Miyerkules, Pebrero 1, 2012

SENESE prepares welcome breakfast for Samoan Deaf team

By Jasmine Netzler-Iose

A special welcome breakfast is scheduled at Senese Compound at Vaitele to welcome home the Samoan Deaf Beach Volleyball team on Monday at 8am.
The delegation of 14, won four gold medals and two silver medals at the XVI Australian Deaf Games in Geelong last week.

Director of SENESE, Donna Lene said four athletes are students at SENESE.
The rest are members of the Deaf Club that was initiated by SENESE.

Mrs Lene said the team?s success is a ?fantastic achievement? since this is the first time they had taken part in the Australian Deaf Games.  She said the team was embraced by the Samoan and deaf communities in Australia.  They were also presented with a medal each from the Victorian Samoa Advisory Committee.

Source: http://www.samoaobserver.ws/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=37760:senes-prepares-welcome&catid=34:sports&Itemid=54

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To pay or not to pay?

By Lanuola Tusani Tupufia

Prime Minister Tuilaepa Sa'ilele Malielegaoi last week suggested that small kindergarten teachers should offer their service ?for free?.

He was responding in Parliament to a question from Falealupo, MP and deputy opposition leader A?e?au Peniamina Leavaise?eta, why kindergarten teachers in his constituencies ?were working for free.? ?They are working day to day for free,? said the former Speaker.

Source: http://www.samoaobserver.ws/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=37754:to-pay-or&catid=1:latest-news&Itemid=50

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Carmarthen Journal published Pupils back bid to save Carmarthenshire museum from future cuts

PRIMARY schools have come out fighting to secure the long-term future of the Carmarthen County Museum.

Pupils back bid to save Carmarthenshire museum from future cuts

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Fifa proposes use of fourth substitute in extra time to cut injuries

? International FA board to consider plan in March
? Goalline technology also back on the agenda

Fifa will propose allowing teams to use a fourth substitute in extra time when the International FA board meets next month.

The rules-making panel is set to decide at a meeting in England on 3 March if increasing the current quota of three replacements would help improve matches and reduce injuries.

A Fifa statement said: "The Fifa Task Force Football 2014, the medical committee and the football committee support the proposal in order to maintain the technical level until the 120th minute and to protect the health of the players."

Goalline technology will also return to the Ifab agenda, with the panel hearing progress reports on tests involving eight systems. They will decide which will proceed to a scheduled second round of testing starting in March.

Fifa said a final decision to approve goal-line technology can be taken at a further Ifab meeting on 2 July in Kiev, the day after the 2012 European Championship final in the Ukraine capital.

The board will also consider trials of the five-referee system, using additional assistants beside each goal to support referees' decision-making, which conclude at Euro 2012.

The panel will also reconsider allowing Islamic female players to wear a hijab, five years after the headscarf was banned for safety reasons. The Fifa vice-president Prince Ali of Jordan urged the board to respect cultural traditions and approve a headscarf held in place by a safe Velcro fastener.

The board, which is comprised of the four British associations plus Fifa delegates, will also consider amending the so-called "triple punishment" of sanctioning certain fouls with a penalty kick, red card and suspension.

Other proposals on the agenda include assessing tests at the 2011 Copa America where referees used vanishing spray on the grass to mark the 10 yards that defensive walls must retreat from the ball once placed for a free-kick.

Rules are amended with six of the eight available votes. Each British association has one vote and Fifa officials have four.

Changes typically take effect on 1 July ahead of the following season, but can be fast-tracked for a major tournament if the panel agrees.


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2012/feb/01/fifa-fourth-substitute-extra-time

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Why does the Premier League have a January transfer window? | The Knowledge

Plus: useless unbeaten records; Manchester United's cup woes; and has any European league had as few winners as Turkey's? Send your questions and answers to knowledge@guardian.co.uk and follow us on Twitter

"Managers are always complaining about the transfer window," writes Steve Arthurs. "But why have we got one in the first place?"

The story of the transfer window is the story of a flip-flop by the English elite ? the Premier League was initially the driving force behind the idea of a transfer window, but by the time it was introduced it was firmly in the "no" camp. In short, the transfer windows were introduced in order to prevent the complete dismantling of the transfer system, though their origins lie in loftier ambitions.

