve seen cybercriminal groups who are incredibly well organised, are reporting profits of hundreds of millions of dollars … so they’re competing with large multinational corporations.”

With this high level of sophistication, individuals were becoming increasingly more susceptible to attacks.

A white screen filled with computer code.
Cybercrime is estimated to be a trillion-dollar industry.(Supplied: Paul Haskell-Dowland)

“It’s not just targeting one person, it could be targeting 100,000 people in just a click of a mouse, or a few key presses,” Professor Haskell-Dowland said.

He said there was an array of ways individuals could be compromised by this kind of activity.

“Sometimes it’s things like scams, but we also hear about things like ransomware, where people’s computers are taken over and their data or files are stolen or encrypted in a way that prevents them from accessing them, and then being forced to pay fines to recover that data,” he said.

“For the past few years, identity theft has been something that has raised alarm bells and people often see things like card-skimming being a bit of an issue.”

How to protect yourself

Professor Haskell-Dowland said there were several relatively simple ways individuals could protect themselves against cybercriminals.

He said the first involved looking at the “boring subject” of their password practices, which he said was of paramount importance.

A man in a suit giving a lecture holds a ridiculously long piece of paper containing a password of random letters and numbers.
Professor Haskell-Dowland says you should never use the same password for multiple accounts.(Supplied: Paul Haskell-Dowland)

“People find a password that meets the criteria, and then they reuse them on multiple systems, and that would be fine if all of the systems that they used were secure, and were never compromised,” he said.

“Unfortunately, all it takes is for the weakest one of those systems to be compromised and that one password that you thought was secure, is now in the public domain, it’s publicly available.”

Professor Haskell-Dowland, who personally has more than 500 passwords, recommends that passwords are not only unique to each site, but are also stored safely and securely.

“I use a password manager to make sure that they’re all stored safely,” he said.

“Even having a notepad of all of those passwords and keeping that locked away in a drawer at home is still better than having the same password on every single system.”

Professor Haskell-Dowland also suggested updating all systems and backing up data.

“Always apply updates to … every device that you’re using, including your mobile phone … to make sure that the cybercriminals don’t have an easy foothold into your system,” he said.

“Making sure that you have a copy of all of the important data … so that in the event that you get an attack, maybe you get some malicious software on a computer, you don’t lose everything.”

Targets go beyond the individual

Professor Haskell-Dowland said it was not only individuals who were susceptible to cybercrime. It also had the potential to be used as a hugely disruptive warfare strategy.

“We could be talking about the systems that control electricity, the systems that control water,” he said.

“The things that we utterly depend upon, for our day-to-day life… are often computer controlled.

“If you’re an adversary and you’re wanting to target a country, then it is much easier to attack infrastructure via digital means than it is to launch, for example, a missile to try and target a power station.”

A post-it note stuck on a computer with a password written on it.
Professor Haskell-Dowland says, unfortunately, many people still write down their passwords and leave them in obvious places.(Supplied: Paul Haskell-Dowland)

But despite the huge risks that cybercrime poses, Professor Haskell-Dowland said we should not “get too carried away with panic.”

“The issues in cybercrime are significant, and they are growing, but so is the defensive side — there’s an enormous amount of time, effort and money being spent on defending the nation and defending the individual,” he said.

“The reality is most cybercriminals are still very lazy in their perspective and they will go for the easiest targets, so simply making yourself that little bit more difficult to be a victim means that they’ll simply move on to easier and easier targets.”

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Categories
US

7 shot in downtown Orlando shooting. Gunman still at large, police say – Orlando Sentinel

Orlando Police say they are still searching for a suspect who shot seven people in downtown Orlando early Sunday morning after a large fight broke out.

The incident took place near Wall Street Plaza and Orange Avenue just after 2 am, when bars and clubs in the area were closing.

Six victims were transported to Orlando Regional Medical Center, and another one person went to Advent Health on his or her own. All seven victims, however, were in stable condition, Orlando Police Chief Eric Smith said.

“At approximately 2:22 this morning, at Orange Avenue and Wall Street, a large fight broke out,” Smith said at a briefing. “One of the combatants pulled out a hand gun and fired into the crowd.”

