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Saturday, July 16, 2011

Hinch in love with life

With a new liver and a new lease on life, Derryn Hinch says going home from hospital after a life-saving liver transplant is "un-bloody-believable".
The broadcaster underwent surgery on July 6 to give him a fresh liver to replace the cancerous, cirrhotic organ that was slowly killing him.
"It is something else, I'm feeling good," said the beaming 67-year-old as he emerged from the Austin Hospital on Saturday, inhaling the crisp Melbourne air.
"I'm most looking forward to getting home."
Hinch's recovery suffered a minor setback on Thursday when he had to have surgery to clear a blockage in his bile duct.
But he got the all clear to go home on Saturday.
As he walked from the hospital to his car accompanied by his teary-eyed wife Chanel Hayton, he thanked medical staff at the hospital as well as the family of his liver donor.
"The donor family, I don't know who they are, I just wish they knew what they've done; they've given me a second life and it's just awesome," he told reporters.

The donor family, I don't know who they are, I just wish they knew what they've done, they've given me a second life and it's just awesome,'' he told reporters.

``Some people walk in here then don't walk out and I'm thinking now at this minute about the people that I've met in there who I've seen on the daily walks who may not make it out.''

He urged Australians to talk to their family members about organ donation and register to become donors, ``because if somebody hadn't done that for me, I wouldn't be here,'' he said.

Ms Hayton said it was a big day, being able to take her husband home.

``He's been hoping each day (to come home) but it's better, obviously, to stay here until he's good enough to come home,'' she said. ``I didn't think it would be happening for another two weeks or so, so it's great, I'm really happy.

``It's a whole new life. We've been given a second chance at everything.''

Hospital spokeswoman Taryn Sheehy said Hinch's road to recovery was not yet over and he would need to return to hospital to see his doctors twice every week.

But he had made great progress, given that the average liver transplant patient spends three weeks in hospital, she said.

``Today is a milestone for Derryn,'' said Ms Sheehy. ``Obviously going home, he's made great progress to this point and he's going home earlier than expected.

``There's still the risk that he might develop complications and that he would have to return to hospital so he is certainly not out of the woods yet.

``The next couple of months will be a crucial time for him.

``The main thing for Derryn is for him to slow down ... he just needs time to rest.''

Hinch will now prepare to be sentenced on July 21 for breaching suppression orders by naming sex offenders. He asked the magistrate last month not to jail him, fearing he would not get to hospital in time to receive his transplant if he was in jail.

Magistrate Charlie Rozencwajg indicated he would probably sentence him to home detention, but said Hinch would be going to jail if not for his ill health.

Say g'day to next door

That’s the advice of founder and CEO of Neighbour Day, Andrew Heslop, who wants to see suburbs turn into real neighbourhoods.

And in the wake of the shocking discovery of Natalie Wood, whose body lay undisturbed in her Surry Hills terrace for up to eight years, there has never been a better time to get to know your neighbours.

``In this case we’re talking about someone who sadly fell through the cracks but it really goes to show the importance of a community,’’ Mr Heslop said.

``Having good neighbours isn’t just a safety thing…it also turns the community into a happier, more inclusive place - and it’s a much better place to live in.

``But it doesn’t need to be a big deal, it doesn’t need to be expensive or hard work, it can simply start with a ``g’day’‘.’‘

The Mt Druitt Standard is today launching Care For Your Neighbour, a campaign to promote healthy neighbourhoods. Doug Hurlstone, the face behind the soup kitchen at Whalan said it was important to check on your neighbours.

We think ‘I’m too flat out looking after myself’ but if you hold out your hand to your neighbour you will also get that support back,” she said.

“We are all busy and some don’t even know who their neighbours are.”

Founder and chief executive of Neighbour Day Andrew Heslop wants to see suburbs turn into real neighbourhoods and said it could start with a simple “g’day”.

“Having good neighbours isn’t just a safety thing ... it also turns the community into a happier, more inclusive place - and it’s a much better place to live in.

“But it doesn’t need to be a big deal, it doesn’t need to be expensive or hard work, it can simply start with a ‘g’day’.”

The Mosman Daily is today launching Care For Your Neighbour - a campaign to promote healthy neighbourhoods.

