Friday, March 2, 2012
Fed: Hicks and Habib abused: dossier
AAP General News (Australia)
08-05-2004
Fed: Hicks and Habib abused: dossier
Australian terrorist suspects DAVID HICKS and MAMDOUH HABIB have reportedly suffered
routine abuse, assaults and death threats at the Guantanamo Bay US military base.
In a 115-page dossier, former British detainees allege abuse at the prison camp in Cuba.
The Sydney Morning Herald says the statement claims HICKS and HABIB were threatened
with death and weakened by lack of food, water, sleep and medical care.
The British men have recounted the information from conversations with the Australian men.
They say HABIB was in catastrophic mental and physical shape after he was tortured
in Egypt but was denied medical help.
They say HICKS had been hooded and beaten and later denied medical attention for a
hernia unless he cooperated with captors.
The men say HICKS was treated worse than other detainees, was constantly moved, kept
in isolation and was forced to make admissions.
US authorities have consistently denied claims of mistreatment.
AAP RTV tam/lm
KEYWORD: GUANTANAMO AUST (SYDNEY)
2004 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
NSW: Day of mourning for Hickey in Redfern
AAP General News (Australia)
02-24-2004
NSW: Day of mourning for Hickey in Redfern
SYDNEY, Feb 24 AAP - Scores of people congregated at the Block in inner Sydney Redfern
today ahead of a memorial service and vigil for teenager Thomas Hickey.
The 17-year-old, known as TJ, died when he fell off his bike and was impaled on a fence
post, sparking violent riots in Redfern on Sunday night, February 15.
Police have denied claims by TJ's family and other members of the local community that
they chased him to his death.
Mourners in Eveleigh Street gathered around …
Young consumers see no harm in racy ads
The Record (Bergen County, NJ)
01-04-2004
Young consumers see no harm in racy ads
By ALLIE SHAH, Minneapolis-St. Paul Star Tribune
Date: 01-04-2004, Sunday
Section: LIVING
Edtion: All Editions.=.Sunday
Buff young bodies intertwined, suggestive slogans, and skin, skin, skin. This is the stuff of eyebrow-raising ads aimed at adolescents.
Sex sells, everybody knows, but businesses' use of it to sell to teenagers and preteens has raised more than eyebrows. It has raised a stink.
The fuss about Abercrombie & Fitch's flesh-baring Christmas "magalog" is well known. The quarterly catalog full of nude and scantily clad young men and women frolicking together was yanked from stores after several parent groups launched protests and made boycott threats.
While the preppy clothier is perhaps the most blatant example, it's not the only company pushing the boundaries. The proliferation of racy advertisements in teen magazines and on television has stoked a national backlash from parent groups.
French Connection United Kingdom came under fire for using the initials FCUK to promote its line of clothing and perfume to teenagers. An ad appearing in Seventeen magazine last fall featured a shirtless young man and a smiling young woman in her underwear in bed, with the phrase "Scent to bed" and "FCUK fragrance."
Pick up other teen magazines - there is a crop of new ones from CosmoGirl to TeenVogue to ElleGirl - and you will see ads for J.Lo Glow, Jennifer Lopez's perfume, featuring a naked Lopez in the shower, the steam strategically covering key body parts.
The way Dwayne Fisher sees it, the use of skin and sexual innuendo to sell to teenagers like him is just a fact of life.
He said he's mature enough to handle the racy images and savvy enough to recognize that it's all just part of the pitch. He's 16, but he said it's a person's maturity level and not age that's the issue.
The proud owner of a shirt that said "FCUK You 2" and an occasional shopper at A&F, he doesn't think such marketing is inappropriate. The French Connection shirts are funny, he insists, not sexual.
Fisher, who works in a clothing store, can wear what he wants, within reason, because he buys his clothes with his own money. But his mom, Laura Fisher, said he knows there's a time and a place to wear that shirt.
Joe Kelly said he is no prude, but he lobbies against "toxic messages" aimed at young girls through his non-profit organization based in Duluth, Minn., called Dads and Daughters.
"We're not anti-sex," said Kelly, whose twin daughters are 23. It's the way sexuality is marketed to teenagers that he finds objectionable.