“We don’t have a suspect at this time,” Smith said. “We’re still in the preliminary part of this investigation, so if anyone has any information please call us at 911 or get with Crimeline [1-800-423-TIPS)].”

Smith said OPD is also working with businesses in the area to recover any videos of the incident.

A three-minute video posted to social media shows dozens of people running on Orange Avenue after hearing several gunshots. A couple of minutes later, the video shows police tending to two people lying on the street in front of Wall Street Plaza.

OPD said they have increased security measures and resources in the area and are looking to further increase them soon.

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“At this time our officers are downtown. The area is safe, there is no further threat downtown,” Smith said.

Orlando Police close off part of Orange Avenue in downtown Orlando in the early morning of Sunday, July 31, following a shooting that injured seven people.  This image provided by the Orlando Sentinel's news partner, Spectrum News 13.

There have been several reports of violence in and around Orlando’s bar district over the past year, and Orlando’s city officials said they have plans to rein in its nightlife amid the spike in violence. The proposals call for security in private parking lots, new permits for businesses that stay open after midnight and the music to be turned up.

Orlando’s city council voted to approve the plans earlier in July as they try to get a grip on the downtown nightlife atmosphere, which includes more than 100 bars and nightclubs, which draw more than 15,000 who flood bars and spill into city streets on weekend nights.

In May, OPD responded to a shooting in the 300 block of West Church Street and Liberty Avenue intersection, where officers found a 24-year-old man suffering from a gunshot wound. The victim was rushed to Orlando Regional Medical Center and taken into surgery in a critical but stable state.

Last Halloween, several people were injured in a pair of shootings amid holiday celebrations in downtown Orlando. One of the shootings, which injured four people, happened near North Orange Avenue and Wall Street. The other shooting, near Lake Eola, injured three people.

In May 2021, a military veteran was shot multiple times and killed after a fight about him walking through a downtown Orlando crowd. Joseph Torres, 34, was gunned down less than two hours after 16-year-old Tavyiah King was fatally shot at a Wawa on John Young Parkway in the west side of the city.

Cassie Armstrong contributed to this report.

Categories
Business

Qantas flights delayed across Australia after nationwide IT glitch

Qantas passengers were left waiting on tarmacs after a nationwide computer glitch caused lengthy delays on Sunday afternoon.

The technical issue grounded plans for about 90 minutes from 2.30pm WA time while the airline frantically worked to fix the problem.

At least three flights at Perth Airport were delayed for more than one hour however Qantas assured the problem was minor and had since been resolved.

According to Qantas, cabin crews told waiting passengers, plans couldn’t take off until the computers were once again up and running.

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Categories
Entertainment

Bachelor star Nick ‘Honey Badger’ Cummins’ fiancée Alexandra George celebrates baby shower

Alexandra George, the gorgeous fiancée of Nick ‘Honey Badger’ Cummins, held a baby shower on Sunday, ahead of welcoming the couple’s first child.

The jewelery designer shared a series of images to Instagram, detailing the celebration alongside family and friends.

‘Beautiful baby shower for our little one. So lucky to call these beautiful women family. Feeling the love,’ she wrote in one caption.

Alexandra George (pictured), the gorgeous fiancée of Nick 'Honey Badger' Cummins, held a baby shower on Sunday, ahead of welcoming the couple's first child

Alexandra George (pictured), the gorgeous fiancée of Nick ‘Honey Badger’ Cummins, held a baby shower on Sunday, ahead of welcoming the couple’s first child

Alexandra added: ‘Ps. Any parenting advice welcome’.

She wrote in a second caption: ‘My sisters from another mister. Couldn’t imagine living away from my family without the support of the Cummins girls! Love y’all.

In the images, Alexandra cradled her baby bump as she posed in a stunning floral maxi dress.