We want to hear from neighbourhoods where care and concern are a normal part of life.

It builds on Neighbour Day, started by Mr Heslop in 2003, after the similar case of a Melbourne woman whose death wasn’t spotted for two years.

Bedside hearing for nurse stabbing accused

Suffering 21 stab wounds and a broken rib, emergency nurse Edith Castro-Rivera attended the rally, describing Tuesday's attack as like being "trapped in a bad dream".

Ms Castro-Rivera was punched in the face and stabbed by a male patient armed with a butter knife.

Nurses want a full-time security guard in the emergency department. Health Minister Jillian Skinner has agreed to a guard from 10pm to 6am while a review of hospital security is conducted.

Sporting a black eye, stitches in both arms and bruises all over, Ms Castro-Rivera said: "I'm still in shock ... I never thought this would happen to me, you don't expect it to happen to anyone."

Her attack came after colleague Robyn Humphreys was assaulted by a patient in October last year.

Shane Keevil, 39, was due to attend Penrith Local Court on Friday morning to face charges related to an incident at Blacktown Hospital on Tuesday afternoon.

Keevil is charged with wounding a person with intent to cause grievous bodily harm, and with recklessly causing grievous bodily harm.

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But Magistrate Annette Sinclair said Keevil was still an in-patient at Blacktown Hospital and was unable to attend the court.

His matter would be heard at a beside hearing later on Friday, Ms Sinclair said.

A nurse, named by media as Edith Castro-Rivera, was working at a computer in the emergency ward of Blacktown Hospital when a man punched her in the face and stabbed her several times with a butter knife.

Nurses at the hospital will hold a stop-work protest in Blacktown on Friday to press for increased security at the hospital.

Binge Drinking May Affect Memory of Teens

A new study, which examined gender-specific influences of binge drinking on spatial working memory (SWM), has found that female teens may be particularly vulnerable to the negative effects of the habit. Binge or "heavy episodic" drinking is prevalent during adolescence, raising concerns
about alcohol''s effects on crucial neuromaturational processes during this developmental period. Heavy alcohol use has been associated with decrements in cognitive functioning in both adult and adolescent populations, particularly on tasks of SWM.

"Even though adolescents might physically appear grown up, their brains are continuing to significantly develop and mature, particularly in frontal brain regions that are associated with higher-level thoughts, like planning and organization," said Susan F. Tapert, acting chief of psychology at the VA San Diego Healthcare System as well as professor of psychiatry at the University of California, San Diego.

"Heavy alcohol use could interrupt normal brain cell growth during adolescence, particularly in these frontal brain regions, which could interfere with teens'' ability to perform in school and sports, and could have long-lasting effects, even months after the teen uses,” added Tapert.

Tapert and her colleagues recruited 95 participants from San Diego-area public schools as part of ongoing longitudinal studies.

The results showed binge drinking was associated with gender-specific differences in brain activation during the working spatial memory task. Male binge drinkers showed greater activation in all brain regions during the task while female binge drinkers showed less activation than non-drinkers.

For female teenage binge drinkers, these differences correlated with worse performance on the working spatial memory task as well as poorer sustained attention.

Among male teenage binge drinkers, greater activation in the brain translated to better spatial memory performance.

Researchers say the results suggest that teenage girls may be more vulnerable to the toxic effects of binge drinking on the brain while males may be more resilient.

"Females' brains develop one to two years earlier than males, so alcohol use during a different developmental stage -- despite the same age -- could account for the gender differences," Talpert says. "Hormonal levels and alcohol-induced fluctuations in hormones could also account for the gender differences. Finally, the same amount of alcohol could more negatively affect females since females tend to have slower rates of metabolism, higher body fat ratios, and lower body weight."

Researchers say these gender differences for the effects of teenage binge drinking on brain development merit further study.

"These findings remind us that adolescent boys and girls are biologically different and represent distinctive groups that require separate and parallel study," says researcher Edith V. Sullivan, PhD, professor in the department of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Stanford University School of Medicine, in the news release.

"And yet binge-drinking is a dangerous activity for all youth," says Sullivan. "Long after a young person -- middle school to college -- enjoys acute recovery from a hang-over, this study shows that risk to cognitive and brain functions endures. The effects on the developing brain are only now being identified. 'Why tamper with normal developmental trajectories that will likely set the stage for cognitive and motor abilities for the rest of one's life?'"

