среда, 29 февраля 2012 г.

FED:Gillard hails hospital reform deal=8


AAP General News (Australia)
08-02-2011
FED:Gillard hails hospital reform deal=8

Health Minister Nicola Roxon said the efficient price component of the deal was a major
change negotiated "long and hard".

"Without a national efficient price, the confidence that taxpayers expect, that every
health dollar is being spent sensibly, I don't think can be met," she said.

Legislation establishing the new hospital pricing authority would be introduced when
parliament resumes.

"I am confident that all of the background work that is being done in the meantime
will be able to be quickly transferred to that new authority - with one exception," she
said.

"If (Opposition Leader Tony) Mr Abbott wants to play silly buggers with it and object
to the legislation, that of course has some potential to delay the establishment of the
pricing authority."

MORE mb/rl/jlw

KEYWORD: HOSPITALS UPDATE 8 CANBERRA

� 2011 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

FED:Sex scandal a 'betrayal of trust': Smith=6


AAP General News (Australia)
04-06-2011
FED:Sex scandal a 'betrayal of trust': Smith=6

Earlier on Wednesday, Prime Minister Julia Gillard said she didn't want to say anything
which could prejudice investigations by the ADF and the federal police.

"But if I can make a point more broadly, any conduct that treats a woman in a way that
her dignity is pushed aside, that engages in misusing trust, breaching trust, going out
of the way to embarrass her dignity and sense of self-worth, is disgusting conduct and
we would all repudiate it," she told Fairfax Radio in Brisbane.

"It's not what we would want to see in this country."

AAP jcd/nb

KEYWORD: CADET 6 CANBERRA

� 2011 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

NSW:Biker dies after swerving to avoid dog


AAP General News (Australia)
12-16-2010
NSW:Biker dies after swerving to avoid dog

SYDNEY, Dec 16 AAP - A 72-year-old motorbike rider died after he swerved to avoid a
dog on a road in the NSW Riverina.

He was riding a 100cc Honda on Plumpton Road, at Tatton, near Wagga Wagga, about 7.50pm
(AEDT) on Wednesday when the dog dashed onto the road.

The man braked and swerved but lost control of the bike and fell off.

An off-duty doctor came to his aid. But the man died later in Wagga Wagga Base Hospital
while undergoing emergency surgery, police said.

AAP mdg/jfm

KEYWORD: TOLL NSW

� 2010 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

FED:Notes reveal why Chamberlain convicted


08-09-2010
FED:Notes reveal why Chamberlain convicted

SYDNEY, Aug 9 AAP - Secret jury notes hidden in the Northern Territory police files
have revealed why Lindy Chamberlain was convicted of murdering her baby daughter Azaria
30 years ago.

The handwritten notes show that like the rest of the nation, the female jurors were
tougher on Lindy than the men, News Ltd newspapers say.

The three women - a teacher and two housewives - all voted for a conviction while at
least four of the nine men had to be persuaded that she was guilty.

"Doesn't believe dingo," one of the housewives is recorded as declaring.

Another said that while she was going to convict Lindy, she still found it "hard to
accept Mrs C did it".

They are the missing element in a puzzle that three decades later still perplexes Australia.

News Ltd says it was given exclusive access to the Azaria Files, 145 boxes of police
documents and exhibits destined for the National Archives because of their historical
importance.

Within the files are pages of jury notes apparantly written by the public servant who
was the jury foreman, jotted down on blue notepaper as the jurors struggled with their
decision in the Darwin courthouse after the seven-week trial that captivated the nation
in 1982.

They detail exactly what the jury was thinking when it threw out Lindy's story that
a dingo had taken her baby and convicted her of killing Azaria at what was then Ayres
Rock on August 17, 1980.

Her husband Michael was convicted of being an accessory.

It was to be six years before Lindy was released and then the couple was exonerated
after Azaria's battered matinee jacket was found at the base of the Rock.

AAP ao

KEYWORD: CHAMBERLAIN

� 2010 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Qld: Man dies in head-on


AAP General News (Australia)
12-29-2009
Qld: Man dies in head-on

BRISBANE, Dec 29 AAP - A 33-year-old man has died in a head-on collision in central
Queensland, lifting the state's holiday road toll to eight.