"It takes power away from girls over their sexuality. We want girls to have power over their bodies and their sexuality," he said. "We want them to understand that sexuality is about humanness, intimacy. It's not titillation, and it's not pornography. This is not a responsible way to do business."
Every month, Kelly posts a message about a troubling ad and the company involved on his Web site (dadsanddaughters.org). Then he urges Web site visitors to write a father-to-father letter to the company's CEO, who almost always is a man, explaining why the ad is harmful to girls and asking the executive to picture his own daughter's face in the ad. His efforts have paid off. Federated Department Stores, the Cincinnati-based chain that owns Macy's, dropped French Connection's fragrance and clothing line after corresponding with Dads and Daughters.
Examples of using sexuality in advertising date back to the 17th century, but sexuality is creeping into the under-18 market, said Tom Reichert, an advertising professor at the University of Alabama and author of "The Erotic History of Advertising."
The motive, of course, is profit.
"They're trying to get hold of that billion-dollar, 13- to 19-year-old buying business," Reichert said.
In some ways, the increase in sexual advertising to a younger audience is a natural progression from the increase of sexual images on television, the Internet, and in the larger society.
But young people are at a greater disadvantage than adults exposed to the same highly sexualized images, because kids generally lack the critical skills necessary to know that they are being taken advantage of, Reichert said.
Consider when Calvin Klein was the undisputed leader of provocative ads. In 1995, a series of TV commercials and magazine ads showed underage models in their CK underwear in sexually suggestive positions.
"Parents and media critics went crazy over those ads, but the kids didn't. They really did not see that these images were pornographic," Reichert said. "So in a lot of ways, they're vulnerable and susceptible."
Illustrations/Photos: * * *
Keywords: YOUTH, ADVERTISING, SEX
Copyright 2004 Bergen Record Corp. All rights reserved.
WA: Man dies in Perth car crash
WA: Man dies in Perth car crash
PERTH, Aug 24 AAP - A 20-year-old man died when a car driven by his friend crashedinto a traffic light in the Perth suburb of Como early today.
A police spokesman said the man was sitting in the back seat of the Holden Commodorestation wagon when it crashed at 2.20am (WST) and died at the scene.
The driver and two other passengers are all in hospital with serious injuries.
"Early investigations indicate speed and alcohol are involved," the spokesman said.
The spokesman said it appeared the group of friends had been returning home from anight out when the car smashed into the traffic light.
The force of the crash dragged the vehicle several metres down the road where it thenslammed into a brick wall, the spokesman said.
This morning's death takes the road toll to 117, down five from the same period last year.
AAP ajm/apm
KEYWORD: TOLL WA
Thursday, March 1, 2012
Fed: Weapons could be destroyed, buried or in Syria - Butler
Fed: Weapons could be destroyed, buried or in Syria - Butler
CANBERRA, April 13 AAP - Australia could make a more legal contribution to the warin Iraq by participating in a peacekeeping force, former chief UN weapons inspector RichardButler said today.
Mr Butler said an interim authority in Iraq needed a peacekeeping component to keep order.
"There needs to be an urgent discussion about that (an interim authority), I suggestwithin the UN context," Mr Butler told the Seven Network.
"If Australia were invited to, or asked to be consider to be a part of that, it wouldbe consistent I think with good Australian foreign policy to make such a contribution.
"I think that would look a bit better and more legal than the contribution we're makingat the moment to the US-led coalition."
Meanwhile, Mr Butler, an Australian, said if weapons of mass destruction were not foundin Iraq they could have been destroyed, buried or taken to Syria.
"If weapons are now not found it is either because A, they don't exist but they didpreviously, so that means they've been destroyed," Mr Butler said.
"They need to find people who can give an account of that destruction.
"Or B, as I used to say to the inspectors, they're somewhere else.
"In other words, they've been taken out of the country or they've been deeply buried somewhere.
"I think that's possible."
When asked where weapons could have been taken, Mr Butler said Syria.
"I saw evidence in the past of smuggling of some of the weapons across the border intoSyria," he said.
