Wednesday, February 29, 2012

FED:Soldier killed in Afghanistan named=2


AAP General News (Australia)
08-23-2011
FED:Soldier killed in Afghanistan named=2

Private Lambert initially served in the Reserve 9th Battalion of the Royal Queensland
Regiment in August 2005, transferring to the Australian Regular Army in February 2007
and posted to the 2nd Battalion of the Royal Australian Regiment (2RAR).

He served in East Timor from June to November 2009 and in Afghanistan from June 2011.

"Private Lambert is described as a well-respected soldier who excelled in any task
he was assigned, and was looking forward to serving his country in Afghanistan," Defence
said in a statement.

During his army service he was awarded the Australian Active Service Medal, Afghanistan
Campaign Medal, Australian Service Medal, Australian Defence Medal and the Timor-Leste
Solidarity Medal.

Private Lambert, 26, is survived by his spouse, parents and family.

AAP mb/rl/de

KEYWORD: AFGHAN AUST NAME 2 CANBERRA

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

Qld: Bligh turns down bipartisan tour of indigenous communities


AAP General News (Australia)
02-20-2008
Qld: Bligh turns down bipartisan tour of indigenous communities

ANNA BLIGH's rejected Opposition Leader LAWRENCE SPRINGBORG's invitation to take a
bipartisan tour of Queensland's indigenous communities.

Mr SPRINGBORG asked the premier to accompany him on a tour of Aboriginal communities
to see what progress has been made since the state parliament passed its own sorry motion
nine years ago.

He says he wants to see the opposition and the government come together to put in place
a …

PLATFORM OPERATORS LOOKING FOR PROFIT-MAKING FORMS


AsiaInfo Services
04-28-2011
Platform Operators Looking for Profit-making Forms

BEIJING, Apr 28, 2011 (SinoCast Daily Business Beat via COMTEX) -- At the Global Mobile Internet Conference (GMIC) 2011, Tencent Holdings Limited (SEHK: 0700) announces that will adopt open strategy for mobile operations such as games and browsers. A top executive of the company reveals that it will share more profits with excellent developers.

However, the proportion of profits shared by Tencent with developers is still low in contrast with that of Apple Inc. (Nasdaq: AAPL), although the Chinese company appropriated CNY 100 million for profit sharing with developers last year.

SINA Corporation (Nasdaq: SINA) currently still focuses on its microblog platform. Yesterday, its CEO Charles Chao announced the company's plan to foray into the LBS market.

By far, SINA microblog has formed cooperation with more than 15,000 Web sites. Over 10,000 corporate customers have used the company's microblog service. And third-party developers have applied for 36,000 applications on the microblog platform of SINA. However, the company is still looking for suitable profit-making forms for microblog service.

Source: www.yicai.com (April 28, 2011)

KEYWORD: BEIJING INDUSTRY KEYWORD: Internet & Online Services & Media SUBJECT CODE: Internet & Online Services
Wireless Internet/WAP/3G Services
SinoCast China Business Daily news
profit
developer
microblog
Charles Chao
LBS

Copyright 2011 AsiaInfo Services (via Comtex). All rights reserved

FED:Abbott plays down leadership tension


AAP General News (Australia)
02-11-2011
FED:Abbott plays down leadership tension

By Paul Osborne, AAP Senior Political Writer

CANBERRA, Feb 11 AAP - Tony Abbott has publicly expressed support for his leadership
team as tensions rise over foreign policy differences with his deputy Julie Bishop.

The row was sparked by a proposal to cut Australian aid funding for Indonesian schools,
part of the coalition's alternative plan to find budget savings to replace the government's
flood levy.

Mr Abbott and Ms Bishop on Friday attended a Liberal Party forum in Parliament House,
but a planned joint media appearance did not go ahead, with Ms Bishop deciding to head
back to Western Australia.

Asked by reporters what she felt about possible moves to undermine her, Ms Bishop said:
"There is no leadership rift within the Liberal Party. Tony Abbott and I are working extremely
well together. We have in the past and will continue to do so."

Talking to reporters late on Friday, Mr Abbott played down the problems in his party.

"All of my senior colleagues have my full and total support," he said.

One of those said to be interested in the deputy's role, frontbencher Andrew Robb,
told reporters the row had been blown out of all proportion.

"I don't think there are people looking to white-ant Tony Abbott's leadership," Mr Robb said.

"There were a lot of misunderstanding this week. The air will be cleared, and we will
get on with it as a solid team."

Mr Robb threw his hat into the ring for the deputy's position after the 2007 election
and is understood to have sounded out colleagues for the role after the 2010 election.

Asked by reporters whether he remained interested in the role, Mr Robb said: "No, I'm
not at all. I think Julie is doing a great job."

It is understood the $448 million in aid cuts were raised by immigration spokesman
Scott Morrison in shadow cabinet, but no formal proposal was put at that time.

But at a subsequent meeting, Mr Abbott angered Ms Bishop, who is the coalition's foreign
affairs spokeswoman, when he told her that he had decided to axe the Indonesian schools
funding.

It is understood she argued unsuccessfully that the move would undermine a lot of goodwill
she had built up with foreign governments.

Other Liberal MPs aligned with rivals for Ms Bishop's position say the decision was
raised in shadow cabinet, and Ms Bishop was now trying to distance herself from it.

The coalition's foreign aid spokeswoman Teresa Gambaro was not involved in the decision.

Contacted by AAP on Friday, Ms Gambaro said that while she had not attended either
meeting, she understood Ms Bishop had "vigorously defended" aid spending.

"It's not an easy thing to see cuts from a portfolio," she said.

However, she said the issue would not undermine the deputy's relationship with Mr Abbott.

"Tony Abbott has given her his full support, and she's a very valuable member of leadership
team," Ms Gambaro said.

AAP pjo/sb/jl/de

KEYWORD: ABBOTT WRAP

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

FED:Wilkie pleased with PM meeting


AAP General News (Australia)
08-28-2010
FED:Wilkie pleased with PM meeting

By Melissa Jenkins

MELBOURNE, Aug 28 AAP - Independent candidate Andrew Wilkie has emerged pleased from
his prime ministerial meeting, saying Julia Gillard was genuinely interested in supporting
his push for national pokie machine reform.

"That was a good meeting," Mr Wilkie told reporters as he left 4 Treasury Place in Melbourne.

Mr Wilkie, who is close to claiming the Tasmanian seat of Denison and is therefore
a crucial vote for either major party to form government, had given a list of national
reforms and concerns about his own electorate to Ms Gillard.

He intends to send the same list to Opposition Leader Tony Abbott, whom he will meet
in Canberra on Monday.

Mr Wilkie said it was crucial for the next federal government to introduce gambling
reforms, which it could do by using its powers enshrined in the Corporations Act.

"I made it quite clear to the prime minster that the time for inaction has passed,"

he said after the hour-long meeting on Saturday.

"I reminded the prime minister that her own electorate is notorious as one of the electorates
with the heaviest losses of any electorate in the country.