The man, from Brisbane, died instantly when the car he was driving and another vehicle
collided on Round Hill Road in Agnes Waters around 11.30am (AEST) on Tuesday.

The other driver was taken to Bundaberg Hospital with non-life threatening injuries.

There were no other occupants in either vehicle.

On Monday night, a teenager died in a crash near Maryborough.

The 17-year-old was killed when a Mazda sedan he was in and a Toyota utility collided
at the intersection of Iindah and Teddington roads at Tinana about 9.35pm (AEST.

The youth was taken to Maryborough Hospital but died a short time later.

The Mazda driver, a 17-year-old girl, was taken to the same hospital with minor injuries.

The ute driver, a 17-year-old boy, sustained "very minor injuries", police said.



(EDS: National road toll figures are for the period 0001 December 18 to 2359 January
3. Some states and territories have different periods.)

AAP peb/it

KEYWORD: TOLL QLD UPDATE

2009 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Vic: Police wait for father who lost whole family to recover


AAP General News (Australia)
08-17-2009
Vic: Police wait for father who lost whole family to recover

By Greg Roberts

MELBOURNE, Aug 17 AAP - Police hope in the next few days to speak to a 31-year-old
man who lost his wife and four young children in a weekend house fire.

Aaron Holloway has undergone surgery in Geelong Hospital after suffering burns, abrasions
and smoke inhalation. Police will speak to him when he has recovered.

Mr Holloway survived by escaping through the front door of his home at Clifton Springs,
southwest of Melbourne.

But his entire family perished in the blaze early on Sunday.

His four children - Brodie, two, Thomas, 18 months, and his three-month-old twins,
son Cooper and daughter Mackenzie - died along with their mother, Ashlee, aged 24.

It is believed Mr Holloway, a truck mechanic, jumped through a window to try to reach
his family but was driven back by the flames.

"(Arson squad) investigators plan to speak to him in the next couple of days," police
spokeswoman Sergeant Sharon Darcy said.

She said investigators did not consider the fire to be suspicious but were still investigating.

Arson and Explosive Squad detectives have now cleared the scene and are awaiting the
results of forensic tests to determine what caused the fire.

It appears Ms Holloway's life revolved around her four children.

On her MySpace web page she said: "Life as a mum rocks. I can't imagine anything better".

She was pregnant when she last wrote on the page but said she planned to go back to
work as a real-estate agent.

Recent postings from friends mostly congratulated her on the birth of her new babies.

Ms Holloway completed her schooling in Geelong, near the Clifton Springs home in which
she perished.

She attended Sacred Heart College, Belmont High School and Matthew Flinders Girls College
at various times.

She said on her the web page that The Beatles were her idols, TV personality Oprah
Winfrey was a hero and her favourite books were "anything with a happy ending".

Police will prepare a report for the coroner.

AAP gr/jl/cdh

KEYWORD: FIRE WRAP (PIX AVAILABLE)

2009 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Fed: What you will save after RBA rate cut


AAP General News (Australia)
04-07-2009
Fed: What you will save after RBA rate cut

New standard variable mortgage repayments on a 25-year loan. Assumes mortgage rate
of 5.60 per cent and that retail banks pass on in full Tuesday's 25 basis point cut by
the Reserve Bank of Australia.



MORTGAGE REPAYMENT SAVING

$100,000 $620.07 $15.09

$150,000 $930.11 $22.63

$200,000 $1,240.15 $30.18

$250,000 $1,550.18 $37.72

$300,000 $1,860.22 $45.27

$350,000 $2,170.26 $52.81

$400,000 $2,480.29 $60.36

$450,000 $2,790.33 $67.90

$500,000 $3,100.37 $75.45



Source - CommSec



AAP cb/rl/tnf

KEYWORD: RATES MORTGAGE FACTBOX

2009 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Fed: Body of soldier returns to Australia today


AAP General News (Australia)
12-03-2008
Fed: Body of soldier returns to Australia today

The body of an Australian soldier killed in Afghanistan returns to Australia this afternoon.