Man admits animal torture

The concern from Australia's peak animal welfare group follows the decapitation of a mouse in Queensland and the stabbing and exploding of possums in Tasmania.

Animal protection officers uncovered video images of the torture and both cases have ended up in court.

But the RSPCA says animal torture being posted on social media is a disturbing trend and it is getting worse.

"We're seeing close to between six and 10 incidents a week where animal cruelty is being posted on the internet or on Facebook," said Michael Beatty from the Queensland branch of the RSPCA.

"The worrying trend is that people seem to be showcasing their blatant disregard for animals on social media and on the internet and as well all know it's very, very hard to track the perpetrators down."

Mr Beatty says the latest case involved a young woman who was sentenced to 180 hours of community service after she filmed herself decapitating a mouse and posting the video online.

It took 40 seconds for the mouse to die.

"A mouse was purchased from a pet shop. It was quite obvious it was purchased for the process of sort of brutally torturing it and killing it," Mr beatty said.

"And the other disturbing aspect of course is that the person filmed the event and then posted it on a social media site."

Also before the courts is the case of two men in Tasmania who filmed themselves bashing, stabbing, exploding and torching possums.

RSPCA prosecutions officer Glenn Carey said the men went out in a vehicle to catch the brushtail possums and filmed the acts of cruelty.

The video was shown to the court yesterday.

"There was systematic killing and wounding of five possums over a sustained period," Mr Carey said.

"It was not just one act or one night."

Three counts were comprised of the men driving a car at the possums, one count involved the stabbing of a caged possum with a knife on a stick and a third count involved beating the possum to death with a broom handle.

Three of the possums were set fire to and blown up.

Mr Carey said the animals would have suffered much pain and they died in an extremely brutal way.

He said there were 270 carers in Tasmania who volunteered their time to raise orphaned possums and they had been devastated about the way the possums were treated.

Defence lawyer Sacha Wong said Hampton's co-accused was the main perpetrator.

Mr Wong said Hampton had not seen the footage between the time it was shot and the time he was interviewed by police.

"He found the footage quite disgusting himself," Mr Wong said.

"He is ashamed of his actions but has no explanation for them."

The court heard drugs or alcohol were not involved.

Julia Gillard open to media probe

IT hasn't been a good couple of weeks for those of us who are making a career in journalism.
The fallout from the News of the World phone hacking scandal has reverberated across the world. The deplorable actions of those at that newspaper has served to only increase the scrutiny of the ethics and actions of media organisations in the United Kingdom but also others in News Limited's worldwide network — which includes significant operations in its chief executive Rupert Murdoch's home country of Australia.

By virtue of the nature of the methods used by the News of the World to intercept phone messages, we would forgive anyone in the general public for not becoming a little more cynical about the measures that some members of the media will go to to get a good story.

But it has been particularly interesting that some prominent Australian political figures have taken the opportunity to seize on the outrage which has greeted the uncovering of the scandal in the UK to suggest that a inquiry should be conducted into media ethics in our country — particularly given they admit there is no evidence that tactics used to obtain stories in the UK are employed here.

Liberal leader Tony Abbott is riding a popularity wave at the moment — not surprisingly he doesn't see the need for an inquiry. But we do know that many on the conservative side of politics have accused the ABC and Fairfax's The Age newspaper of having a leftist bias.

News Limited chief executive and chairman John Hartigan said last night he believed an inquiry into journalistic conduct would be "totally unnecessary".

"You've got a statutory authority that looks at broadcast media, and I would argue that the behaviours of the press which operate under the Press Council, which is funded by ourselves, are no different to the behaviours of those that operate under a statutory organisation (the Australian Communications and Media Authority)," Mr Hartigan told ABC's 7.30.

"I know the newsrooms. I know how cultures develop and I'm hugely confident that there's no improper or unethical behaviour in our newsrooms."

He said the company would cooperate with any inquiry but found it disturbing Senator Brown wanted one that canvassed editorial content, including comment, analysis and opinion.

Mr Hartigan said the culture in the British media was different from that in Australia.