"The prime minister is well aware of that, and I believe she genuinely is interested
in bringing about some kind of reform."

Mr Wilkie specifically raised the prospect of a $1 bet limit on all pokie machines
nationally and a $120 per hour loss limit.

Ms Gillard had not closed the door on pokie machine reform, he said.

"I did emphasise repeatedly that reform of poker machine legislation nationally is
one of the most important issues for me personally and it's an area that I expect either
the Labor party or the coalition parties to commit to some kind of reform if they are
to have my support."

Mr Wilkie said he would meet with the prime minister again on Monday after his discussions
with Mr Abbott and would be expecting "firm commitments" from her at that time.

He said he hoped to make an announcement about which party, if any, had won his support
by early to mid-week.

"I think it's certainly in the public interest for all of the independents to do what
I'm trying to do and that is to reach a decision early," he said.

"I think people want stability. They don't want this to drag on, so I'm going to do
my best to move quickly now and foster that stability."

Ms Gillard did not answer questions as she left the meeting and got into a waiting car.

"We've had a good discussion, thank you," she told reporters.

Their meeting began with a handshake and Ms Gillard agreeing that Mr Wilkie's wife
and media adviser Kate Burton could join the discussion.

"Yeah, no, that's fine," Ms Gillard replied.

"We're certainly, we're an office of chairs, that's for sure," she added, motioning
to the variety of seats available.

The trio sat down, and Mr Wilkie and Ms Burton quickly switched places so he could
sit closer to Ms Gillard.

The trio then began talks over a jug of water and a thin black binder placed on a coffee table.

The binder looked identical to packages Ms Gillard handed recently to three other independent
MPs which touted Labor's record and election promises bearing on their electorates.

AAP mj/sbl/jl/de

KEYWORD: POLL10 WILKIE UPDATE (WITH PIX AND VIDEO)

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

Fed: Coalition warns gov't about including broken promise=3


AAP General News (Australia)
04-21-2010
Fed: Coalition warns gov't about including broken promise=3

Later, Mr Rudd said the government would not tie its legislation for a means test on
the private health insurance rebate to its health reforms.

"They will be dealt with each on their own merits, two separate pieces of legislation,"

he told Sky News.

MORE rl/maur

KEYWORD: HOSPITALS ABBOTT 3 CANBERRA

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

Fed: Health decision due next year: Rudd =7


AAP General News (Australia)
12-07-2009
Fed: Health decision due next year: Rudd =7

COAG also agreed to the renegotiation of the national partnership agreement on remote
indigenous housing.

The federal government has committed $5.5 billion over 10 years to address overcrowding
and poor housing conditions in remote communities.

Negotiations on a revised agreement will begin soon, with it expected to come into
effect from July 1, 2010.

AAP pjo/mn

KEYWORD: COAG RUDD UPDATE 7 BRISBANE

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

NSW: EnergyAustralia to take legal action against contractor


AAP General News (Australia)
04-29-2009
NSW: EnergyAustralia to take legal action against contractor

SYDNEY, April 29 AAP - EnergyAustralia will take legal action against the contractor
whose boring machine cut a vital power cable and caused Sydney's CBD to suffer its third
power blackout in a month.

Some 30,000 businesses and homes in northern parts of the city were without power on
Tuesday morning after workers in North Sydney drilled through the 132,000-volt cable.

That activated a safety shutdown, leaving parts of the city without power for 45 minutes.

EnergyAustralia said further investigations found the boring machine also damaged a
second cable, which was fixed overnight and back in service.

However, the first cable will take up to 10 weeks to repair.

EnergyAustralia managing director George Maltabarow said the company would now take
action to recover the costs associated with the damaged power cables.

"This incident is a reminder that there can be no short cuts when working near cables,
because the consequences are severe," Mr Maltabarow said in a statement on Wednesday.

"This contractor is extremely fortunate our protection equipment shut down the high-voltage
cable immediately because it probably saved his life."

Hundreds of office workers were evacuated during the power outage, while others were
stuck in lifts and 31 sets of traffic lights were blacked out.

At Circular Quay, the outage plunged a catwalk at Australian Fashion Week into darkness.

A blackout affecting some 70,000 homes and businesses in Sydney on March 31 crippled
the city during afternoon peak hour, and 50,000 customers in the same area were again
without power for about 90 minutes on April 4.

AAP nr/evt/jl/apm

KEYWORD: ELECTRICITY

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

Main stories in tonight's 1800 Seven News


AAP General News (Australia)
12-26-2008
Main stories in tonight's 1800 Seven News

SYDNEY, Dec 26 AAP - Highlights of tonight's Seven News at 1800.

- Maxi yacht Wild Oats XI has made a good start to the Sydney to Hobart and could break
the race record.

- Despite the gloomy economy, retailers are very busy on the first day of post-Christmas sales.

- Motoring groups are saying drivers are being ripped off with petrol 10 cents a litre
more than it should be.

- A nine-year-old boy and a man have suffered minor injuries after a paraglider accident
on Sydney's northern beaches.

- A Sydney pilot who survived a fatal plane crash near Merriwa in the Upper Hunter
on Christmas Eve is in a stable condition in hospital.

- On the fourth anniversary of the Boxing Day Tsunami Australians are being warned
to expect more violent weather.

- Ford Australia has dropped an appeal against a landmark court ruling that awarded
a former mechanic $840,000.

- Eartha Kitt, a sultry singer, dancer and actress who was the first Cat Woman on Batman,
has died.

AAP jcc/

KEYWORD: MONITOR SEVEN 1800

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

Oly: Poor results no surprise for badminton chiefs


AAP General News (Australia)
08-18-2008
Oly: Poor results no surprise for badminton chiefs

By Charisse Ede

BEIJING, Aug 18 AAP - Australia's badminton chiefs always said their Olympic team would
struggle to win a match in Beijing.

They were right on the money.

All six of Australia's badminton players were sent packing after the first round at
the 2008 Games.

In fact, women's singles specialist Erin Carroll was out less than 12 hours after the
Olympic flame had been lit - 2-0 to a higher-ranked Spaniard.

Australia's greatest hope, men's singles player Stuart Gomez, had match point in his
first round clash, but was unable to wrap it up and eventually lost 2-1.

The women's and men's doubles went down in resounding fashion. The women's pair of
Tania Luiz and Eugenia Tanaka took just 12 points off their World No.8 opponents the Japanese
in losing 2-0.

The men, the last to play their match on day four of the Games, were no competition
for Poland, going down 2-0.

The medals were divided up between the favourites: China, Indonesia, South Korea and Malaysia.

Badminton Australia (BA) is already looking beyond Beijing, and even London 2012, to
build the competitiveness of the national team.

Last year, then chief executive Damian Kelly told AAP they were more focused on building
a stronger team for the 2016 Olympics and 2014 Commonwealth Games.

"2016 is where we're looking to make a change," he said at the time.

"We're looking to make some small changes in the next eight years ... with potential
medallists at 2016 and 2014 at the Commonwealth Games."