The jewelery designer shared a series of images to Instagram, detailing the celebration alongside family and friends

The jewelery designer shared a series of images to Instagram, detailing the celebration alongside family and friends

The beauty was absolutely glowing as she enjoyed a delicious juice at the pretty shindig

The beauty was absolutely glowing as she enjoyed a delicious juice at the pretty shindig

'Beautiful baby shower for our little one.  So lucky to call these beautiful women family.  Feeling the love,' she wrote in one caption

‘Beautiful baby shower for our little one. So lucky to call these beautiful women family. Feeling the love,’ she wrote in one caption

Alexandra showed off her baby bump as she posed in a stunning floral maxi dress

Alexandra showed off her baby bump as she posed in a stunning floral maxi dress

The designer, who donned Chloe slides, was surrounded by female relatives of her fiancé

The designer, who donned Chloe slides, was surrounded by female relatives of her fiancé

The party was decorated with trinkets for the guests, who sat down to a lavish meal together.

The event appeared to be held at a private home decorated with framed paintings, with the guests later posing in a palm tree lined courtyard.

Former Bachelor star and retired rugby union player Nick shared the happy news of his impending fatherhood in an Instagram post on Easter Sunday.

Alexandra wrote in a second caption: 'My sisters from another mister.  Couldn't imagine living away from my family without the support of the Cummins girls!  Love y'all

Alexandra wrote in a second caption: ‘My sisters from another mister. Couldn’t imagine living away from my family without the support of the Cummins girls! Love y’all

The party was decorated with trinkets for the guests, who sat down to a lavish meal together

The party was decorated with trinkets for the guests, who sat down to a lavish meal together

The event appeared to be held at a private home decorated with framed paintings

The event appeared to be held at a private home decorated with framed paintings

The event appeared to be held at a private home decorated with framed paintings

The ladies posed for pretty photos in a palm tree lined courtyard

The ladies posed for pretty photos in a palm tree lined courtyard

Guests enjoyed a tasty looking meal and glasses of champagne during the event

Guests enjoyed a tasty looking meal and glasses of champagne during the event

Guests enjoyed a tasty looking meal and glasses of champagne during the event

The 34-year-old shared an image in which he posed alongside his girlfriend Alexandra George, with the pair sharing a smooch, with a sweet caption.

‘My darling and I look forward lovingly to the arrival of our little badger cub’ he wrote.

Alexandra also shared the same image to her own Instagram, as well as an ultrasound scan of their baby.

Former Bachelor star and retired rugby union player Nick (left) shared the happy news of his impending fatherhood in an Instagram post on Easter Sunday

Former Bachelor star and retired rugby union player Nick (left) shared the happy news of his impending fatherhood in an Instagram post on Easter Sunday

Alexandra also shared an ultrasound scan of their baby.  'We decided to create a little hybrid!!  Can't wait to share this next chapter with the love of my life.  Welcoming our little badger cub into this world shortly,' she wrote

Alexandra also shared an ultrasound scan of their baby. ‘We decided to create a little hybrid!! Can’t wait to share this next chapter with the love of my life. Welcoming our little badger cub into this world shortly,’ she wrote

‘We decided to create a little hybrid!! Can’t wait to share this next chapter with the love of my life. Welcoming our little badger cub into this world shortly,’ she wrote.

Nick debuted his new romance with Alexandra on Instagram in January 2021.

He shared a photo in which they were cozying up on a boat as they watched the sunset.

Alexandra and Nick were on holiday at the idyllic Kingfisher Bay Resort on Fraser Island, Queensland, at the time.

Nick debuted his new romance with Alexandra on Instagram in January 2021. He shared a photo in which they were cozying up on a boat at the Kingfisher Bay Resort on Fraser Island

Nick debuted his new romance with Alexandra on Instagram in January 2021. He shared a photo in which they were cozying up on a boat at the Kingfisher Bay Resort on Fraser Island

Later that month, Alexandra finally shared a photo of herself and her reality TV star beau - making them Instagram official.  In the pictures, the pair posed outside of the Daly Waters Pub in the Northern Territory

Later that month, Alexandra finally shared a photo of herself and her reality TV star beau – making them Instagram official. In the pictures, the pair posed outside of the Daly Waters Pub in the Northern Territory

Later that month, Alexandra finally shared a photo of herself and her reality TV star beau – making them Instagram official.