AAP lm/sek/jlw
KEYWORD: IRAQ AUST BUTLER
SA: Main stories in today's Adelaide Advertiser
SA: Main stories in today's Adelaide Advertiser
ADELAIDE, Feb 1 AAP - Main stories in today's Adelaide Advertiser:
Page 1 - Nine killed and 45 hurt in Sydney train derailment.
Page 2 - Contents.
Page 3 - Asian families are paying thousands of dollars to have their primary school-agedchildren educated in Adelaide public schools; Three hi-tech libraries expected to openthis year; Extra $2 million allocated for the construction of an additional two overtakinglanes on the Sturt Highway between Truro and Blanchetown.
World - US federal judge sentences would-be shoe bomber Richard Reid to life in prison(Boston); British police spied on Wallis Simpson and her alleged secret lover while shewas being courted by the future King Edward VIII, who abdicated to marry her in 1936 (London).
Finance - Southcorp's earnings hangover is expected to continue until at least mid-year.
Sport - Cricket's World Cup is on the brink of a split along racial lines followingNew Zealand's decision yesterday not to play its match against Kenya in Nairobi.
AAP la/tnf
KEYWORD: FRONTERS SA
Fed: 75 per cent of farmers faced driest weather in century
Fed: 75 per cent of farmers faced driest weather in century
The national forecaster says three-quarters of the nation's farmers have faced theirdriest year in almost a century.
The Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics (ABARE) says in most casesfarmers have recorded some of the lowest rainfall figures on record.
The bureau says in its latest crops forecast the rankings indicate rainfall receivedthis year in around 75 per cent of the mainland crop growing regions ranks in the bottom10 per cent of observations.
It says the states with the most serious rainfall deficiency this year are New SouthWales followed by Victoria.
ABARE says in most regions, crop development is also hindered by low subsoil moisture,particularly in the northern crop areas.
Statistically, it says the worst hit area is the upper north region of South Australiawhich has had its driest year on record.
It says there's little chance of good rains for summer crops, while the low rainfallalready means irrigation water will be scarce for crops such as cotton and rice.
AAP RTV sw/rsm
KEYWORD: CROPS RAIN (CANBERRA)
NT: More than 1,000 gather at Dili dawn service
NT: More than 1,000 gather at Dili dawn service
More than 1,000 Australians, New Zealanders and United Nations personnel have gatheredat the giant Jesus statue outside Dili for a moving Anzac Day dawn service.
Soldiers gathered with expatriate civilians east of Dili at the gift from Indonesiabuilt when that country was under international pressure for occupying East Timor.
Smaller services have been held at the Australian border post at Moleana and at theNew Zealand base at Suai.
Australians and New Zealanders have commemorated three Anzac Days in East Timor sincethe UN mission began to keep the peace during the transition to independence next month.
AAP RTV rmg/sal/rp
KEYWORD: ANZAC DILI (DARWIN)
Fed: Labor mealy-mouthed on asylum seekers - Stott Despoja
Fed: Labor mealy-mouthed on asylum seekers - Stott Despoja
Australian Democrats leader NATASHA STOTT DESPOJA has challenged Labor to scrap itspolicy on the mandatory detention of asylum seekers.
She says Labor leader SIMON CREAN and his party should put aside their mealy-mouthedtalk and first of all, visit Woomera and other detention centres, then scrap mandatorydetention.
Senator STOTT DESPOJA says Labor introduced mandatory detention, and is too scarednow to accept that that policy is not only inhumane, but it's not working.
Labor yesterday backed the mothballing of Woomera, returning the operation of detentioncentres to the government, and giving the media greater access to the centres.
It also backed extending the relocation allowance proposed for Afghanis in detentioncentres, opening the door to using the payment system for all refugees.
Senator STOTT DESPOJA is predicting a cross-party turn-out at a rally on the issueoutside Parliament House in Canberra today.
AAP RTV dep/jmt/rt
KEYWORD: BOAT LABOR DESPOJA (CANBERRA)
NSW: Australians approve of embryo research
AAP General News (Australia)
12-13-2001
NSW: Australians approve of embryo research
SYDNEY, Dec 13 AAP - The majority of Australians approve of cloning an embryo from
a patient's own genetic material for use in therapy, a poll revealed today.