An RAAF C-130 transport plane carrying Lieutenant MICHAEL FUSSELL will land at RAAF
base Richmond for the traditional ramp ceremony.

Family members will be there .. alongside Defence Minister JOEL FITZGIBBON .. opposition
defence spokesman DAVID JOHNSTON .. Army chief KEN GILLESPIE and special operations commander
TIM MCOWAN.

A commemorative service will be held tomorrow.

25-year-old Lieutenant FUSSELL .. of the army's 4RAR commando battalion .. was killed
last Thursday by an insurgent improvised explosive device during a patrol in Oruzgan province.

He was the seventh Australian soldier to die in Afghanistan since 2002 .. and the first officer.

AAP RTV mb/rl/jmt

KEYWORD: IRAQ AUST FUSSELL (CANBERRA)

2008 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

ACT: 15,000 new homes to ease ACT housing pressure


AAP General News (Australia)
04-30-2008
ACT: 15,000 new homes to ease ACT housing pressure

CANBERRA, April 30 AAP - More than 15,000 new residential blocks will be released during
the next five years to help ease Canberra's housing affordability crisis.

The land release would have major fronts in the city's north, central west and south-east.

ACT Chief Minister Jon Stanhope says the aim of the release is to meet the demand for
property and have land in reserve as well.

It would also provide a variety of choice for buyers.

The territory government intends releasing 4,200 blocks during the next financial year,
about 1,000 more than this year.

Strong demand for commercial and industrial land will also be met with both sectors
having an average of 100,000sqm released to them each year for the next five financial
years.

AAP dep/rl/jm

KEYWORD: HOUSING ACT

2008 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

NSW: Post-Christmas sales may top retail forecasts


AAP General News (Australia)
12-27-2007
NSW: Post-Christmas sales may top retail forecasts

SYDNEY, Dec 27 AAP - The post-Christmas sales may turn out even better for retailers
than expected, industry experts say.

The end-of-year sales are now an institution across NSW, and the Australian National
Retailers Association says this year they may be more lucrative than first hoped.

Chief executive Margy Osmond said $2.1 billion was expected to be made in NSW between
now and the middle of January, and about $6 billion nationally.

But after speaking to retailers across the country, she said that figure could even be higher.

"Certainly what I'm hearing from NSW, South Australia and Tasmania this morning, from
a number of large member companies, it's going to be a lot better than that $6 billion,"

she said.

"That may be conservative."

December 27 is traditionally the big day of the post-Christmas sales, with the return
to trading in Sydney's suburbs and regional areas after Boxing Day restrictions.

While Ms Osmond did not have concrete figures for spending today in NSW, NSW Business
Chamber spokesman Paul Ritchie said it could hit $300 million above normal takings.

"I did some back of the envelope calculations that said you could be looking at $300
million above a normal day's trade," he said.

"The feedback from retailers is all positive."

Ms Osmond said whitegoods, electrical products, ladies' apparel and homewares were
top of shoppers' lists.

"Those things that we predicted were going to be the big sellers during the period
are proving to be the biggies - it's the audio-visual equipment, it's the ladies' apparel
and homewares," she said.

"There has been a change in shopping culture which says that if you need to buy big
purchases, particularly for the home, you wait for the sales period, and you buy them
then."

The post-Christmas sales had become part of the Australian calender, Mr Ritchie said.

"If you look at the significant months, particularly for clothing and footwear, it's
January and July, which are the months of the two major sales of the year," he said.

AAP ab/hn/jl/de

KEYWORD: SALES NSW

2007 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

WA: Sister appeals for information about murdered woman


AAP General News (Australia)
08-19-2007
WA: Sister appeals for information about murdered woman

The sister of murdered Perth woman CORRYN RAYNEY has made a heartfelt plea for information
about the case.

SHARON .. who doesn't want her surname revealed .. says her family needs answers.

The body of 44-year-old CORRYN RAYNEY was found buried in in Kings Park on Thursday.

The mother of two had been missing since August 7 .. when she failed to return home
from an evening bootscooting class.

Her estranged husband .. LLOYD RAYNEY .. was babysitting their daughters at the time.

Major Crime Squad detective PAUL ROBINSON says every person connected to Ms RAYNEY
remains a person of interest.