In the pictures, the former Bachelor and the brunette jewelery designer posed outside of the Daly Waters Pub in the Northern Territory.

In March last year, the pair proved they were still going strong, with Alexandra sharing two images to Instagram showing the couple sharing a sweet smooch.

In March last year, the pair proved they were still going strong, with Alexandra sharing two images to Instagram showing the couple sharing a sweet smooch

In March last year, the pair proved they were still going strong, with Alexandra sharing two images to Instagram showing the couple sharing a sweet smooch

In June 2020, it was reported that Nick had found love with Alexandra and that they had spent lockdown together in Seal Rocks

In June 2020, it was reported that Nick had found love with Alexandra and that they had spent lockdown together in Seal Rocks

In June 2020, The Daily Telegraph reported that Nick had found love with Alexandra and that they had spent lockdown together in Seal Rocks, on the mid-north coast of New South Wales.

Nick referred to Alexandra as ‘my darling of four months’ in April, 2021, making the romance officially on for around 16 months.

This is the former rugby union star’s first serious relationship since he caused an uproar by not choosing a winner in the finale of The Bachelor in 2018.

Nick famously left finalists Brittany Hockley and Sophie Tieman heartbroken after he dumped them both at the finale because he hadn’t fallen in love.

Nick's romance with Alexandra is his first since his stint on The Bachelor in 2018, where he infamously failed to choose between finalists Brittany Hockley (pictured) and Sophie Tieman

Pictured: Sophie Tieman with Nick on The Bachelor

Nick’s romance with Alexandra is his first since his stint on The Bachelor in 2018, where he infamously failed to choose between finalists Brittany Hockley (left) and Sophie Tieman (right) leaving both women heartbroken

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Sports

Jacob Kiraz stars as Bulldogs beat Knights, Cowboys cruise to win over Dragons

The Bulldogs downed the Knights before the Cowboys shored up their top-two spot with a win over a Dragons side who are rapidly losing touch with the top eight.

Check out all the scores, news and stats below.

Canterbury Bulldogs 24 def Newcastle Knights 10

Coach Adam O’Brien has defended Newcastle’s decision to cut Jacob Kiraz, who played the best game of his young career in Canterbury’s NRL 24-10 win over the Knights on Sunday.

Kiraz joined the Knights on a development contract last year but was stuck behind Starford To’a, Enari Tuala, Hymel Hunt and Dominic Young in the wing stakes.

The Knights let Kiraz go ahead of the 2022 season to leave room for one-time Queensland State of Origin winger Edrick Lee, who had recovered from a long-term foot injury.

Team stats

Kiraz subsequently made the move to the Bulldogs, where he has played 10 games and signed as one of the most promising rookies of the season.

He scored three tries against the Knights in a game-defining performance but O’Brien stood by the club’s decision to part ways with Kiraz, insisting it was the right move at the time.

“He had a really good day. You’re going to have ones who come back and hurt you,” O’Brien said.

“At the time, Edrick (Lee) was coming good with that foot. We’d invested a fair sum in him and he didn’t have a spot in the team.

“Anyone put in that situation back then would probably have wanted to fit Edrick in the team.”

O’Brien admitted Kiraz’s sudden development into a bona fide first-grader had surprised him.

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“If I’m really honest, I didn’t foresee him jumping to the levels he has this quickly. I didn’t spot that,” he said.

“But good luck to Kiraz. There’s no sour grapes on that.”

Kiraz is a favorite of interim coach Mick Potter, who has played the 20-year-old on the wing in each of his nine games in charge since taking over from Trent Barrett mid-season.

Potter was familiar Kiraz before replacing Barrett, having coached against Kiraz in reserve grade.

“When I was with Mounties, when Canterbury played us, I had to ask someone who that player was, because he was so elusive,” Potter said.

“It was good to see him get three tries today.”

Potter said Kiraz was now reaping the rewards for persevering with his NRL dream despite failing to make first grade at North Queensland and Newcastle.

“It’s a fantastic story that he’s going so well,” he said.