"They're very aggressive newspapers," he said. They're very sensational, they deal with people's lives, private lives and some of the behaviours that have come out are obviously being driven by the need to get in front of each other. I would argue very strenuously that we don't have those behaviours in Australia."

Lawyers yesterday debated whether the government had the same extent of powers over the print media as it does over radio and television, because it owns the communications spectrum.

Justin Quill, director of KellyHazellQuill Lawyers, said the issue was "not necessarily clear cut".

"(The commonwealth has) a specific authority over radio and broadcast through their telecommunication powers and control of the spectrum but they don't have any specific powers to regulate print," Mr Quill said. "In my view and experience, the actions of the Australian print media are ethical and do not warrant any government intervention."

Ms Gillard said the media could head off criticism by lifting its game. "If I could put it as clearly as I can . . . 'don't write crap'," she said. "Can't be that hard. And when you have written complete crap, then I think you should correct it."

The proposed inquiry, likely to be conducted by the Senate, would come amid a separate government "convergence review" of media ownership, local content and other rules for the telecommunications sector, television, radio and the internet.

The media last underwent a regulatory shake-up of ownership and other rules five years ago. The Australian understands opposition communications spokesman Malcolm Turnbull is not sympathetic towards a new inquiry.

Australian Press Council chairman Julian Disney said he did not believe standards in print journalism were lower than in the broadcast media, which is governed by ACMA.

He said the council was already undergoing changes to toughen its sanctions, develop new standards and attract funding from sources other than newspaper and magazine proprietors and warned that a new inquiry could slow or stall that work and take away from the convergence review.

Mr Hartigan said there was a greater diversity of media ownership now than at any time in Australian history and challenged Senator Brown's call for curbs on foreign ownership of Australian media.

"One of his suggestions is that media assets should be Australian-owned," Mr Hartigan said. "Does the senator mean companies like Google, Yahoo, Facebook or Twitter should not operate in Australia or that Channel Nine and Channel Seven should get rid of their foreign shareholders?"

University of NSW professor George Williams said there was "clear scope" for the commonwealth to further regulate newspapers under the Corporations Act. "But it couldn't impede the ability of the press to engage in political discussion and debate across its pages," he said.

Timothy Swan

Timothy Swan, 1758–1842 was a composer and hatmaker born in Worcester, Massachusetts. The son of goldsmith William Swan, Swan lived in small towns along the Connecticut River in Connecticut and Massachusetts for most of his life. Swan’s compositional output consisted mostly of psalm and hymn settings, referred to as psalmody. These tunes and settings were produced for choirs and singing schools located in Congregational New England. Swan is unique as an early American composer in that he composed secular vocal duets and songs in addition to sacred tunebook music. The tunebook, New England Harmony is a collection of his sacred music compositions, while The Songster's Assistant is a collection of his secular music. Swan was also a poet and teacher of singing.

Life Birth and Early Life
Born July 23, 1758, Timothy Swan was the eighth child of goldsmith William and Lavinia Swan of Worcester, Massachusetts. Not much is known of Swan's early years other than he resided in Worcester until his father's death in 1774.After the death of his father, Swan was apprenticed to a "Mr. Barnes" of Marlborough, Massachusetts. Barnes, an "importer of foreign goods" was a loyalist who eventually left the colonies to return to England as relations between the two became increasingly strained. This caused an end to Swan's brief apprenticeship in Marlborough.

Groton and the Singing School
It was after leaving Barnes' employ that Swan moved to Groton, Massachusetts to live with his older brother William. Timothy's elder brother had an active interest in music and may have influenced his brother. Shortly after arriving in Groton, Swan enrolled in a singing school that was taught by a "Mr. Gross. This experience is probably the only formal musical education that Swan ever had.

Cambridge and Northfield
In 1774 Swan left Groton to enlist in the Continental Army located in Cambridge, Massachusetts. It was here that he learned to play fife under the tutelage of a British Fifer. In 1775 a little less than a year after enlisting at Cambridge, Swan moved to Northfield, Massachusetts. It was here that Swan became apprenticed as a hatter with his brother-in-law Caleb Lyman. It is here in Northfield that Swan's attention focused on musical composition. His first composition "Montague" can be placed around 1774 when Swan was sixteen years old.