In July this year, current BA chief executive Paul Brettell said Australia's greatest
achievement at Beijing was just qualifying for the event.

"The trouble with badminton is it's a massive sport in the Asian region," he said.

"We have always seen the Olympics as part of the four-year cycle. In our case, we go
to the Commonwealth Games, and the Olympics are somewhere in between."

They have a lot of work to do before 2014.

AAP ce/jmt

KEYWORD: OLY08 BAD WRAP

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

NSW: Hung jury in Jeffrey Gilham double-murder trial


AAP General News (Australia)
04-10-2008
NSW: Hung jury in Jeffrey Gilham double-murder trial

By Margaret Scheikowski

SYDNEY, April 10 AAP - Almost 15 years after Steven and Helen Gilham were brutally
murdered in their Sydney home, a jury has been unable to decide if their surviving son
was their killer.

At the start of Jeffrey Gilham's double-murder trial in February, Justice Roderick
Howie told the jury the case was a "whodunnit".

But after they failed to agree on who did kill the couple, the judge discharged them
this afternoon.

As the jurors filed out of the NSW Supreme Court, Gilham showed no emotion - a demeanour
he maintained throughout the six-week trial.

He left the complex holding hands with his wife.

The jury retired on Monday, but subsequently sent the judge two notes saying they could
not reach a unanimous verdict.

When they were given the option of a majority decision of 11-1, the foreman told the
judge further deliberations would not result in either verdict.

After discharging them, Justice Howie continued Gilham's bail and adjourned the case
to the next arraignment list in the Supreme Court on May 2.

On that date, it is open to the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) to tell the judge
if the case is to be continued.

Gilham had pleaded not guilty to murdering his parents - Steven, 58, and Helen, 55
- at the family home at Woronora on August 28, 1993.

In 1995, he admitted to the manslaughter of his older brother Christopher, 25, who
also was viciously stabbed to death.

In his evidence to the jury, Gilham repeated what he told police in 1993 - he stabbed
his sibling after Christopher confessed to killing their parents and setting their mother
on fire.

But Mark Tedeschi QC, for the crown, contended Gilham killed all three family members,
stabbing them a total of 63 times in a "ferocious attack".

He referred to the "remarkably similar" way in which they were stabbed and alleged
Gilham then destroyed much of the evidence, including by showering and setting the house
on fire.

While the crown said Gilham was motivated by greed to acquire his parent's wealth,
his barrister, Phillip Boulten, SC, told the jury he had no reason at all to kill them,
adding there was no fortune to inherit.

"He had a good relationship with his mother and his father," he said.

"It was as close and loving as you can get."

Mr Boulten also rejected the crown's claim that Gilham had created false evidence about
his sibling's so-called "weird" behaviour before the deaths so he could blame him for
the killings.

"The defence case is there was trouble between Christopher and Steven," he said.

"Mr Gilham was very concerned about Christopher because Christopher was not acting
the way he usually did."

The jury was told much of the evidence was lost or destroyed, including the knife used
to stab the three victims.

AAP mss/hn/af/de

KEYWORD: GILHAM NIGHTLEAD (PIX AVAILABLE)

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

SA: Kangroo Island man died fleeing the fire


AAP General News (Australia)
12-07-2007
SA: Kangroo Island man died fleeing the fire

ADELAIDE, Dec 7 AAP - A 22-year-old man has died in his truck as he tried to flee a
bushfire raging on Kangaroo Island's southern coast.

The man was found dead in the burnt out truck near Vivonne Bay yesterday.

Initial investigations revealed the vehicle had crashed.

Police forensic officers were heading to the island today to conduct further inquiries
into the death and prepare a report for the South Australian coroner.

Assistant Commissioner Madeleine Glynn said it was not yet clear whether the man died
as a result of the crash or the fire.

"At this stage it's being investigated as a vehicle collision," she said.

"But certainly, subsequently or as part of that the fire went through and he and his
truck were burnt.

"Which came first, we're not quite certain."

The Country Fire Service (CFS) said 12 fires, all caused by lightning strikes, threatened
properties at various locations on the island, destroying at least one shack and killing
300 sheep.

Seven fires were still burning today with the CFS expecting them to continue to pose
problems for at least the next 48 hours.

Properties in various locations remained under threat.

The CFS said it still had 270 firefighters on Kangaroo Island while police declared
the western side of the island a dangerous zone, prohibiting the movement of people into
those areas.

AAP tjd/jt/de

KEYWORD: BUSHFIRES SA DEATH

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

NSW: Man jailed for 18 years for strangling murder of student


AAP General News (Australia)
04-24-2007
NSW: Man jailed for 18 years for strangling murder of student

A Sydney man has been jailed for at least 18 years for the strangling murder of a university
student .. whose body was dumped in the boot of her car.

30-year-old TRUNG SON HUYNH was found guilty of murdering 22-year-old VAY LINH PHUN
in the NSW Supreme Court last May.

Ms PHUN .. a student at Sydney's University of Technology in Ultimo .. disappeared
in August 2003.

Her body was found four days later in the boot of her car .. at Petersham in Sydney inner-west.

HUYNH pleaded guilty to demanding a 70 thousand dollar ransom from Ms PHUN'S family
.. but denied strangling her.

The NSW Supreme Court was told that HUYNH had tried to implicate several other people
in the murder .. but there was no evidence to support those claims.

Judge TERENCE BUDDIN today sentenced HUYNH to a maximum 24 years' jail .. with a non-parole
period of 18 years.

He's been in custody since August 2003 .. and will be eligible for release in August 2021.

AAP RTV kaj/pc/was/af/tm

KEYWORD: HUYNH (SYDNEY)

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

NSW: Man faces court over baby killing


AAP General News (Australia)
12-23-2006
NSW: Man faces court over baby killing

EDS: CHANGES KEYWORD FROM BABY

SYDNEY, Dec 23 AAP - A man accused of murdering a nine-month-old girl by stabbing her
in the throat in Sydney, will remain in custody over Christmas.

Jayant Kumar Singh, 53, of Campsie, was last night charged with murder over the incident
in Unara Street, Campsie, yesterday morning.

The NSW Ambulance Service said the baby girl was dead when officers arrived at the
scene, at about 10.30am (AEDT).

Singh did not appear at Parramatta Bail Court today. No application for bail was made
and it was formally refused.

However, his lawyer said there may be mental health concerns for her client.

The matter was adjourned to Sydney's Central Local Court on Wednesday, December 27.

AAP nr/go/it/cdh

KEYWORD: SINGH (CHANGES KEYWORD)

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

SA: Blame politicians, not Hicks' lawyers, says Law Council


AAP General News (Australia)
08-16-2006
SA: Blame politicians, not Hicks' lawyers, says Law Council

The Law council of Australia says politicians should be blamed for prolonging terror
suspect DAVID HICKS' detention.

Council president TIM BUGG says it's unfair for the HOWARD government to blame delays
in the case on HICKS' lawyers.