The approval was measured against a backdrop of recent controversy over cloned human embryos
An American company caused controversy worldwide when it confirmed it had developed
a number of human embryos through cloning.
A Bulletin-Morgan poll published today found 55 per cent of Australians would approve
of using a patient's own genetic material to clone an embryo to be used as a stem cell
source.
Stem cells can be grown into any kind of tissue in the body and are the basis for so-called
"therapeutic cloning" which is hoped will lead to advancements in treating a variety of
ailments, including Parkinson's disease and diabetes.
Thirty-two per cent of Australians disapproved of therapeutic cloning, while 13 per
cent were undecided.
The survey of 617 people over the age of 14 found 70 per cent of Australians believe
couples with excess embryos after infertility treatment should be able to donate them
to research.
Seventy (70) per cent also approved of extracting stem cells from such embryos to treat
disease and injury.
AAP rcg/arb/mjm/de
KEYWORD: EMBRYO RESEARCH
2001 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
AP Top Technology Headlines At Noon EDT
AP Online
05-07-2001
AP Top Technology Headlines At Noon EDT
3Com Plans to Cut 3,000 Jobs
Price War Has PC Makers Fighting
Lucent CFO Replaced After 1 Year
Writers Seek Internet Payments
Online Visitation New in Divorce
Hackers Attack White House Web Site
Hoover's Names New CEO
The information contained in the AP News report may not be published, broadcast or redistributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.
Copyright 2001 The Associated Press All Rights Reserved
SA: Main stories in today s Adelaide Advertiser
AAP General News (Australia)
02-16-2001
SA: Main stories in today s Adelaide Advertiser
ADELAIDE, Feb 16 AAP - Main stories in today's Adelaide Advertiser:
Page 1 - The South Australian government has one week to improve a pay offer to nurses
or face widespread industrial action throughout public hospitals.
Page 2 - A serious division within one of the state's biggest unions, the Australian
Workers Union, has emerged in the lead-up to its election; Nick Grono, the chief of staff
who allegedly warned a female federal ministerial adviser for "sleeping with the enemy",
had a lengthy affair with a woman working for the Australian Democrats; Mitsubishi Motors
Australia boss Tom Phillips has returned from Japan optimistic about the Adelaide car
company's prospects for future growth.
Page 3 - A father was trying to kill himself and his four children when he deliberately
drove his vehicle over a 26m cliff at Crafers, a lawyer acting for his teenage daughter
told the Coroners Court yesterday; South Australia's natural resources, such as the River
Murray, will be brought under the control of three senior ministers to ensure their increased
protection.
World - The killing of eight Israelis by a Palestinian in the worst attack in Israel
in years has sparked fears the violence that has escalated since Ariel Sharon was elected
Prime Minister could worsen (Jerusalem); The father of James Bulger was yesterday asking
the High Court to overturn a decision which could see the toddler's killers freed in the
near future (London); Educators reinstated the theory of evolution in the Kansas state
curriculum yesterday, reversing a decision 18 months ago and thwarting religious conservatives
who want students to learn the biblical theory of creation (Overland Park, Kansas).
Finance - Australian companies face a difficult six months but the worst is almost
over for weaker earnings, according to analysts; Investors had fallen in love with the
greenback all over again, Macquarie foreign exchange dealer Jo Masters said yesterday.
Sport - AFL clubs and their players are on a collision course over the management of
abuse on Internet sites from fans.
AAP scl/jas
KEYWORD: FRONTERS SA
2001 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
What Australian papers are saying today, Dec 18, 2000
AAP General News (Australia)
12-18-2000
What Australian papers are saying today, Dec 18, 2000
SYDNEY, Dec 18 AAP - The Daily Telegraph identifies in its editorial today a new divide
between public education's haves and have-nots: those in selective or single sex schools,
which dominate the HSC honour rolls released today, and those in regular co-ed high schools.
"The federal and state governments should convene an education policy forum in which
teachers, parents, principals, and students themselves can examine the existing and emerging
challenges to our schools... most of all... the disturbing new tiers of opportunity within
public education itself".
The Australian Financial Review says before the government can legitimately promote
its credentials as a sponsor of innovation, it should remove regressive taxes it placed
on exports and on import-competing products.