AAP

North Queensland Cowboys 34 def St George Illawarra 8

North Queensland have given their hopes of hosting their first home final in six years a massive boost, staying second with a 34-8 win over St George Illawarra.

In a crucial result for each team’s season, the Cowboys barely looked threatened at Kogarah before running away with the match late in the second half.

With five rounds to play, the Dragons’ season looks shot while North Queensland are now all but guaranteed to be finals-bound for the first time since 2017.

But much more beckons than just a return to the playoffs.

A crucial home game in the first week of the finals remains firmly in the Cowboys’ grasp, with the win keeping them two points clear of the chasing Cronulla with a far superior for-and-against.

Team stats

A top-two finish would also guarantee a second home final beyond the opening week, meaning North Queensland can dare to dream of playing all of September in Townsville until the grand finale.

Among the favorites for the wooden spoon at the start of the season, the Cowboys are firming as a genuine title contender.

And for all the talk of their electrifying back five and impressive attack, it has been their forwards who have represented the biggest change.

Jeremiah Nanai scored two tries and Griffin Neame also crossed in Sunday’s win, while Jason Taumalolo had an influential second half, tempered only by being put on report for a shoulder charge.

The Cowboys’ first try was also from the work of Coen Hess, who earned a fast play-the-ball before Scott Drinkwater put Kyle Feldt over on the next play.

Moments later it was Nanai who produced the decisive play, bursting through the Dragons’ defense before sending Drinkwater over under the posts.

After the Cowboys led 10-8 at the break, their forwards helped ensure they would spend most of the second half on the Dragons’ line.

Taumalolo twice turned into provider as North Queensland pulled away, once going to the line and putting Neame through the middle of two defenders to score.

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Nanai’s first four-pointer was also off the back of some Taumalolo brilliance, as the Cowboys star burst downfield and the second-rower scored from the next play.

His second came when he ran onto a deft Chad Townsend pass, taking the edge forward’s try tally for the year to 16.

In comparison, the Dragons were limited in their opportunities after not making the most of their chances in the first half.

Jack de Belin scored the Saints’ only try when he toed ahead a Ben Hunt offload that went to ground, but they only completed at 64 per cent after the break.

The result leaves them struggling to hold onto any hope of playing football finals this year, sitting two points out of the top eight with a horror for-and-against.

AAP

Fixtures

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Categories
Australia

Senior cardiologist lodges case with Federal Court arguing suspension during bullying investigation at Canberra Hospital was unfair

Another senior doctor from the Canberra Hospital has lodged a case in the Federal Court, opposing an investigation by the hospital into claims of bullying and misconduct.

Cardiologist Muayad Alasady has been suspended by the hospital while the investigation takes place.

His statement of claim reveals he wants the Federal Court to revoke his suspension and stop the investigation, on the grounds he has been denied procedural fairness under his enterprise agreement.

The documents lay out details of findings from several inquiries that drew on allegations from staff in the hospital’s cardiology department.

The initial report, commissioned in 2020, listed allegations of inappropriate behavior by some people working in the department, with claims of bullying and outbursts, including swearing, kicking doors and throwing objects, and consultants shouting and screaming at each other.

The report found there was a culture of blame and a lack of respect for co-workers by some doctors.

And the report also noted there was a clash between Dr Alasady and another doctor.

But the court documents point out that managers considered the report and took no action against Dr Alasady.

The fact they didn’t tell him what they had considered was a breach of the enterprise agreement and a denial of procedural fairness, the documents claim.

The documents outline how the same thing happened with later inquiries that detailed similar allegations, to which he wasn’t able to respond.

Dr Alasady was told in March that he would be suspended, during a formal investigation.

In their submissions to the court, his lawyers said he had been treated unfairly.

“The effect of the suspension decision is that the applicant has suffered reputational harm and denied the opportunity to practice his profession,” the submission states.

Last month, intensive care doctor Bronwyn Avard took her case to the Federal Court after she was subjected to an investigation for misconduct, including allegations of bullying, and urged not to come to work.

Dr Avard said she believed she was the target of retaliation for raising safety concerns over several years.

Neither case has a court date yet.

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