Mr BUGG has taken exception to comments by Attorney-General PHILIP RUDDOCK that HICKS'
lawyers are delaying the Adelaide man's trial.

He says Mr HICKS has languished in legal limbo for years and the blame should be laid
squarely at the feet of politicians.

AAP RTV sl/bart

KEYWORD: HICKS (ADELAIDE)

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

Vic: Christie's set for $5 million sale at final auctions


AAP General News (Australia)
04-10-2006
Vic: Christie's set for $5 million sale at final auctions

By Catherine Best

MELBOURNE, April 10 AAP - The first of two final auctions by closing Australian art
auctioneer Christie's will be held in Melbourne tonight with last sales expected to top
$5 million.

The auctions, at 6.30pm (AEST) tonight and 2pm tomorrow, will feature 320 Australian,
international and contemporary works.

Christie's is closing its Australian sales operations after more than 35 years to focus
on the more lucrative Asian market.

Paintings director Jon Dwyer said more than 300 people were expected to attend the
auctions, which feature a "who's who" of Australian art.

"We've had a fabulous viewing here in Melbourne, it's been one of the best attended
viewings," Mr Dwyer said.

"It's a good group to go out with, it's really the who's who of Australian art.

"We want to go out on a very positive and a very up-beat note and I'm sure that will
happen tonight."

Mr Dwyer said Christie's was expecting records to be broken and sales over the two
days to top $5 million.

The collection draws on the works of 180 Australian artists.

The showpiece is Fred Williams' 1965 painting Upwey Landscape which is expected to
tonight fetch up to $800,000 - a record for the artist.

Also going under the hammer are Rupert Bunny's 1908 `A Game of Patience', John Brack's
1978 `Halt' and five paintings by the legendary Pro Hart, who died recently.

Mr Dwyer said the last three months had been an "emotional rollercoaster" as the final
auctions approached but stood by Christie's decision to close.

"Even in a good year from a global point of view we're (Australian auctions) only one
per cent of the turnover," he said.

"Christie's will set up a presence here but not a showroom so to speak."

Two Christie's representatives will remain in Sydney and Melbourne to source artwork
for offshore auctions.

But the Australian market would continue to be well serviced by Christie's competitors,
Mr Dwyer said.

The auctions come as rival Sotheby's launches its first auction of 2006 in Melbourne
tomorrow, which is tipped to rewrite the history books.

Fifty-seven fine Australian artworks will go under the hammer but it is John Brack's
1954 work `The Bar' which is in the spotlight.

The painting is tipped to fetch more than $2 million - smashing the previous record
of $1.98 million for a 20th-century Australian painting.

AAP cmb/ce/maur/de

KEYWORD: CHRISTIES (PIX AVAILABLE)

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

Monday, February 27, 2012

SA: Housing plan welcomed


AAP General News (Australia)
08-09-2005
SA: Housing plan welcomed

South Australia's real estate industry has welcomed moves by the federal and state
governments to establish a national affordable housing plan.

Real Estate Institute chief executive TONY MYERS says property values have appreciated
considerably over the past decade with an adverse effect on affordability.

Mr MYERS says the ability of first homebuyers in South Australia to enter the market
has been a concern in recent years, so it is pleasing to see that the issue is now high
on the national agenda.

Moves towards establishing a national affordable housing plan were agreed on at a meeting
of housing ministers last week.

AAP RTV tjd/jv/tm

KEYWORD: HOUSING SA (ADELAIDE)

2005 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Fed: Scientist stumbles on cancer clue


AAP General News (Australia)
04-03-2005
Fed: Scientist stumbles on cancer clue

By Janelle Miles, National Medical Correspondent

BRISBANE, April 3 AAP - It was a stroke of luck all scientists dream about, an accidental
discovery that may one day lead to better treatments for bone and brain cancers.

Sydney researcher Wei-Qin Jiang wanted to observe the inner workings of a cancer cell.

So he added excess amounts of a protein, known as Sp100, into the large doughnut-shaped
structures found in some cancer cells' nuclei.

He coloured the protein molecules fluorescent green to watch their movements under
a microscope and found, to his surprise, Sp100 switched off one of only two known mechanisms
that allow cancer cells to multiply unchecked.

The mechanism, known as ALT - or alternative lengthening of telomeres - is active in
about 10 per cent of all cancers.

Telomeres have been described as protective caps on the end of chromosomes, like plastic
tips on the end of shoelaces.

Once the telomeres of a normal cell become too short, it can no longer continue multiplying.

In certain cancers - like adult brain tumours known as glioblastomas and bone cancers
called osteosarcomas, which particularly affect teenagers and young adults - lengthening
of the telomeres through the ALT process allows the cells to proliferate.

"Discovering how to turn off ALT is a major clue toward developing a treatment for
these cancers," said Roger Reddel, head of cancer research at the Children's Medical Research
Institute, where Dr Jiang works.

"We've known about this process for about 10 years and now for the first time we know
some of the molecules which are involved."

Dr Jiang found large amounts of the Sp100 locked up a complex of three other proteins
which was enough to stop the ALT process - like switching off a light.

"They were rendered inactive by having too much Sp100," Dr Reddel explained.

Finding a drug to mimic Sp100 and turn off the ALT mechanism could save lives with
high-grade glioblastomas almost universally fatal.

But Dr Reddel warned drug treatment could be many years away.

"It's a long way from finding a drug unless we're extremely lucky and find some existing
medicine that interferes with those three proteins," he said.

"That would be another really lucky break.

"Otherwise, what we would try to do is find a small molecule which is able to interact
with those three proteins in the same way that Sp100 does to interfere with their action.

"But it wouldn't be Sp100 itself. It's too big for us to easily deliver it as a drug."

The research was published in the April edition of Molecular and Cellular Biology.

AAP jhm/rll/sd

KEYWORD: CANCER

2005 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

standard selling price

standard selling price A predetermined selling price set for each product sold for a specified period. In standard costing, these prices are compared with the actual prices obtained during the period in order to establish any variance.

Internet and the virtual marketspace: implications for building competitive e-commerce strategies in the hospitality industry.

During the last years, research has focused more on the tactics surrounding Internet development such as the development of web site content and design, and only recently on the competitive dynamics of the Internet and on building successful e-commerce strategies. This article aims to provide a conceptual framework for developing competitive e-commerce strategies in the hospitality industry. To this end, the new competitive environment (the virtual marketspace) fostered by technological developments and in which hotels have to compete is examined; specifically, three features of the virtual marketspace, namely, reach, richness and digital representation are analysed. Competitive e-commerce strategies in the hospitality industry aim at addressing and managing the challenges fostered by these three features. Successful examples from the hospitality industry are also provided.

