Finance jokes-Oil company

Posted on 12th November 2011 by admin in news - Tags: , , , , , , , ,

said t he oil company, clapping her hands. “Are you crazy?” said the accountant. “Handsome young men are two a penny but clever, ugly little accountants are worth their weight in gold.” Labels: good jokes, Office jokes, ..

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Finance jokes-Oil company

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Posted on 1st October 2011 by NZ News in news - Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

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Uggggh | The Gatekeepers Post

Posted on 30th September 2011 by Sydney News in news,Uncategorized - Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Forty-odd years ago they were two a penny .

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Uggggh | The Gatekeepers Post

Joseph Paperback Conrad Youth

Posted on 10th December 2010 by Asia News in news - Tags: , , , , , , , ,

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Get other Popular Fiction hereGet other Joseph Conrad here Joseph Conrad (1857-1924) was a Polish-born novelist who spent most of his adult life in Britain. Some of his works have been labelled romantic: Conrad’s supposed “romanticism” is heavily imbued with irony and a fine sense of man’s capacity for self-decep Comments (0)

Looking For That Perfect Present | My Dating Success

Posted on 6th October 2010 by French News in news - Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

Gifts for her are two-a-penny and you want to get something that’s not to obvious, here are a few options¦. Red letter days have been around for a while and offer a range of great experiences that she will treasure forever. …

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Looking For That Perfect Present | My Dating Success

‘Balloon boy’ made for reality show

Posted on 19th October 2009 by admin in news,nz - Tags: , , , , , , ,

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An associate of the father who allegedly carried out the now-infamous balloon boy hoax to promote a proposed reality show is wanted for questioning after e-mails surfaced showing the two had discussed a similar stunt months ago as part of a public relations campaign for the program.

Investigators said they want to interview Robert Thomas, a Denver man who claimed Richard Heene had told him he was planning a media stunt to promote a proposed reality show. Thomas, a self-described researcher, sold his story to Gawker. Thomas said the show would feature Heene as a mad scientist who carries out various scientific experiments.com and provided the Web site with e-mail exchanges between him and Heene.Gawker.”This will be the most significant UFO-related news event to take place since the Roswell Crash of 1947, and the result will be a dramatic increase in local and national awareness about The Heene Family, our Reality Series, as well as the UFO Phenomenon in general,” according to a copy of the show’s proposal provided to the site by Thomas.com editor-in-chief Gabriel Snyder confirmed the New York-based Web site paid Thomas, but declined to say how much for the story billed with the headline: “Exclusive: I Helped Richard Heene Plan a Balloon Hoax.Messages left for Thomas by The Associated Press were not returned.”Snyder said Thomas was planning to meet with investigators Sunday night, though sheriff’s officials did not return messages seeking confirmation.com story that the plan he knew about did not involve Heene’s children.Thomas, 25, said in his Gawker.The drama played out on live television to millions of viewers worldwide.The alleged stunt temporarily shut down Denver International Airport, and the National Guard provided two helicopters in an attempt to rescue 6-year-old Falcon Heene, who was believed to be inside the flying-saucer shaped homemade balloon that hurtled more than 50 miles across two counties. When the balloon landed without the boy, officials thought he had fallen out and began the grim search for his body. When the balloon landed without the boy, officials thought he had fallen out and began the grim search for his body.”"We certainly know that there’s a conspiracy between the husband and wife, you’ve probably seen some of the e-mails and some of the things on the Internet suggesting that there may be other conspirators,” Alderden said. Alderden said the stunt two weeks in the planning was a marketing ploy by the Heenes, who met in acting school in Hollywood and have appeared on ABC’s reality show “Wife Swap. Alderden didn’t name the media outlet but said it was a show that blurs “the line between entertainment and news.Alderden said documents show that a media outlet has agreed to pay money to the Heenes with regard to the balloon incident.”Let’s call it (my statement) short of speculation that a media outlet was in on the hoax, but let’s not discount the possibility,” he said.”It wasn’t clear whether the deal was signed before or after the alleged hoax, or whether the media outlet was a possible conspirator.com had not contacted the Heene family or offered them money for their story, referring to Alderden’s reference to a deal being struck by a media outlet.In an e-mail Sunday to the AP, Snyder said editors at Gawker.The parents weren’t under arrest, the sheriff said.”No, that wasn’t us,” Snyder said. Federal charges were also possible. Federal charges were also possible.The most serious charges are felonies and carry a maximum sentence of six years in prison and a $500,000 fine. Alderden said they would be seeking restitution for the costs, though he didn’t have an estimate.The cost for just the two military helicopters was about $14,500 ($NZ19,785).As Alderden told reporters Sunday that the whole thing was a hoax, the Heenes were shopping for snacks at Wal-Mart, where Richard Heene told thehe was “seeking counsel.”"This thing has become so convoluted,” Heene said, tears welling in his eyes. He said his wife was holding together better than he was.The couple’s attorney, David Lane, issued a statement later Sunday saying the Heenes were willing to voluntarily turn themselves in to face charges. Lane said he advised the family against making public statements.Once investigators got a good look at the “flying saucer” they determined that the thin mylar balloon covered with foil and held together with duct tape would not have been able to launch with the 37-pound-boy inside, according to Colorado State University physics professor Brian Jones.Other parts of the story, including whether the 6-year-old had been hiding in the rafters of the family’s garage during an intense five-hour search also weren’t true, Alderden said.”For all we know he may have been two blocks down the road playing on the swing in the city park,” the sheriff said.The sheriff said all three of the Heenes’ sons knew of the hoax, but likely won’t face charges as a result of their ages. The oldest son is 10. One of the boys told investigators he saw his brother get in the balloon’s box before it launched.Alderden said Heene, a 48-year-old storm chaser, inventor and self-described amateur scientist, has a high school education and most recently earned a living by laying tile.Alderden said investigators had an “aha” moment that the story was a hoax when Falcon turned to his father during a CNN interview Thursday and said what sounded like “you had said we did this for a show” when asked why he didn’t come out of his hiding place.On Friday, Falcon got sick during two separate TV interviews when asked again why he hid.Alderden said they didn’t question the family Friday because they wanted to keep the family’s cooperation by maintaining the appearance that they believed their story. . No charges were filed.Alderden said officials tried Saturday to persuade Mayumi Heene, 45, to go to a safe house, but she declined.Alderden said the children were still with the parents Sunday and that child protective services had been contacted to investigate their well-being. On “Wife Swap,” Heene was portrayed as erratic, at one point throwing a glass of milk on a participant on the program.”Clearly, from all indications, Mr. Heene has somewhat of a temper,” Alderden said.The producer of “Wife Swap” said it had a show in development with the Heenes but the deal is now off. TLC also said Heene had pitched a reality show to the network months ago, but it passed on the offer.