AAP RTV ah/ibw/wz

KEYWORD: RAYNEY (PERTH)

2007 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Fed: Ex-cops plead guilty to violent armed robbery


AAP General News (Australia)
04-03-2007
Fed: Ex-cops plead guilty to violent armed robbery

By Jade Bilowol

BRISBANE, April 3 AAP - A violent armed robbery committed by two former NSW police
anti-theft squad members marked a "tragic fall from grace", a court has been told.

Former NSW police officers Wayne Alfred Duckworth, 47, of the Gold Coast, and Brett
Terence Gale, 44, of Sandgate in Brisbane's north, today pleaded guilty in the Brisbane
District Court to one count each of robbery in company with personal violence.

Prosecutor Julie Aylward said Duckworth had moved up the ranks to become a detective
during his 17 years with the NSW police before leaving in 1999.

"He had tried to become an inspector," Ms Aylward said.

Gale was an officer for six years until 1990.

Ironically, both men had worked in the state's anti-theft squad.

"This is a tragic fall from grace for two men who have gone from investigating crime
to being the criminals in a very serious crime," Ms Aylward said.

In the early hours of November 5 last year, balaclava-clad Gale and Duckworth, wielding
a bike pump and metal bar respectively, robbed the Park Ridge Tavern, south of Brisbane,
of more than $63,000.

Ms Aylward told the court Gale forced a female employee to the ground and held the
metal bar to her head, while Duckworth taped another's hands together.

Both women attended court today.

Ms Aylward said a male tavern employee, whose hands were also bound, allegedly plotted
the robbery with Gale, who then recruited Duckworth.

The employee allegedly turned off an illuminated XXXX beer sign outside the tavern
to signal to the pair that the alarm had been switched off and security guards had left,
she said.

Ms Aylward said "a number of aggravating features", including the premeditated nature
of the crime, warranted sentences of four to six years each for Duckworth and Gale.

However, defence lawyers said the two men were experiencing financial difficulties
at the time and had used the controversial sleeping aid Stilnox.

Barrister Stephen Zillman, who represented Gale, a married man with two school-aged
children, said his client had been suffering a "major depressive disorder, pathological
grief disorder, and substance abuse".

"My client's judgment was reasonably affected by a mixture of illnesses and substances,"

he told the court.

"(He was taking) Stilnox, which I'm sure your honour has seen in recent times has been
taken off the pharmaceuticals list ... (due to) certain behaviours to various people taking
that medication."

The court also heard Duckworth, also married and with two children from a previous
relationship, had suffered post-traumatic stress disorder and gambled away tens of thousands
of dollars.

Judge Kerry O'Brien remanded the pair in custody until sentencing on April 11.

AAP jvb/pjo/jl/de

KEYWORD: DUCKWORTH

2007 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

NT: Two youths dead after four break into shipping container


AAP General News (Australia)
12-03-2006
NT: Two youths dead after four break into shipping container

Two teenage boys are dead .. and another two remain in hospital .. after gaining entry
to a shipping container at a meat works in a remote community .. north of Kakadu National
Park.

Police say the incident's believed to have occurred between 6pm last night and 7am
this morning (CST).

They say four Aboriginal boys gained entry to a metal shipping container used to store
drums of fuel .. apparently for the purpose of petrol sniffing.

The boys were freed from the container this morning by a member of the local community
.. but a 15-year-old and an 18-year-old were pronounced dead .. shortly after arrival
at the Oenpelli Health Clinic.

The other two have been flown to Royal Darwin Hospital .. where one is in a critical
condition and the other stable.

AAP RTV njl/wf

KEYWORD: CONTAINER (DARWIN)

2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Tas: One body found in Tassie mine, owners = 4


AAP General News (Australia)
04-27-2006
Tas: One body found in Tassie mine, owners = 4

The miners - Todd Russell, Larry Knight and Brant (Brant) Webb - became trapped after
an earth tremor triggered a rock fall at the Beaconsfield Gold Mine at 9.30pm (AEST) on
Tuesday night.

Fourteen other miners working underground made it to a safety chamber and escaped unscathed.