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During the last few years, we have been overwhelmed by new ideas, concepts, facts, opinions and even buzzwords surrounding the spectacular development of e-commerce business. It can actually be said that knowledge development in this arena has replicated the image of its own evolution: speediness and a perpetually fierce race. Carried over by the flood of innovations, research has focused more on the tactics surrounding Internet development such as the development of Web content, design interface and/or the digitisation of business operations on the Internet (e.g., Cunliffe, 2000; Gilbert, Powell-Perry, & Widijodo, 1999; Huizingh, 1999; Liu & Arnett, 2000; Procaccino & Miller, 1999; Weeks & Crouch, 1999) and only recently on the competitive dynamics of the Internet and on developing successful e-commerce strategies for the Web (e.g., Sigala, 2001; Riggins, 1999). Moreover, confused about developments on the Internet, many hotels are developing e-commerce strategies that are short-lived or not profitable. Thus, there is a need to investigate and identify the strategic issues that can be considered as the pillars for the development of competitive e-commerce strategies, which in turn can form the basis for developing web site content and design.

The purpose of this paper is to provide a framework for developing competitive e-commerce strategies in the hospitality industry. To this end, the Internet features and the new competitive environment that they generate and in which hotels operate are analysed. When immigrating from marketplaces into marketspaces, three features become important, namely, reach, richness, and digital representation. The management of these three concepts underpins the development of a conceptual framework for building competitive e-commerce strategies which: (a) pulls together and unifies all the previously identified but scattered best practices on the Internet; (b) provides the objectives and reasons for developing innovative Internet services and offerings; and (c) identifies the managerial implications for implementing such practices.

Internet Features and Their Applications

Sigala (2001) identified three distinct capabilities that make the Internet a very powerful tool--interactivity, connectivity and convergence. The Internet allows real-time, online true interactivity, which is crucial since much business activity consists of interactions. Interactivity enhances the richness of customer relationships and creates new paradigms of product design and customer service (e.g., the customer can customise the product/service and the supplier can learn from the customer). Moreover, the Internet is an open, global network that everyone can easily get connected with. The increased connectivity enables new communication and coordination mechanisms both across organisations and customers as well as within groups of customers themselves, while, according to the "network externalities" phenomenon, as the number of connections increases the value of the network grows exponentially (Gosh, 1998). Finally, digital technologies (embracing computers, networks, and media) themselves are converging and making the Internet ubiquitous and mobile.

Thus, the Internet as media is not only considered as a rich information provision mechanism but also as a medium for communication, an environment for conducting transactions, and possibly a channel for actually delivering/distributing the product/service to the customer (Angehrn, 1997; Hoffman & Novak, 1996). The Internet is a niche instrument and a medium of highly customised contacts with existing and potential customers (Sigala, 2001; Sivadas, Gewral, & Kellaris, 1998). The Internet is a marketing communication channel (Berthon, Pitt, & Watson, 1996) and it has also been suggested as a tool for direct marketing (Mehta & Sivadas, 1995). The interactive nature of the Internet allows marketers to reach and interact with individual customers in one-to-one basis as well as to customise their offerings to personal preferences (Deighton, 1998; Gilbert, et al., 1999; Kierzkowski, McQuade, Waitman & Zeisser, 1996). The Internet is used for marketing research (Burke, 1996) as well as a new forum for word of mouth communication allowing people to seek advice and discuss purchase suggestions, for example, virtual communities. (Gosh, 1998; Hagel & Armstrong, 1997).

The Virtual Marketspace

Hotels have been criticised for treating the Internet as merely another sales channel (e.g., Sigala, 2001), but such an approach is fundamentally no different from traditional sales channels and it requires no change in the way business is conducted. However, competition on the Internet does not take place in the physical marketplace but in the marketspace (Rayport & Svioka, 1994), whereby profound changes occur on buyers' and sellers' transactions. The content of the transaction is based on the product/ service's information rather than on its physical appearance or attributes, while the context of the transaction is transferred from the physical world to a computer-mediated environment. Thus, the unique characteristics of the new virtual marketspace created by the Internet need to be first identified and then built business models accordingly.

Few models are found in the literature analysing the characteristics as well as the new rules and dynamics of the new economy. In his model, the wheel of Internet business, Dussart (2000) identified and clearly analysed eight concomitant and interrelated "re-volutions" driven by the Internet, (i.e., changes in the economy, product offerings, markets, distribution channels and power, relationships, management and control). However, although Dussart (2000) clearly and systematically analysed the new economic climate fostered by the Internet, he failed to identify the dynamics and competitive forces driving such changes.

Angehrn (1997) also proposed the ICDT model analysing how businesses should extend their information, communication, distribution, and transaction virtual spaces in order to exploit the new opportunities, and address the competitive pressures generated from the Internet. Dutta, Kwan and Segev (1998) expanded the ICDT model to include the highly required changes and enhancements in the dimension of customer relationships. Nevertheless, these frameworks although very useful to guide strategy-building processes aiming at products/services redesign and/or innovation, they fail to identify the dynamics of the new marketspace that require and foster such transformations. On the contrary, it is argued that successful strategies should be proactive and continuously adopt to forecasted changes (Berthon et al., 1996; Schwartz, 1997) Hence, the identification and management of the forces driving and requiring fundamental changes is highly required.

Evans and Wurster (1997, 1999) identified two features as the main sources of the changes in the new marketspace namely reach and richness and which are linked to Internet's capabilities. New technologies can convey a rich message to a wide base of customers challenging the traditional trade-off between richness of information and reach of message. The possibility of high levels in both dimensions creates a new environment, whereby the old rules of business no longer hold. Zott, Amit and Donlevy (2000) added a third characteristic of the virtual marketspace, the digital representation, which actually denotes the absence of a physical contact in a virtual market.

Reach is about access and connection--how many customers the business can access and how many products it can offer. Unlike in a traditional market where "bricks and mortar" are usually required, in the virtual marketspace anyone that can connect to the network can sell a product to the globally dispersed and connected consumers--the "Internet-ionalisation" effect (Dussart, 2000, p. 388). As a result, a vast number of new players, the "cyberintermediaries", has entered the marketspace by enormously increasing hyper-competition (Werthner & Klein, 1999).

Richness is defined as the depth and detail of the information that the business gives the customer or collects about the customer. Richness occurs in a virtual market, because information flows in both directions are greater, deeper and faster than they are in a traditional market. In a virtual market, technology empowers all parties with knowledge and so provides the potential to reduce any asymmetry of information between buyers and sellers. As buyers have more product/service information, price, vendor and transactions' transparency increase. Moreover, sellers can also collect more information about consumer's buying behaviour and characteristics in order to improve direct marketing activities and customise their e-marketing mix configuration (Sigala, 2001).

Nonetheless, online transactions are impersonal and this has its own drawbacks. Digital representation denotes this absence of physical contact (i.e., the inability to touch and feel the product, to visit a physical storefront and to have human interaction) (Zott et al., 2000). This feature of virtual markets is considered as the major inhibitor to purchasing, since customers must overcome the mistrust of not having human contact, the perceived lack of transaction and payment reliability. In the context of hospitality, whereby the product is totally intangible digital representation creates even more constraints.