The Suffield Years
After completing his apprenticeship in 1780, Swan moved to Entfield, Connecticut and then to Suffield, Connecticut  two years later in 1782. It was in Suffield that Swan composed most of his music.

Marriage and Family
It is in Suffield that Swan was introduced to Mary Gay, the daughter Ebenezer Gay, third minister of the First Congregational Church of Suffield. Swan may have been introduced to Ms. Gay by his brother Benjamin Swan who was married to Lucy Gay, Mary's sister. His marriage to Mary on May 5, 1784 produced a large family similar to his own, ten children several of which were musicians like their father.

Singing Schools and Tunebooks
Supplementing his work as a hatter, Swan began teaching singing-schools in he area. It was during this time that his music was first printed. In 1783 Composer-compiler Oliver Brownson included six of Swan's tunes in the third issue of Select Harmony. This was followed by requests from other compilers and publishers to include Swan's tunes in their tunebooks and other publications. By 1800, his tunes were being printed in larger areas: New York, Virginia, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Massachusetts, and Connecticut.
This rise in interest in his music prompted Swan to publish his music himself. Collaborating with Alexander Ely, Swan published The Songster's Assistant in ca. 1786. The tunebook was a collection of secular duets. Swan contributed half of the songs in the collection.
In 1801, he published New England Harmony. Unlike The Songster's Assistant, New England Harmony was a collection of sacred music. The tune book contained over 104 pages of original music. The collection contained many tunes that had been previously printed including his first tune Montague. The tunebook was not well received and Swan did not publish another collection after 1801. Even though the last tunebook did do well, Swan's music was still in demand and was published in later compilations by other tunebook compilers.

Return to Northfield
In October 1807, twenty-five years after settling in Suffield, Swan and his family moved back to the town of his childhood. The reason for the move is not known, however the decision may have been prompted by his mother's failing health, who died six years later in 1813. Upon returning to Northfield, Swan went into business with his nephew Josiah Dwight Lyman, as a milliner. Swan continued to compose music and receive requests from other compilers seeking to purchase the copyright of some of his more popular tunes.

Death
On July 23, 1842 at the age of 84, Timothy Swan died in his sleep in Northfield, Massachusetts. Around the time of his death the style of psalmody that he composed had given way to more proper compositions more along the lines of the European school of musical composition. An obituary published in the Boston Daily Advertiser dated August 5, 1842 noted: "Timothy Swan, 82, generally known to the public as the author of China and other pieces of sacred music, which have so long held a place in successive musical collections, that the have seemed to belong to an age long gone by"

Tony Abbott, Wayne Swan clash over carbon tax

Mr Swan on Friday named Sydney's The Daily Telegraph as one newspaper that constantly opposed a carbon price.

"It doesn't care how it does it," he said of the News Limited publication.

Referring to the phone hacking scandal embroiling media mogul Rupert Murdoch's News International organisation in the United Kingdom, Mr Swan told reporters in Perth that such practises were "absolutely unacceptable".

But he said he welcomed and accepted statements made on Thursday by News Limited's chief executive officer in Australia, John Hartigan, that the company was not engaged in those sorts of practises here.

But the treasurer said some media outlets in Australia did have a political agenda.
Mr Swan said: "This is just a despicable act and a new low from Mr Abbott."

"Mr Abbott could not even mention in his budget reply speech the floods in Queensland and their impact on Queenslanders in our economy," he told reporters in Cairns.

"Now he is somehow seeking to link for political purposes our plans to reduce carbon pollution with the floods in Queensland."

Meanwhile, Ms Gillard said she understood the residents of Victoria's Latrobe Valley were anxious about the impact of the carbon tax package but believed the region had a strong future.

Ms Gillard has met workers from the Hazelwood Power Station, which is likely to close under the federal government's carbon tax plan.

She said the workers asked some hard questions as she explained the package.

"There's a lot of anxiety there and that's why I'm here to talk issues through with people, to be there directly available to have a conversation," she told reporters.

She said the government would be working alongside communities through the process.

"I am very confident that the Latrobe Valley has a bright future," she said.

But Ms Gillard was unable to say if any Latrobe Valley power station would definitely close, saying it had to go through a tender process and any closure would take a number of years.

The federal government's carbon tax plan states that 2000 megawatts of the nation's dirtiest power generators would close by 2020.