http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/story/0,23739,26536964-5017858,00.html
Have a go at The Courier-Mail's screensaver contest
December 29, 2009 11:00pm
FANCY promoting your photographic skills to the world? Have a go at The Courier-Mail's screensaver competition - send us your best shots.
The prize? Priceless - your work displayed on the internet for all the world to see.
Just send us your favourite photograph or two for consideration as one of the free downloadable screensavers we build and make available for our readers. You can see some examples of work by our talented team of photographers at http://couriermail.com.au/savers.
And you can download a screensaver built from amateur images to see if you think you can match the images for quality. (The download file is called "Show.exe". Run it and you can preview the screensaver and then – if you think it's good enouigh – install it on your PC.)
We will publish a selection of the best photographs submitted, then open voting to the public for a final selection.
The winning photos will be included in free screensavers that other readers can download and install on their computers.
The ideal screensaver photograph is horizontal and a bright, high-resolution, JPG. You must certify that you either own, or have publications rights to, any photograph you submit to The Courier-Mail at survey@qnp.newsltd.com.au
Have a go – show off your skills to the world. Then vote on everyone else's work.http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/story/0,23739,26536964-5017858,00.html
Have a go at The Courier-Mail's screensaver contest
December 29, 2009 11:00pm
FANCY promoting your photographic skills to the world? Have a go at The Courier-Mail's screensaver competition - send us your best shots.
The prize? Priceless - your work displayed on the internet for all the world to see.
Just send us your favourite photograph or two for consideration as one of the free downloadable screensavers we build and make available for our readers. You can see some examples of work by our talented team of photographers at http://couriermail.com.au/savers.
And you can download a screensaver built from amateur images to see if you think you can match the images for quality. (The download file is called "Show.exe". Run it and you can preview the screensaver and then – if you think it's good enouigh – install it on your PC.)
We will publish a selection of the best photographs submitted, then open voting to the public for a final selection.
The winning photos will be included in free screensavers that other readers can download and install on their computers.
The ideal screensaver photograph is horizontal and a bright, high-resolution, JPG. You must certify that you either own, or have publications rights to, any photograph you submit to The Courier-Mail at survey@qnp.newsltd.com.au
Have a go – show off your skills to the world. Then vote on everyone else's work.http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/story/0,23739,26532514-952,00.html
Dumbest criminals caught out
December 28, 2009 11:00pm
THEY may have broken the law but these offenders could never be called criminal masterminds.
Queensland Police have told The Courier-Mail about catching some of 2009's dumbest criminals.June 11
A police officer noticed a vehicle following him while he drove around Clermont, 280km southwest of Mackay, about 11.45pm. The car followed the police vehicle into the police station's yard and the driver got out to discuss a relationship problem. The man appeared drunk and when tested blew a blood-alcohol reading of 0.26. The 35-year-old man was charged with drink-driving, fined $1800 and disqualified from driving for 16 months.
June 19
A teenager was seen leaving the Harvey Norman store at Warwick, 80km south of Toowoomba, with two video games he had not paid for. Police went to the store to speak with the informant and get a description of the suspect. Instead, they were handed a very useful document. A staffer recalled the thief had visited the store earlier to seek employment and had given them his curriculum vitae. Police went to the address listed on the CV and charged the teenager with shoplifting.
August 18
A woman went to Cecil Plains police on the Darling Downs to report her mobile phone had been stolen the night before. She had left it on her dining room table when a 34-year-old man known to her visited. When he left, she realised her phone was missing. When police visited the man's address, he denied knowing anything about the missing phone. Police then rang the number and heard the woman's phone ringing in the man's bedroom. He gave the phone to police and was given a notice to appear in the Dalby Magistrates Court .
November 5
Two men who allegedly robbed a hotel at Gladstone, 100km southeast of Rockhampton, at knife point did so without the benefit of a getaway car. They were forced to hitchhike away from the scene and were about 30km from Rockhampton when they used a $50 note as bait to flag down a silver Toyota sedan. The vehicle pulled over and the men got in only to find they had been picked up by two plainclothes detectives. One man and one juvenile were charged with robbery while armed and will appear for sentencing on April 1.
Our daughter became engaged to her Scottish partner today. He is a fine young man, and we are very happy for them both. It is three years today since they met in Inverness, Scotland. They came to Toowoomba last April, and plan to make their future home here. We had planned a BBQ for tomorrow night. I wonder if her partner and I will be dancing together like we were at the wedding we attended in Manchester last year. Better not, I suppose. I don't want to make our daughter jealous...
May I wish all my Vox friends a Very Merry Christmas, and Best Wishes for the New Year.
Your company during the past year is sincerely appreciated.
http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/story/0,23739,26512112-5003402,00.html
Books prove prayer can cure cancer, says archbishop
TERMINAL illness such as cancer can be cured by prayer, the head of the Catholic Church in Australia said.
But Catholic Archbishop of Sydney Cardinal George Pell admitted such cures, like the miracle attributed to Mary MacKillop, were obviously rare.
"Yes obviously (cancer can be cured by prayer)," Cardinal Pell told ABC Television today.
"And there are quite a number of examples in the books."
Cardinal Pell said that wouldn't give sick people a false sense of security because they realised cure by prayer was a "very long shot".
The Vatican has recognised Mother Mary's role in the healing a woman with inoperable cancer during the mid-1990s after she prayed to Mother Mary.
It was the second miracle attributed to Mary MacKillop, set to become the nation's first saint 100 years after her death.
Those of you who used to be on Whitepage may be interested to know that cc is back on Vox. She used to live in Sydney but is in the bush now. You can catch up on her here. http://cc1804.vox.com/
http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/story/0,23739,26506144-952,00.html
Tony Abbott preaches all children must read the Bible
December 18, 2009 11:00pm
BIBLE classes should be compulsory so children have a fundamental understanding of Christianity on leaving school, federal Opposition Leader Tony Abbott says.
"I think everyone should have some familiarity with the great texts that are at the core of our civilisation," Mr Abbott told the Herald Sun.
"That includes, most importantly, the Bible.
"I think it would be impossible to have a good general education without at least some serious familiarity with the Bible and with the teachings of Christianity."That doesn't mean that people have to be believers."
But former Howard government Islamic advisor Dr Ameer Ali, said Mr Abbott's remarks were "over the top".
"It's one thing to say every child needs a good knowledge of history and geography or science," Dr Ali said.
"But it is something else to say all children should have a knowledge of the Bible. That might hurt other people who have their own holy scriptures," he said.
And the Australian Education Union's federal president, Angelo Gavrielatos, said that religion was not a priority for schools.
"There is a place for comparative studies of religion in the curriculum, but ultimately we consider it a private matter for parents and their children," he said.
Read more on the Herald Sun's website.