Overall, it is argued that competitive e-commerce strategies are those that successfully address and manage challenges generated from these three features of the hyper-competitive virtual market-space. In fact, it is the successful coordination of these three dimensions rather than the separate management of each of them that can create sustainable competitive advantage. These are analysed as follows.

Managing Reach

Before the advent of e-commerce, for most hospitality executives the essential frame of reference has been a geocentric one where real estate and geography have been the big drivers in a physical world (e.g., buildings, dots on maps, markets served, and chains). Hotels chains have, and still brilliantly compete on "location, location, location", because the manner in which hospitality companies bring their product to market remains a cornerstone of any competitive strategy. However, technological developments have separated the physical function (rooms' inventory) from its information distribution function. Angehrn (1997) argued that technology provides tremendous opportunities for extending possibilities in information provision and expanding distribution channels. Castleberry, Hempell and Kaufman (1999) also advocated that as technologies continue to evolve, competition for the customer purchase will increasingly take place in the virtual arena as players battle for "electronic shelf space" and number of "eyeballs" (i.e., number of web site visitors).

In the same vein, Evans and Wurster (1999) argued that reach is the most visible difference between electronic and physical businesses, and it has been the primary competitive differentiation for e-business so far. They also went on to advocate that reach is about the battle for eyeballs, but also about space for a huge amount of information provision of both products and suppliers. Thus, overall management of reach should be built upon the management of these two interrelated dimensions (i.e., the number of eyeballs and information provision).

Access and Number of Eyeballs

The easiest way to increase access and number of eyeballs is to promote and link a web site with others. Indeed, with the explosion of infomediaries on the Internet, several hotels joined them in order to expand their distribution channels and enable customers to find them easier. However, because of high levels of reach and electronic exposure, hoteliers argue that they are loosing control on their room and rate inventory (International Restaurant and Hotel Association; IHRA, 1999). Moreover, high exposure and reach also resulted in increased transparency between prices, products and suppliers, which coupled with the fact that customers can also bid for rooms, all led to the "commoditisation" of the hotel products--competition on price only--(Connolly & Sigala, 2001). As hotel brands erode, hotels find it increasingly difficult to differentiate their product, build customer loyalty and drive traffic and sales to their web site.

However, theory and practice have indicated valuable strategies to manage reach. When competing for eyeballs, multiple electronic distribution strategies become unavoidable. As a result, the development of comprehensive distribution channel management strategies aiming at the most efficient and effective ways of controlling and distributing room and price inventories across players in the digital distribution chain are vitally important. To achieve that, hotels should aim at maintaining a single image of rooms and rates inventory that can be seamlessly distributed and updated at all available distribution channels (Connolly, 1999). The latter enables hotels to take control of their inventory, instantly respond to any demand changes, promote and sell their last available room and yield by distribution channel (Sigala et al., 2001). Although legacy systems have been a major inhibitor to the development of a single image room and rate inventory, such barriers should be solved and overcome.

However, distribution channel management for hospitality companies requires more than simply understanding the value chain and electronic distribution of rooms and price inventory. Hospitality businesses also need to develop business measurements that effectively represent e-commerce and determine the health and profitability of each available channel (Castleberry et al, 2000). Sigala et al. (2001) introduced the concept of e-yield, meaning yield maximisation by distribution channels by driving and controlling sales across electronic channels. To achieve that, technological developments such as networks, data warehousing and mining should be adopted, while the generation, auditing and analysis of information derived from each channel should become a standard procedure in each organisation's sales strategy.

Information Provision

Reach was also argued to be about the provision of product information, which in turn also increases number of eyeballs. This is because enhanced provision of product information provides customers with shopping convenience and enables transactions' transparency. For example, hotel web sites lose sales and eyeballs from one-stop-shop web sites (i.e., those providing more than one travel product) and from infomediaries providing comparative shopping. According to the IHRA (1999), 60% of online sales are going through the traditional players (the Global Distribution Systems) that provide a consolidated database of a wide range of products, while new types of infomediaries (the "meta-navigators") that provide technologies comparing multiple electronic retailers are growing in popularity and customer traffic.

Hoteliers are questioning their existing strategies (i.e., their promotion in multiple distribution channels). According to hotel-online.com (2000), a hotelier argued:

    Now that is all about eyeballs on pages, the value of unsold rooms has    changed and we are asking ourselves why we should sell our rooms for others    to gain eyeballs. 

Consequently, five leading hospitality companies recently announced the development of a "virtual market-place" through a new business-to-business web-based exchange (www.hotel-online.com). This is the first initiative of the hospitality industry to develop its own electronic mall and meant the beginning of co-opetition, (i.e., cooperation between competitors in order to survive).

A different strategy is found in the airline industry and there is no argument why hotels could not do the same. Lufthansa sells tickets for other airlines through its web site and British Airways recently announced to do the same (Simmons, 2000). The rationale is simple. If a customer cannot or does not want to book a flight from a certain airline, it is better for the airline to keep the customer in its branded web site rather than let the customer to go and buy a ticket in a competitor's web site. Moreover, by keeping customers on their web site, airlines can also gather a vast amount of customer information in order to manage richness. Evans and Wurster (1999) did not attribute this strategy to the greater transparency of online transactions but rather to the blow-up of the trade-off between reach and richness. Indeed, economics and management strategies in the marketspace become more complex but also more powerful when the dimensions of reach, and richness are combined and blurred.

An alternative strategy would be to offer services beyond product information. For example, hotels could offer a navigation service that solves consumer problems in finding information or provide intelligent agents to help in consumer decision making. Hotels can also follow a configuration or aggregation strategy that is to bundle different services/products to some kind of integrated offerings (Werthner & Klein, 1999). Aggregation of competing products/services is very common in the marketspace and as Evans and Wurster (1999, p. 91) argued "acting to preserve their own business from commoditisation, sellers happily commoditise one another's".

Managing Richness

When competing on reach, hotels have to struggle to keep abreast of electronic infomediaries. However, hotels have the natural advantages when it comes to richness, because as they host customers in their properties, there are multiple customer touch points from which to gather and update customer information (e.g., distribution channels, food and beverage systems, and front office) as well as to disseminate their product information.

Rich Product Information

Although hotels can develop web sites and empower them with search engines that facilitate browsing through the rich, online product information, in order to push cross-and up-selling amongst their properties and products, stand-alone hotel information on a web site suffers from lack of reach. This is in terms of limited online onward distribution to other web sites and product diversification. Evans and Wurster (1999) suggested two ways for empowering strategies through rich product information: (a) continuous product evolution; and (b) product/brand promotion and positioning as an experience rather than as a belief.

In the hotel context product evolution can be translated into dynamic pricing, meaning continuous price changes depending on market trends (e.g., Easyjet's pricing model). However, Dutta and Segev (1999) argued that technology advances have fostered innovative practices for dynamic and personalised customisation of the whole marketing mix (i.e., price, place, product, and promotion). For example, customers participate in product specification and design, in price negotiation and bidding, while they are delivered information at anytime, anyplace or anywhere through mobile Internet enabled devices.