Hunter missing in Nelson Lakes National Park walks to safety

Posted on 17th October 2009 by admin in nz - Tags: , , , , , , , ,

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A hunter who was missing in the Southern Alps south of Nelson has made his way to safety, say police. .

He had been hunting alone off the Rotoroa Track while other members of his party hunted the western side of the lake, said Senior Sergeant John Maxwell of Nelson Bays Search and Rescue.

A dog team followed what was believed to be Mr Manson’s foot prints, which led south toward the Sabine Hut.

Mr Manson had hunted the area previously but was ill prepared for the conditions, he said.

The Nelson Search and Rescue helicopter was also called in but was hampered by the inclement weather.

Search and rescue tracking staff continued to brave the conditions into the early hours of Sunday morning before the search was called off, Mr Maxwell said.

About 30 people took part in the search earlier today before Mr Manson walked to safety himself.

Death threats to Sue Bradford

Posted on 29th August 2009 by German News in nz - Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

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Anti-smacking campaigner Sue Bradford has received chilling death threats and been warned she could be New Zealand’s “first political assassination”.

Police are looking at stepping up her personal security after the vile warnings on Twitter. Some of it is pretty nasty. The Green MP said: “There has been a whole lot of stuff.

“There is another email that was really ugly a few weeks ago that we referred to police.”

She told : “I was on Twitter and someone sent a tweet saying, ‘Sue Bradford should be the first candidate for a political assassination’.”

Voters have been bitterly divided over the issue.”

Bradford, the architect of the anti-smacking legislation, added: “I have become the iconic symbol for the opponents, for the people who want to change the law back.

Bradford, an MP for 10 years, received a backlash of threats and abuse after the bill was passed on May 16, 2007. Opponents argue that the law prevents parents from disciplining their kids and prosecutions can rip families apart. I copped it for many years earlier on for standing up for unemployed people and beneficiaries and being a street protestor.

She told this week: “I have been copping it for four years.”

She has moved house several times to protect her privacy. It is what happens when you stand up for what you believe.