"Sadly, the retention of the 3 per cent Tariff Concession Scheme looks set to occur,"
says the Review.
The scheme serves to remind the public the Howard government has a "very patchy" record
in dismantling residual tariff protection.
Its whole record on industry policy should be borne in mind when the Coalition unveils
its innovation statement next month, says the Review.
The Australian finds "regrettable" the lack of details on dollars and a timetable for
implementation of the McClure report on welfare reform.
But it notes one positive aspect of the government's response to the McClure report:
the setting up of a "welfare reform consultative forum", which will detail a new welfare
system before the next Budget.
The Age says the government's failure to cost its welfare changes is disappointing.
By choosing not to release the budget details, the government runs the risk of creating
anxiety and uncertainty among welfare recipients.
Sole parents and people on disability benefits must wait five more months to learn
whether they are winners or losers.
"Welfare recipients are vulnerable; they deserve certainty," it says.
The Sydney Morning Herald voices the concern that the government, working through the
National Health and Medical Research Centre (NHMRC) and its strategic research development
committee, is failing to support some of the most promising lines of inquiry into mobile
phone use and cancer or other harm.
The Herald calls on the government to provide details of research being funded and
give full and sufficient reasons why promising lines of inquiry are not supported.
"The drive for knowledge in this area must be open and concerned solely with scientific
truth, unaffected by commercial considerations of the mobile phone industry," says the
Herald.
The Canberra Times says last week's summit shows the European Union is forging a path
others would do well to follow.
It says the EU is putting an end to the possibility of armed conflict within its borders,
diminishing the dangers inherent in national sovereignty, expanding the notion of internationalism
and encouraging cultural diversity within the larger entity.
Sure, the job is far from complete, but "the proposed expansion of the EU will almost
certainly lead to a better deal for Australia because the union will not be able to afford
to subsidise the newcomers; so barriers will necessarily be lowered".
The Times says in developing solutions to many previously intractable problems, the
EU provides a splendid example to the Australasia-South-East Asia area.
The Adelaide Advertiser implores its readers to take care on the roads and be prepared
for bushfires - the twin hazards of the summer holiday season.
Too many of its readers assume they are immortal and make those fatal assumptions which
make the difference between a humdrum road journey and a ruined life, it says.
"All that has to be done is look alert and slow down," it says. "A moment's indecision
or neglect will cause a life's extinction or a lifetime's misery. Watch those roads; stay
alive."
It appears that everyone involved has lost sight of the responsibilities of the Melbourne
City Council, the Herald Sun says.
The council should focus on cleaning up the city, ridding it of the scourge of heroin,
helping the homeless and cooperating with business to revitalise the CBD.
"No longer do ratepayers want to hear of council brawls, spats over councillors' expenses,
car hire, fees for speech writers or factional disputes," says The Herald Sun.
"Melbourne City Council must simply get on with the job of running the city properly."
AAP rst
KEYWORD: EDITORIALS
2000 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
Fed: Reith, union differ on decision s effect on rail jobs
AAP General News (Australia)
08-04-2000
Fed: Reith, union differ on decision s effect on rail jobs
By Denis Peters, Industrial Correspondent
CANBERRA, Aug 4 AAP - A ruling effectively retaining junior pay rates in seven Victorian
railway awards was good job news for young people, Workplace Relations Minister Peter
Reith said today.
But a rail union dismissed this claim as unlikely and without proof.
The full bench of the Australian Industrial Relations Commission (AIRC) today overturned
an earlier decision by Commissioner Bob Merriman to remove junior rates from the awards.
The federal government applied for a review of the decision.
"We wanted to make sure that junior rates were retained so that young Victorians had
a fair go at competing for jobs in the railway industry," Mr Reith said in a statement.
"While the full bench decision is good news for young people in Victoria, it will also
benefit young Australians more widely.
"This is because the decision makes it clear how the amendments the government made
to the Workplace Relations Act last year are to be applied in practice.
"They are to be applied to make sure that work opportunities for young people are improved
by including junior rates in awards where this is appropriate."
He said the decision stood in contrast to Labor's policy platform which would overturn
its support for junior rates brokered last year.