A remote-controlled earthmover equipped with cameras was sent into the mine yesterday
to try to dig through to the trapped men.

AAP jlw/sco

KEYWORD: MINE BODY 4 BEACONSFIELD

2006 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

понедельник, 27 февраля 2012 г.

Manasā Devī

Manasā Devī Manasā is a popular snake and childbirth goddess of the Bengali section of India (see Manasa-Mangals, Devi).

A pocket full of prayers

By Susan DeMar Lafferty Staff Writer "Blessed be the Lord, my rock, who trains my hands for war, and my fingers for battle." In addition to all the training and equipment soldiers need before going off to war, there is one more survival tool Carol and Fred Blacksmith want to tuck inside their duffel bags: a packet of Scripture verses. They know soldiers are allowed to carry a Bible with them, but their simple gift is designed to provide immediate comfort and encouragement. It's a packet of 20 different verses printed on patriotic business cards that can easily fit in a soldier's pocket. It even comes in a protective plastic sleeve. The design is very intentional. And the Blacksmiths intend to reach as many soldiers and their families as possible through their Operation Freedom Inc., which operates out of their Park Forest home. "After the Sept. 11, (2001 attacks) we wanted to do something to benefit and encourage the soldiers," Carol said. "Scripture is the one thing we knew would help them." They had created similar sets as holiday gifts. Fred, a minister with his home-based Abundant Life Christian Fellowship, selected verses for the military that were comforting: Psalm 46: "God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble." Isaiah 41:13 "For I the Lord thy God will hold thy right hand, saying unto thee, Fear not; I will help thee." The first sets of cards were printed at Office Max, and Fred and Carol would collate them while watching television. They did 200 sets in 2006 ("a big year") and gave away 12,500 in 2008. They have a volunteer staff that includes Terri Banks and Laura Robertson, also of Park Forest, and Beth Ellis, of Frankfort. They often enlist other community service volunteers and church friends to collate, and this year they already have completed 10,000 packets. "Our goal for this year is 100,000 sets," Ellis said. None of them thought Operation Freedom would grow so much. But as it grew, they developed a system for printing, collating and packing.

"If someone asked us for 500 sets a year ago, we would have thought 'Oh my gosh!' Now we can turn that around in seven to 10 days. Our goal is to get packets to soldiers in any area we are serving," Carol said. They also are serving the families of soldiers who are deployed and offer another set of cards with a different set of Scripture verses for those who are waiting for loved ones to return. Psalm 130: "I wait for the Lord, my soul waits, and in His word I put my hope" Psalm 55: "Cast your cares on the Lord and He will sustain you." The cards are distributed in many ways. The Blacksmiths have worked closely with Operation Care Packages in Joliet, www.operationcarepackages.org, which places the packets in the boxes of toiletries and food items it ships to soldiers. They are discovering other organizations and branching out to attend public events to make people aware of their free cards. They recently had a booth at Barrington Freedom Fest and appeared by invitation at an out-of-state predeployment event. They are looking forward to attending more events and aren't shy about spreading their message. Fred has met chaplains and stopped people in uniform and talked about Operation Freedom. Robertson's daughter encountered someone in a Las Vegas parking lot. Ellis also is hoping to reach more members of the military via the Internet because she realizes many have computer access. And they expect God will continue to open many more doors. Each packet costs $2.50. Initial funds came from the Park Forest Veterans of Foreign Wars, Matteson American Legion and Chicago Heights Purple Hearts. Now that they are established as a nonprofit organization with a Web site (www.OperationFreedomInc.com) they have received donations from as far away as California and Colorado. Even kids with a lemonade stand chipped in their earnings, and all donors get their name printed on the back of the last card in the set, "so soldiers know someone is praying for them," Fred said. "How many places can you make a $2.50 donation and know that you are making a life-changing difference?" Carol said. "This is the best thing we can offer our soldiers. We're pretty passionate about this." But their mission depends on the donations of "generous Americans," she said. Their future plan is to develop a set of Scripture cards for returning soldiers, who may need help reintegrating into society, and a set for those who work in high stress situations, such as police, fire and hospital workers. Fred heard about a soldier who pulled a tattered pack out of his pocket and said, "I can't tell you how many times this saved my butt." And just recently he got an e-mail from a battalion chaplain in Iraq. One of his soldiers showed him a packet and asked for more. "We just sent 500 sets to the front lines. This is exactly where we want them," Fred said. Susan DeMar Lafferty can be reached at slafferty@southtownstar.com or (708) 802-8805. She also blogs about the Lincoln-Way communities at blogs.southtownstar.com.