Let's go all the way back to 1991-92 when the idea was first put to the vote in the top flight. The vote, on the principle of the transfer window, was narrowly defeated because of "one or two smaller clubs who sometimes need to sell in the season and were worried about having to do most of their buying in the summer when their cash flow was poor".

By December 1992 the idea was being bigged up by the Premier League powers that be. "Several high-profile managers and senior officials, notably Tottenham's Terry Venables, are in favour of copying Italy's hugely admired Serie A," reported Russell Thomas in the Guardian, "and closing shop for the whole season except for a 'transfer window' of a fortnight or three weeks in December or January." Rick Parry, then the Premier League chief executive, added: "Terry's idea is that managers ought to be coaches, spending time with their players and not looking around for new signings or fending off agents or having to deal with unsettled players." (Roberto Mancini would be able to point out just how well that latter theory has worked in practice.)

Parry argued that a transfer window would ultimately improve the quality of play on the pitch in England ? "That has to be the objective of the Premier League" ? but he seems to have failed to convince the smaller clubs of the case as the phrase "transfer window" isn't uttered again in the hallowed pages of the Guardian archive until 1998. Martin Thorpe reported on 30 January of that year: "The Premier League is considering revolutionary changes, including the introduction of a transfer window, foreign referees officiating in the Premier League and even a referee in each half of the pitch."

This time, though, the suggestion came not from Venables and co but from an Athens meeting of the nine top leagues in Europe ? England, Germany, Italy, France, Spain, Holland, Portugal and (how times change) Belgium and Scotland. Essentially this group set themselves up to ensure their voice, and not just that of the national FAs, was heard by Uefa (the background threat of a breakaway league not least bending Uefa's ear). The driving force now was standardisation across Europe and, again, keeping those pesky agents on a leash. "It would keep some control over the agents just hawking players around constantly," said Peter Leaver, 1998's Premier League chief executive, "and I think clubs would also have to start planning ahead properly. I think it would make a lot of sense."

Uefa was in favour. "We have to introduce a European-wide system to stop the confusion that has followed Bosman," said the general secretary Gerhard Aigner in January 1998. By February 1999 negotiations seemed to have moved little, although Leaver and the Premier League remained very much in favour. Still the obsession seems to have been the power of agents. "We have put the idea forward ourselves," said the then head of the League Managers Association, John Barnwell. "It is a good way of curbing the power of players and agents who know they would not be able to move for a specified period."

Leaver added: "There is feeling we need harmony throughout Europe to ensure fair play and it's something we will continue to discuss."

Finally, in September 1999, Uefa announced plans for a standardised transfer window running for six weeks from mid-December to the end of January, though the issue of agents wasn't the key one in Uefa's thinking. The general secretary Gerhard Aigner insisted a common window was crucial to stop clubs from augmenting their squads in mid-competition. "The benefits are obvious," he said. "One is that a team starting a competition will stay together for at least part of it."

England and Germany united in opposition, with the length of the winter window a sticking point. Leaver's dismissal in March 1999 had considerably shifted the Premier League's position.

Then in the summer of 2000 the process was handed the mother of all jump-starts from the European Commission. Under pressure to scrap the entire transfer system (which was accused of breaching the Treaty of Rome), Fifa put forward a three-point compromise package to stave off the impending dismantling, one prong of which was the introduction of transfer windows, essentially designed to curb to some extent the post-Bosman freedom enjoyed by players (other proposals included one-season contracts for all players and compensation for players aged under 24).

By mid-October a biannual transfer window had been agreed by all the European countries apart from England in order to keep the transfer system intact and in March 2001 the European Commission agreed to the proposals. So by 2001 things had turned full circle, with Uefa now urging the Premier League to accept the new transfer rules.

Eventually the system we know today was introduced in 2002-03. "The English clubs did not want it, they were very happy with the existing system but, due to no fault of our own, we have had thrust upon us a new system which makes life more difficult," said the Arsenal vice-chairman David Dein in August 2002. "We were robustly opposed to it but were advised by Uefa that we had to comply and we have no alternative but to comply against our will." A very different position to the one taken by the Premier League's big beasts back in the 1990s.