Rail, Tram and Bus Union spokesman Andrew Thomas said Mr Reith's claim that more young
people would get rail jobs as a result of the decision was an assertion only, and he would
like to see any proof to that effect.
Mr Thomas said the case was originally brought to the AIRC only because the junior
rates provision was obsolete and was required to be removed under the act.
"Commissioner Merriman deleted it on the basis of Mr Reith's own legislation," he told AAP.
"The fact remains that junior rates had been in those awards for many years and it
hadn't stopped employers in the rail and tramway industry in Victoria from employing juniors
and paying them the adult rates.
"It didn't seem to be a problem to them."
Employers would be under no obligation to change their current pay rates, Mr Thomas said.
AAP dep/mfh/cjh/br
KEYWORD: JUNIOR
2000 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
NT: Magistrate a specialist in sentencing but no discretion
AAP General News (Australia)
02-17-2000
NT: Magistrate a specialist in sentencing but no discretion
EDS: Restores keyword
By Catharine Munro
DARWIN, Feb 17 AAP - Northern Territory Magistrate Greg Cavanagh has a specialist degree
in sentencing but yesterday had no choice but to send a 21-year-old to jail for one year
for stealing a box of biscuits.
The 48-year-old former criminal lawyer attained a Masters degree from London University
in sentencing in 1986 and Bachelors of Jurisprudence and Laws from Monash University but
cannot exercise his discretion when he finds a suspect guilty of a property offence.
Discretion was taken from him by the NT Parliament in March 1997, six months after
he was appointed a magistrate.
Under mandatory sentencing laws jail terms are set out for first, second and third
property offences no matter what was stolen.
Adults receive 14 days, 3 months and one year respectively, while juveniles receive
28 days for second offences.
Mr Cavanagh, who is also the Territory Coroner, has a reputation for consistently pointing
out the problems with the laws when handing down judgments.
Yesterday, while presiding over court on remote Groote Eylandt 800km from Darwin, he
found 21-year-old Jamie Wurramara guilty of stealing a box of biscuits from a mine site
on the island.
He questioned the use of sending people from Groote Eylandt to jail, noting Wurramara
had only been out of jail for a few weeks when he committed the offence.
But he told Wurramara's lawyer:
"I must not let possible penalties sway me about whether he is guilty beyond reasonable
doubt, no matter how offensive the penalties are to yourself and others".
Along with the other eight NT magistrates, as an officer of the court he refuses to
speak publicly about the laws because they are a matter of government policy.
Mr Cavanagh's position is made more delicate because his wife, Margaret Lyons, is involved
in the Country Liberal Party.
She is the Northern Territory Chief Minister Denis Burke's chief of staff.
It was Mr Cavanagh who in January found a 15-year-old boy, also from Groote Eylandt,
guilty of stealing stationary and breaking a window.
That boy died in custody last week after being found with a sheet around his neck.
Clearly distressed about the task of sending Wurramara to jail yesterday, Mr Cavanagh
told reporters after adjourning the court he would stand down as coroner in the separate
case of the 15-year-old's death.
Former NT chief magistrate Ian Gray said the working under a mandatory sentencing regime
was difficult personally.
The new laws were a factor in Mr Gray's decision in 1997 to retire from the NT judiciary
after seven years to return to work as a barrister in Melbourne.
"When you are required to impose what you think is an unjust, unfair and disproportionate
sentence, it's an unsatisfactory," Mr Gray said.
But magistrates were required to be robust in their day to day work and would see handing
down sentences as part of their job, he said.
"You can't sit around wringing your hands, you have to get on with the next one."
AAP cm/ah/br
KEYWORD: MANDATORY CAVANAGH REPEATING
2000 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
QLD: Motorcycle gang members charged
AAP General News (Australia)
12-16-1999
QLD: Motorcycle gang members charged
Twenty people, including members of the Bandidos Motor Cycle Gang, have been arrested
in Cairns in a police drug raid.
The arrests are the culmination of Operation Celeste which started in April.
Police say those arrested face a total of 108 charges so far, including kidnapping,
torture, assault and drug trafficking.
No court dates have been set.