IN PROGRESS... Josefina "Josie" Aguilar Co-Proprietor: Espresso Mi Cultura.(Artículo Breve)

There's an old African proverb that translates into "it takes a village to raise a child." This simple adage also relates to music and the arts, because it takes a whole village to present various art forms. In Progress... has aimed to highlight different women making great waves behind the scenes in the Latin music arena. Behind the actual artist singing that beautiful bolero or playing the trumpet lie numerous folks working as a collective to make sure this art form is exposed. Among these doers are extremely talented women filling in the role as music publishing executives, internet company owners, and for this issue's installation, Josefina "Josie" Aguilar, co-owner of the popular bookstore/coffee house, Expresso Mi Cultura, in Hollywood.

You might be wondering how Josie fits into the whole gamut of music tastemakers. Well, have you ever walked into an eclectic neighborhood coffee shop for a quick caffeine fix? If it's a good place, there's usually great music in the background, or better yet, a local band strumming their acoustic guitars next to the expresso machine. Josie's well-known establishment offers both examples, along with a myriad of great literature, artwork, and space where up and coming artists of all kinds can collaborate and show off their work. It's a business venture that's allowed this enterprising woman to offer not just a great locale to hang out in, but a space where culture and ideas become widely shared and easily accessed. As a proud L.A. native (East L.A. to be exact), this Chicana is actually an Urban Planner by trade, having worked in housing development for low-income families. Aguilar is a graduate of UCLA's prestigious Urban Planning program and worked for the city of Santa Barbara as its city planner right before she opened Espresso Mi Cultura with a partner. Questioned as to how she went from city planning to cultivating a bookstore's inventory, she freely echoes what many artists state when asked why they do their craft, "you're searching for whatever it is that makes you happy, what feeds your soul." What satisfied her interest was bringing forth a place where she could be surrounded by things that held great meaning to her: good literature, profound artwork, and connection with different types of people. "It's part of our history, to find a place where people can congregate and exchange ideas, work together and be exposed to different things together." A great part of these exchanges come between musicians and shop patrons. This haven allows independent and upcoming artists to come in and show off their music for a very open-minded crowd. Aguilar and company welcome the idea of having musicians, some of whom don't have the capacity to rock big-time venues, to share their talents to an eclectic crowd. The booktore even offers a different array of music selections, some of which are releases by the very performers who have graced Espresso's makeshift performance space.

Expresso Mi Cultura's success has been highlighted through numerous media outlets, but much of the notoriety comes from word of mouth. Aguilar is sincere in wanting to offer her community a place where progressive ideas can be fostered and cultivated. She is busy working on establishing a non-profit arm for the shop, hoping to generate funding to offer even more space and opportunities for artists in the community. Aguilar envisions generating grants to get appropriate stage equipment, budget for marketing and local advertising, stipends for performers, and wider outreach to a bigger audience. She visualizes creating a bigger synergy between culture and art and a community that feeds on it. Music and its players come from all walks. In the midst of Josie Aguilar's reality came a vision called Espresso Mi Cultura that offers so much more than books and coffee. It is through this type of place and idea that visionaries and works of art come together. It is through innovative minds and amassed passion--such as Josefina Aguilar's--where these ideas come into fruition.

Quick Facts:

Name: Josephina "Josie" Aguilar

Present Projects:

* Espresso Mi Cultura will be part of CHICANO NOW: AMERICAN EXPRESSIONS, a huge art exhibit focusing on Chicano art and culture. For more information, check out the website: http://www.bbhinc.net/chicano.html

Location: 5625 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywod, CA 90028

Bookstore: 323-461-0808

Coffeehouse: 323-466-0481

e-mail: XicanoBks@aol.com

Website: www.EspressoMiCultura.com (for schedule of events)