USELESS UNBEATEN RECORDS

"At present, Liverpool's home league record reads P11 W4 D7 L0, so that despite being unbeaten 11 home league games they have only 19 points for an average of 1.72 points per game," writes Mike Taylor. "Has any team finished a league season with a less impressive unbeaten record?"

Step forward Como. "In Serie A in 1984-85 the newly promoted Como managed to finish their 15 home games with a record of W5 D10 L0 and a goal tally of F8 A2," writes Giovanni Meloni, which came as a consequence of their nine goalless home draws. Even so, at a time when wins were worth only two points they managed to avoid relegation by a three-point margin."

UNITED'S CUP WOES

"Manchester United are out of the Champions League, the FA Cup and the League Cup," sympathises Andrew Hatfield. "How many times have they been dumped out of three cup competitions by the end of January?"

This is only the second time this has happened to United, Andrew. The first came in 1980-81, the last season of Dave Sexton's miserable reign. United were beaten 1-0 home and away by Coventry in the second round of the League Cup; then, on 1 October, Widzew Lodz put them out of the Uefa Cup on away goals. United reached the fourth round of the FA Cup after beating Brighton in a replay but a 1-0 defeat at Nottingham Forest on 24 January ended their FA Cup campaign ? and their season: in those days there was no Europa League consolation, and no title challenge.

The only other time United came close to a hat-trick of cup failures before the end of January was in 1977-78, again under Sexton. Having been knocked out of the League Cup and Cup Winners' Cup before Christmas, they lost an FA Cup fourth-round replay at West Brom on 1 February.

KNOWLEDGE ARCHIVE

"Bursaspor became only the fifth team to win the Turkish League at the weekend," wrote Ian South in 2010. "Has any other European League had so few different winners?"

Bursaspor's win in Turkey this season indeed ended one of Europe's longest standing quadopolies. Galatasaray, Besiktas, Fenerbahce and Trabzonspor were the only previous teams to have won the Turkish Super Lig but Bursa's victory draws Turkey level in the fewest champions stakes with Portugal, where Porto, Benfica, Sporting, Belenenses and Boavista are the only champions. Although it can be argued that the real leagues to beat in this regard are the still fairly fledgling ones of Eastern Europe (Latvia and Ukraine, for example, have had just three champions each but have been going for only 18 and 19 years respectively).

Turkey 5 (Galatasaray, Besiktas, Fenerbahce, Trabzonspor, Bursaspor)

Portugal 5 (Porto, Benfica, Sporting, Belenenses, Boavista)

Greece 6 (Olympiakos, Panathinaikos, AEK Athens, Aris Salonika, PAOK Salonika, Larissa)

Iceland 9 (KR, Valur, IA, Fram, Vikingur, FH, Keflavik, IBV, KA)*

Malta 10 (Sliema Wanderers, Floriana, Valletta, Hibernians, Hamrun Spartans, Birkirkara, Rabat Ajax, King's Own Malta Regiment, Marsaxlokk, St George's)

Scotland 11 (Celtic, Hearts, Rangers, Hibs, Third Lanark, Motherwell, Aberdeen, Kilmarnock, Dundee United, Dundee, Dumbarton)

* UBK added their name to the list later in the 2010

For thousands more questions and answers take a trip through the Knowledge archive

Can you help?

"The Oscar nominations on Monday reminded me of Neil Patterson, who won an academy award for best adapted screenplay for 'Room at the Top' in 1959," writes William Dods. "Patterson had previously captained Dundee United in the 1930s. Ignoring OBE/MBEs and the like are there any other footballers with major awards in a non-sporting field?"

"During the Norwich vs. Chelsea game at the weekend, neither side committed a foul in the opening 45 mins," writes Kristian Boyce. "Has any top flight games ever gone foul free for the whole match?"

"With the transfer window wide open, I was wondering if a player transferred mid-season has played more than the maximum number of league games in the same division that season?" writes Simon Goodenough. "ie, a player playing 47 league games in a 24-team league."