According to the second suggestions brands communicated as experience are far better suited to e-commerce than brands as belief. Brands as belief convey facts or beliefs about product attributes; for example, Sony promotes its products as superior technology, high quality at a warranted price premium. However, messages such as that cannot compete with distributors, since the latter can easily demonstrate that some Sony products do not meet specifications and because of their endorsement the brand can become redundant. On the contrary, brands as experience are not defined by companies' mission statements or specifications. Instead, they are a fantasy, a state of consumers' minds created through several channels of communication. In this case, the brand, product and the experience are really one and the same and it is so difficult for online distributors to commoditise, erode and divert sales to other brands.

Thus, the concept of hotel branding should be revisited. It is very likely that hotels conveying a brand promising certain offering specifications would suffer from customer credibility, while it would be easier for cyberintermediares to commoditise and sell their room inventories across other similar hotel brands. To prevent commoditisation, hotels need to take a more direct and active approach to brand development and to lessen their dependence on cyberintermediaries. Direct promotion and communications with customers can enhance customer experience and loyalty with the hotel brand. Moreover, rich, customer-centred information, positioning the hotel brand as a customer-personalised experience, should be the hotels' counter to the superior reach, product diversification and objectivity as perceived by customers of cyberintermediaries. Indeed, best practices promoting hotel brands as an experience were strategies based on customer relationship management, product customisation and the development of virtual communities that directly affect customers' perceptions (Connolly, 1999).

Rich Customer Information

The Internet offers an unparalleled opportunity for gathering customer information, which in turn can be used for cheap and infinitely discriminating customisation of offers, products, prices and promotion. Data mining and data warehouses can gather and analyse varied customer information; for example, Internet browsing behaviour, purchasing history and demographics, which in turn can be used for several product personalisation practices, such as to speed-up booking process, to cross-sell other products, to increase the level of service, to customise banner advertising, to send personalised e-mails, and to reward customers' loyalty (Sigala, 2001).

Product and service personalisation is argued to be a vital e-commerce strategy because it creates web site "stickiness" and loyalty--the ability of web sites to draw and retain customers (Zott et al, 2000)--which in turn are crucial since the competition for eyeballs extensively grows as the number of customers, suppliers and intermediaries on the Internet increases (Shapiro & Varian, 1999; Stan & Mayer, 1999). Moon, Hempell and Hempell (2000) also argued that as connectivity and reach to the customer is no longer a technology hurdle, what actually builds a value added strategy is to "own" a customer--to build customer loyalty and stickiness on the Internet. Internet business is not just a battle for catching attention and eyeballs. It is a battle for trust, hearts and minds (Dussart, 2000) that depends on the successful management of richness aiming at building customer relationships. Indeed, Zott et al.'s (2000) study revealed that the way with which web sites manage information for building relationships substantially determines whether or not customers return to the web site, how long they stay online and more importantly how likely is that they will buy only.

On the other hand, good management and exploitation of richness aiming at building trust and customer loyalty significantly contributes to the management of the third feature (i.e., digital representation). In fact, online strategies become more powerful when they can simultaneously address and manage more than one of the marketspace's features.

Managing Digital Representation

The inability to touch and feel the product as well as to have a human contact in virtual markets is claimed to be a major inhibitor of online success, but the burden of alleviating these fears lies with the sellers. Strategies for managing reach and richness aiming at building trust, loyalty and "stickiness" through customer relationship management strategies as well as the use of virtual product presentations (e.g., web-cameras, 3D pictures, and video) greatly contribute to the management of digital representation. However, the following practices have also been proved to be necessary and very successful.

Online suppliers frequently attempt to overcome the lack of human contact by making the transaction as simple and error free as possible. Thus, there should be no more than three clicks to a booking, while web sites offering encryption and other secure payment methods were also proved to be more successful (Zott et al., 2000).

Few suppliers also attempt to simulate the social aspect of shopping by exploiting or creating virtual communities, chat rooms and bulletin boards of online customers or by exploiting the Internet's multimedia capabilities to entertain the buyers. Moreover, as Butler and Peppard (1998) claimed the notion of a customer community can convey enormous credibility on the information source, since ideas and proposals are vetted by and with trusted colleagues in the community. Indeed, virtual communities of customers have all the power of the traditional reference groups found in the physical marketplace, but with even greater quantity and quality of comparative shopping information as well as ways of sharing and disseminating it.

Virtual communities benefit both consumers and suppliers (Hagel & Armstrong, 1997). Consumers are able to share their experiences, and find and access competing suppliers and ideas. Suppliers can find and target specific highly segmented audiences, obtain market and customer information for product and price customisation practices, and exploit communities for effective word of mouth promotion. More-over, virtual communities are governed by network externalities rules (i.e., member-based content attracts more members, who in turn contribute more content while more members' interaction attracts more members and builds more members' loyalty) and so, virtual communities can be used for amplifying the reach and richness of hotels' web sites.

However, as Zott et al. (2000) argued, communities are not limited to the development of speciality web sites. Any firm that that is able to identify common interests amongst users, and then provide a medium where they can interact, share information and build interest around the product, can build a community. For example, in their web site, Westin Hotel & Resorts allow customers to get information and become members of the Westin Kids Club or to participate in the Traveller's Forum "where travellers converse with one another, ask questions and share experience" Tellini (1995).

Conclusion

The main purpose of the paper was to develop a framework for building competitive e-commerce strategies in the hospitality sector. To that end, the competitive benchmarks and features that are driving competition in the virtual marketspace have been analysed. Arguments for successful strategies were anchored in the unique characteristics of virtual markets, namely, reach, richness and digital representation. Thus, as competitive e-commerce strategies should be designed to address and manage competition along these three dimensions, hotels should aim at: (a) achieving great reach and exposure but overcome commoditisation and loss of room and rate inventory; and (b) exploiting richness in order to build and maintain customer relationships, increase eyeballs and create web site stickiness; and (c) simulating the shopping experience through virtual communities, web-cameras, and 3D pictures in order to overcome digital representation.

However, the three dimensions should not be considered as independent; instead, a framework of coordinated and aligned practices should be developed,whereby activities in each dimension should enforce and leverage activities in others. Moreover, it is evident that successful implementation of e-commerce strategies requires fundamental changes in the way hotels compete as well as evaluate performance. Indeed, the increasing importance of the value of hotel intellectual assets such as customer information and relationships has made a lot of hotels to immigrate from metrics based on physical assets to metrics based on intellectual assets (e.g., from revenue per available room to revenue per available customer) as well as to complement their existing metrics with metrics such as the lifetime value of customers and one-to-one yield maximisation (Sigala et al, 2001). However, further research is required for investigating what and how hotels should manage change for competing in the world of e-business.

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 Correspondence  Address for correspondence: Marianna Sigala, Lecturer in Hotel and Hospitality Management, The Scottish Hotel School, University of Strathclyde, 94 Cathedral Street, Glasgow, G4 OIG, Scotland, UK. Email: M.Sigala@strath.ac.uk  Marianna Sigala  The University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom 

EVTC Plans to Initiate a Tender Offer at $2.15 per Share for a Controlling Interest in MWSI.

