Please wait....
Please wait....
Home
'
InDaily : January 22nd 2010
Contents
Front Cover
ADELAIDE S ONLINE DAILY NEWSPAPER Friday 22nd January 2010 AM EDITION | FREE WEATHER Max Min Max Min Max Min Max Min NEWS IN BRIEF SPORT BUSINESS THE INSIDER Have any insider information? Confidentiality assured. CLICK TO EMAIL New postings Ian Darbyshire, chief executive of real estate company Toop and Toop and a recent immigrant from England, has been named South Australia's new head of tourism, while an international search has begun to find a replacement for Christopher Menz who leaves his post as director of the South Australian Art Gallery in two weeks. 36 18 33 16 35 18 33 16 FRI SUN SAT MON 500,000 homeless in Haiti At least half a million people are living outdoors in improvised camps in Haiti's capital Port-au- Prince, the International Organisation for Migration says. A spokeswoman for the IOM, which had accounted for 370,000 people in improvised settlements on Wednesday, said the count of those who were homeless or staying outside their homes after last week's earthquake was climbing. Catastrophic warning Fire bans have been announced for 10 of the state's 15 districts, with catastrophic warnings for the Mid-North, Riverland and Murraylands districts. The CFS has also announced special measures for today's Community Challenge Tour Down Under ride, including additional rescue support staff alongside CFS volunteers. TODAY IN SA Former chief of the Australian Defence Forces General Peter Cosgrove will today launch Adelaide's Australia Day celebrations at an official luncheon atTown Hall. Comedian Ahn Do will also share his perspective on the national day. Hewitt, Baghdatis set for epic rematch Get set for higher tax, says Henry ISPY TDU video Cricket Australia is suffering backlash after its decision to nominate John Howard as its candidate for the ICC. HOWARD CRICKET TRAGIC Treasurer Kevin Foley has refused to release his report to shareholders -- the end of year financial results. By previous convention the figures were due in November last year, but last year's figures are a closely guarded government secret. In a company listed on the stock exchange this is equivalent to the board of directors not telling shareholders how their company's performed over the previous year. A corporate adviser told Indaily this morning that for a listed company, this could be illegal. He said public companies have to report totheASXbytheendof August for a June 30 balance date. The annual report needs to out to shareholders by the end of October, and the annual general meeting has to be held by the end of November. - HENDRIK GOUT Govt hides state report
Links
editorial@independentweekly.com.au
Archive
January 21st 2010
January 25th 2010
Navigation
Next Page