The issue still rumbles on despite the $9 million referendum when 87. She also has special dispensation from Parliament to leave her name and address off the electoral roll. .6 per cent voted ‘No’ to “Should a smack as part of good parental correction be a criminal offence in New Zealand?”

Bradford said that as well as being abused and intimidated, her office had been flooded with letters and emails from parents telling her they would go on whacking their children.

One hateful opponent threatened to make a sawn-off shotgun to take out Bradford and any MPs who supported her. In 2007, she was targeted with menacing taunts on the CYFS Watch website.

There were also threats to publish her home address unless she backed down.

Another nutter, intent on teaching her the difference between a smack and a serious assault, threatened to punch her, “hopefully breaking her nose or jaw”.

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She said at the time: “I think it’s indicative of some of the people that are campaigning against me

Doctorate thesis disappeared ‘in a black hole’ says lawyer

Posted on 27th July 2009 by admin in nz - Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

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Former immigration chief Mary Anne Thompson’s doctorate thesis disappeared “in a black hole” after being sent to the London School of Economics, her lawyer said today.

Defence counsel Robert Lithgow was questioning the school’s academic registrar, Simeon Underwood, via video link at a depositions hearing in Wellington District Court.

Mr Underwood had not met Thompson and, under questioning, relied on the school’s records.

Thompson faces three fraud charges after applying for public service jobs in 1989, 1998 and 2004, claiming she had achieved her doctorate in philosophy.

Mr Underwood said the record “seems to be full up to the point where Ms Thompson submitted her thesis”.

Mr Lithgow suggested he was attempting to put together a jigsaw which had some pieces missing.

Mr Underwood today told the court he did not know where the documents were now.

Prosecutor Grant Burston said yesterday the thesis had been sent for examination in 1990 but no degree was confirmed as Thompson had not undertaken the oral examination.

“I wouldn’t share that judgment,” Mr Underwood said.

Mr Lithgow asked if it would be reasonable to describe the loss of a top level student’s thesis as an embarrassment.”

He said there may be an explanation which was not made clear in the school’s paperwork.

“Because the pieces of the jigsaw – as you said at the start – are missing. He asked whether there were circumstances under which the exam could be waived on extreme compassionate grounds.

Mr Lithgow said Thompson would have had to travel from New Zealand to England for the oral exam.

He said there had been correspondence over whether Thompson could do her oral exam in Australia as her supervisor was due to visit Queensland.

Mr Underwood had only heard of this being done once, “and that was posthumously”.

Two more witnesses from the school were due to give evidence via video link this week, with court sessions beginning early to accommodate the time difference. .

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Immigration service a ‘shambles’

Posted on 14th June 2009 by Sydney News in nz - Tags: , , , , , , , ,

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A minder for the Department of Labour’s chief executive is necessary to sort out the “shambles and mess” at the immigration service, Prime Minister John Key says.

An Auditor-General’s report released this month said the service, part of the Department of Labour, was focused on processing as many visas as possible without worrying about quality.

“This meant that staff who were under pressure to meet quantity targets had incentives to approve visas and permits, rather than decline them,” the report said.

The division was set up by the service’s former boss Mary Anne Thompson in 2005, who resigned last year after accusations of a conflict of interest in helping overseas family members gain residency.

The report found problems were worse in the Pacific Division than elsewhere in the service.

Ms Thompson is facing court action on fraud and dishonesty charges.

It was also alleged that she did not have a doctorate from the London School of Economics that many people believed she had when she applied for jobs earlier in her career. .

“This was a shambles and a mess left to us by the Labour Government,” Mr Key said said on TVNZ’s Breakfast programme.

The service last week reviewed its decision on 29-year-old Lithuanian tourist Jurga Skiauteris, so she and her family were allowed to remain in New Zealand until the birth of her baby.”

A person would be appointed to “ride shot-gun” and help change the immigration service, Mr Key said.

“Immigration is part of the Department of Labour so it doesn’t just have immigration to worry about it has ACC, it has employment law, it has a lot of different areas.

Dr Coleman told TV1′s Q+A show that the Auditor-General’s report was “very bad”.

He was confident Immigration Minister Jonathan Coleman could “sort it”.

The problems meant some people may be in New Zealand who should not be and others with legitimate rights may have been turned away, he said.

The problems meant some people may be in New Zealand who should not be and others with legitimate rights may have been turned away, he said.

Two years was the “outside limit” for changes to be made and New Zealand to have “a superb immigration service”.

The cost and risks of separating the immigration service out of the Department of Labour were too high, Dr Coleman said.

New MP excited about job, not the circumstances

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