"After Tuesday night's handcuff-to-post efforts at Goodison Park, what are the most ludicrous on-pitch, non-match protests ever?" asks James Richards.

Send your questions and answers to knowledge@guardian.co.uk


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2012/feb/01/the-knowledge-premier-league-transfer-window

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Leicester Mercury published Mandaric 'insulted' by claims

Article


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Gold back in vogue

Gold prices rose on a weaker US dollar and were on course for their biggest monthly rise since August.

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Gold prices rose on Tuesday on a weaker dollar and were on course for their biggest monthly rise since August, raising the possibility of a climb toward last year's record high of just over $1,900 per ounce.

Sentiment for gold at the end of January compares starkly with late December, when prices dropped by more than 10 percent in their biggest monthly fall since the collapse of Lehman Brothers in an investor dash for cash.

A $400 price drop from last September's record $1,920.30 had left investors questioning whether gold had ended an 11-year rally.

Gold was up 0.6 percent at $1,740.80 an ounce by 13:43 SA time, having earlier touched $1,744.80 - its highest since mid-December and up some 11.2 percent on the month to date.

The euro rose against the dollar on hopes for a Greek debt restructuring deal that would help the country avoid a disorderly default, possibly setting itself up for a test of a key chart level. A weaker dollar makes gold cheaper for holders of other currencies.

While recovering global share prices and hope of a deal for Greece tempered gold's safe-haven gloss on Tuesday, concerns about Portugal following a similar path to Greece and data pointing to a poor first quarter in the euro zone kept the background environment supportive.

More broadly, bullion was benefitting from a favourable monetary policy backdrop, with a jump of almost 5 percent last week after the US Federal Reserve pledged to keep interest rates near zero until at least late 2014.

“Interest rates remain low, euro zone problems persist, the situation in Portugal got worse yesterday ... and now that we broke through $1,740 it looks like prices might go up,” said Alexander Zumpfe, a precious metals trader at Heraeus in Germany.

A top US Federal Reserve official said on Monday he would have preferred a more optimistic statement on the US economy, after the central bank painted a grim picture of the recovery last week and forecast ultra-low interest rates.

“With gold starting 2012 at a cracking pace ... gold may be poised to set fresh highs this year but much earlier than many - ourselves included - would have expected.” Ross Norman, chief executive of Sharps Pixley, said in a note.

PORTUGAL YIELDS BREACH 17 PERCENT

Portugal's 10-year government bond yields fell sharply on the day but remained in sight of 17.0 percent, close to euro-era highs of around 17.4 percent, stoking the fears that Lisbon may become the next Athens.

“Sentiment seems to have improved quite tremendously, I would say. We are now into more bullish territory, more than ever, with the Fed providing enough fundamental support,” said Dominic Schnider, head of commodity research at UBS Wealth Management.

“I think we have good reasons to believe we are going to test $1,805. The Fed was clearly the most important event,” he added.

Gold has gained for the last four weeks, with a spike in prices before the Lunar New Year holidays being driven partly by Chinese buying.

“Before the Chinese New Year really started, we've seen quite strong gold exports from Hong Kong to China. Apparently Chinese demand was very solid,” said Schnider.

The most active US April gold contract rose $7.80 an ounce to $1,742.30 an ounce.

Greece and its private creditors realise the need for it to avert a financial collapse and are close to a deal on restructuring Greek sovereign debt, Luxembourg Finance Minister Luc Frieden said on Tuesday.

Silver added 0.9 percent to trade at $33.77 an ounce after rising to $33.95 on Monday, its strongest since mid-November. Platinum and palladium also firmed.

Holdings of the world's largest silver-backed exchange-traded fund, iShares Silver Trust rose about 1 percent to 9,608.95 tonnes by Monday, from 9,510.70 tonnes on Friday.

Traders and investors were also watching for further developments at South African miner Impala Platinum. It said on Monday its Rustenburg operations remained shut after the majority of workers staging an illegal strike over wages failed to return to work. - Reuters

Source: http://www.iol.co.za/gold-back-in-vogue-1.1224350

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