AAP RTV geb/sd/rp/jn
KEYWORD: BANDIDOS (BRISBANE)
1999 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
HELP FOR NEEDLES, A YOUNG HEDGEHOG WHO IS LOSING HIS QUILLS
The Record (Bergen County, NJ)
01-04-1996
HELP FOR NEEDLES, A YOUNG HEDGEHOG WHO IS LOSING HIS QUILLS
By CATHY KRZECZKOWSKI
Date: 01-04-1996, Thursday
Section: LIFESTYLE
Edition: All Editions -- 3 Star, 2 Star P, 2 Star B, 1 Star Late, 1 Star Early
Column: PET Q&A
Q. Help! Our 6-month-old hedgehog's quills are falling out! His
skin is red and flaking and he appears to be very uncomfortable. We're
afraid to take Needles to our vet because he's never treated hedgehogs
before. What should we do?
A. Find a veterinarian who does take care of hedgehogs -- and make
an appointment before your poor pet goes bald! You may have to make a
few calls before you find one in your area, but persistence pays off.
After calling the North American Hedgehog Association in New Mexico, a
vet in upstate New York, and a former breeder in Ramsey, I finally found
hedgehog help in Ridgewood.
Dr. Dean Cerf, who has been treating these spiny mammals for quite
some time, says parasite, fungal, or bacterial infections could be the
cause of your pet's problems. Or, because of his red, flaky skin, it
could be an allergic reaction. After infections and allergies have been
ruled out, Cerf says the third possibility may be endocrine disorders,
imbalances of hormones in the body.
"But don't take this shopping list to the store," Cerf says. Skin
scrapings and cultures (to identify the problem) may be needed, as well
as heavy-duty drugs, all of which should be administered only under a
qualified vet's care.
Also, it could be difficult to treat hedgehogs, he says. If they
get defensive, curl up into a ball, and stick their needles out, they
would have to be sedated.
Although Cerf says he wouldn't encourage people to get these
exotics -- they're not the most cuddly or affectionate pets -- he admits
that some hedgehogs can be "playful ... like pussycats."
Advice from Eve Kelsey-Wood of NAHA: If you're feeding your
hedgehog only cat or dog food, he may be suffering from poor nutrition.
They need a broader diet.
"They're meat eaters," Kelsey-Wood says, and they should be eating
small pieces of skinless chicken or beef, insects such as mealworms, or
even scrambled eggs, cottage cheese, or small pieces of any fresh fruit
or vegetable.
Letters should be sent to Pet Q&A, The Record, 1350 Route 23, Wayne,
N.J. 07470-5892. Or, send electronic mail to Cathy Krzeczkowski via the
Internet at newsroom {AT} bergen-record.com. Answers will appear only in
this column.
Keywords: ANIMAL. DISEASE
Copyright 1996 Bergen Record Corp. All rights reserved.
ACT: Pedestrian killed by car
AAP General News (Australia)
02-09-1999
ACT: Pedestrian killed by car
CANBERRA, Feb 9 AAP - Australian Federal Police are seeking help to identify a pedestrian
killed by a car in Canberra's southern outskirts early today.
An AFP spokeswoman said the man, in his early to mid 20s, died about 2.15am when he was hit
by a car while walking in Langdon Avenue, Wanniassa.
The death is the second fatality on ACT roads …
NSW:Body found by tree in eastern Sydney
AAP General News (Australia)
01-12-2012
NSW:Body found by tree in eastern Sydney
SYDNEY, Jan 12 AAP - A body has been found near a tree in Sydney's eastern suburbs, police say.
Police were called to Prince Lane at Randwick around 11.50am (AEDT) on Thursday after
a council worker discovered …
VIC:Police investigate four deaths after fire
AAP General News (Australia)
01-10-2011
VIC:Police investigate four deaths after fire
MELBOURNE, Jan 10 AAP - Police are appealing for witnesses to come forward as they
investigate the mystery deaths of four people whose bodies were found in a burnt-out Melbourne
house.
Up to three young children were believed to be among the dead.
Police and firefighters were confronted with an "horrific" scene at the fire in Southern
Road, Heidelberg Heights at around 4pm (AEDT) on Sunday.
They had to force their way in and found the dead people.
Homicide detectives are still in the process of identifying the bodies, which …