HURST, Texas, July 27 /PRNewswire/ --

Environmental Technologies, Corp. (Nasdaq: EVTC) and Mercury Waste Solutions, Inc. (Nasdaq: MWSI) jointly announce the execution of a binding letter of intent whereby EVTC agrees to purchase a controlling interest in MWSI through a friendly tender offer to acquire up to a maximum of 70% of MWSI's

outstanding shares. Pursuant to the letter of intent, EVTC agreed to commence a cash tender offer to purchase MWSI's publicly held shares for $2.15 per share and restricted MWSI shares for $1.95 in cash and $.20 in restricted EVTC Common Stock. Upon consummation of this transaction, EVTC will own up to 70% (but not less than 50%) of MWSI's outstanding shares, on a fully diluted basis. The tender offer is being made subject to MWSI shareholder approval, the completion of due diligence, certain other related agreements and definitive offering documents to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Certain members of MWSI's management and board of directors have entered or will enter into agreements under which they have agreed to tender shares held by them into the offer that would ensure that at least 50% of MWSI's outstanding shares are tendered to EVTC. Following the completion of the tender offer, EVTC intends to consummate a second-step merger whereby it will contribute its ballast and fluorescent lamp recycling division, Full Circle, to MWSI in exchange for additional MWSI common stock.

David Keener, EVTC's president stated, "We believe this transaction provides significant value for EVTC's and MWSI's shareholders. The combined entity of MWSI and our Full Circle lamp recycling division will enable the combined companies to realize significant economies of scale, access to a larger national customer base, and provide better national coverage and services. Furthermore, this transaction will reduce EVTC's exposure to seasonal fluctuations inherent to the refrigerant business and will provide a platform for us to continue to execute our consolidation strategy in the lamp recycling business, a market which continues to grow at an annual rate of 35%."

Brad Buscher, MWSI's Chairman and CEO commented, "We are excited about this transaction. We have had a longstanding goal to consolidate the mercury recycling industry and have invested heavily to build the infrastructure to do so. This transaction with EVTC will achieve this goal. EVTC's tender offer gives our shareholders the opportunity to receive cash for a significant portion of their investment in MWSI as well as participate in any future growth of the MWSI. Our analysis of our strategic alternatives led us to believe that this transaction is the best alternative for our shareholders."

This announcement is neither an offer to purchase nor a solicitation of an offer to sell shares of MWSI. EVTC will file a tender offer statement upon the completion of its due diligence with the Securities and Exchange Commission and MWSI will file a solicitation/recommendation statement with respect to the offer. MWSI shareholders are advised to read the tender offer statement referenced in this press release, and the related solicitation/recommendation statement. The tender offer and the solicitation/recommendation statement contain important information which should be read carefully before any decision is made with respect to the offer. These documents will be made available to the shareholders of MWSI at no expense to them. These documents will also be available at no charge on the SEC's web site at www.sec.gov.

EVTC, through its wholly-owned subsidiaries, engages in the marketing and sale of refrigerants, refrigerant reclaiming services, recycling of fluorescent light ballasts and lamps and, through e-solutions, inc., directly markets business to consumer services via the internet.

MWSI provides mercury waste recycling services. The Company has sales and processing facilities in Union Grove, WI, and Roseville, MN; sales and storage facilities in Marietta, GA and Indianapolis, IN; storage facilities in Albany, NY and Kenosha, WI; and corporate offices in Mankato, MN.

"Safe Harbor" Statement under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995: Certain statements contained in this press release are "forward- looking statements" within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, including without limitation, MWSI shareholder approval, negotiation of a satisfactory Purchase Agreement, due diligence, the industry position, financial condition and structure of each of MWSI and EVTC. Such forward-looking statements are subject to risks, uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from future results expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Investors are cautioned that any forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve risks and uncertainties and that actual results may differ materially from those contemplated by such forward-looking statements.

Such risks include, without limitation, EVTC's ability to obtain financing, MWSI shareholder approval, the risks associated with new acquisitions in addition to certain other risks indicated in each of MWSI's and EVTC's SEC filings.

CONTACT: EVTC, Inc. t/a Environmental Technologies, Corp.

Investor Relations

Phone (817) 282-0022

Fax (817) 282-0033

ir@evtc.com

Mercury Waste Solutions, Inc.

Mark Stennes

Phone (507) 345-0523

Fax (507) 345-1483

Sunday, February 26, 2012

BIO CEO & Investor Conference Presentation Web - Replays Made Available by CCBN.com.

Business Editors

BOSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Feb. 16, 2000

CCBN.com, a leading online provider of investment-related event information, announced today that it will provide web casts of presentations done by heads of biotechnology companies from The BIO CEO & Investor Conference, being held in New York from February 15-16.

The replays of the company presentations will be available on CCBN's StreetEvents network at www.streetevents.com starting February 18th through March 24th. This is an opportunity for investors to hear from CEOs of leading biotechnology companies at one of the industry's premier Investor Conference events.

"In this business environment, institutional investors increasingly need to be in more than one place at the same time," said CCBN.com President and Chief Operating Officer Rob Adler. "By providing access to events like the BIO conference, StreetEvents eliminates the need to choose between attending one event and missing another."

StreetEvents (http://www.streetevents.com) will carry audio of nearly 75 CEO presentations and numerous other break-out sessions, giving institutional investors access to the only biotechnology investor conference organized by the industry for its peers and investors. The BIO conference presentations are open to both existing and prospective institutional subscribers, who can log on to StreetEvents and receive a free password and three-week trial subscription.

A service of CCBN.com, StreetEvents is a comprehensive Internet portal that offers access to corporate conference calls, brokerage conferences and investor meetings, along with the exact dates of corporate earnings releases. More than 5,000 of the largest US corporations, including the S&P 500, currently provide StreetEvents with straight-from-the-source event information. StreetEvents also provides live and audio archived web casts of investor conference calls.

Attended by more than 1300 people this year, the BIO's 2nd annual CEO & Investor Conference provides a unique and neutral forum where CEOs from public small-, medium- and large-cap companies as well as private firms can interact with investors and other members of the financial community and the healthcare industry.

About CCBN.com

Founded in 1997 by Jeff Parket, creator of First Call, CCBN.com is a leader in a rapidly emerging industry supporting essential communications between public companies and the investment community over the Internet. IR Online, the company's suite of Web-based communication services, provides more than 1,250 public companies with a customized, comprehensive and cost-effective Internet solution for investor relations. StreetEvents (http://www.streetevents.com), the company's event management service, provides corporations, financial institutions and individual investors with access to an online portal that enables them to identify, organize, and track investment-related event information.

About BIO

BIO represents more than 880 companies, academic institutions and state biotech centers in 47 states and 26 countries. BIO members are involved in the research and development of health-care, agricultural, industrial and environmental products.