eDynamic Announces Completion of Website Design & Development Project for Allianz Insurance

Monday, June 16th, 2008

It did not take long before they recognized limitations in their existing Website. Allianz’s original site had to service clients from all sectors. Every effort was made to make all services available in one place, but things were just not working. Many customers were not able to find what they were looking for. Unfortunately, later attempts to organize the information only made matters worse: Every section of the Web site ended up with its own unique ‘look and feel’, and with inconsistent branding.

The key challenges, therefore, were not just to re-design & develop the website, but also to mirror Bajaj Allianz’s strong offline brand imagery on the Web along with all the ingredients of a Web 2.0 online Insurance Web presence for customers & sales channels alike. So that customers could renew their policies online along with paying their premiums, prospects could search, compare & find the best policy/plan for their families & agents could drive account management all under one interactive roof. eDynamic immediately identified these problems, proposing, designing and implementing a comprehensive solution.

Subir Singh, VP, Sales, eDynamic, credits the success of eDynamic’s efforts to the company’s established expertise in the Insurance industry. “Our deep understanding in insurance..and strategic approach to business help us maintain a strong and comfortable relationship….” eDynamic brought to the table additional experience in financial services, such as lending and loans, credit cards, real estate, and financial services.

By creating a generic, easily customizable template to provide a framework for the design, the information architecture is kept simple, easy to understand and navigate. Simplicity is also key to its versatility –remaining consistent when customized for each service segment. The design has proven so adaptable that, as the online services of Bajaj Allianz have continued to expand, the same recognizable branding and navigational controls have remained.

Says Vishal Karki, Head of Marketing for Bajaj Allianz Insurance, India, “It has been a pleasure to do business with eDynamic. The team at eDynamic holds its customer’s satisfaction as highest priority. They understood our business requirements and have delivered high-quality results on time.”

About eDynamic: eDynamic is a Global IT services, Interactive Marketing Services, Website Design & Development and Consulting Firm focused on delivering integrated business solutions. eDynamic is a rapidly growing, privately held company that delivers on the technology, creativity & marketing needs of enterprises. Through its offices in New York, Portland, Toronto, London, Dubai, and New Delhi, eDynamic is serving customers such as Suncor Energy, UPS, PepsiCo, New York Life, General Electric, Advance America, Preferred Commerce, Intercontinental Hotels, Jet Airways, Samsung, Sony, among many others.

Global Dreams for a Wireless Web

Sunday, May 25th, 2008

SITTING on the porch at Finca Torrenova, his 800-acre retreat on this Mediterranean island, Martin Varsavsky ticks off the credentials of the group of Internet entrepreneurs finishing lunch at a nearby table.

“He has 40 million uniques, he has 50 million, and he has 8 million,” Mr. Varsavsky says, referring to the number of visitors to Web sites owned by his guests many of whom are also business associates and have joined him for several days of brainstorming about the digital future.

These days, commercial victory on the Internet is all about scale, and Mr. Varsavsky, a 48-year-old from Argentina, can be forgiven for speaking longingly and in detail about his peers’ achievements. No stranger to success he has had a tidy crop of new media and telecommunications hits since the 1990s he is still struggling to bring his newest Internet venture to fruition.

Three years ago, aiming to create a global wireless network, he founded FON, a company based in Madrid that wants to unlock the potential power of the social Internet. FON’s gamble is that Internet users will share a portion of their wireless connection with strangers in exchange for access to wireless hotspots controlled by others.

And as he struggles to expand the FON network, Mr. Varsavsky faces particular hurdles now that the Internet’s commercial side has reached a crossroads. Born a few decades ago as an anarchic, digital version of a barn-raising, the wireless Internet is now a battleground between two giant technology consortiums seeking to rein in the Web’s chaotic openness in favor of creating uniform, global access built upon wireless data networks.

The two camps, known as WiMax and L.T.E., for “long-term evolution,” are both top-down, highly structured approaches that will cost billions of dollars to build and may close a door on some of the architectural openness that led to the rapid growth of the Internet.

But their potential advantage is that closed standards can encourage the kind of growth that offers more access to mainstream consumers and business users, as occurred when Microsoft imposed a measure of conformity on software development.

For his part, Mr. Varsavsky hopes that FON can offer a middle ground deploying the original, bottom-up strengths of the early Internet movement and at the same time wedding them to a more formal, corporate approach to expansion.

Although FON faces huge obstacles in realizing those ambitions, the company also has a growing number of devotees.

“The wireless Internet market today is fragmented and complex it can be accessed through 3G operators, through WiMax, through private hotspots, through paid hotspots and through corporate networks,” said Michael Jackson, a partner at Mangrove Capital in London and a former FON board member. “In summary, it is a nightmare for a consumer. FON can and will change this.”

Undeterred, Mr. Varsavsky says that what he currently lacks in scale he can make up for in huge cost savings, particularly because FON avoids the expensive proposition of having to build a worldwide network of cellular towers and Wi-Fi nodes from scratch.

MR. VARSAVSKY has worked overtime trying to line up more high-profile partners for FON. To that end, he traveled to Cupertino, Calif., last fall to meet with Steve Jobs, the chief executive of Apple.

During that 90-minute meeting, Mr. Varsavsky says, the two men discussed why a partnership might make sense.

Apple has sold millions of its Wi-Fi routers to residential customers, and its community of Wi-Fi users who share router access would be an ideal platform for FON. For his part, Mr. Jobs had developed an interest in Wi-Fi sharing because of the expanding number of iPhone users who are often frustrated by locked Wi-Fi access points.

Mr. Varsavsky says he left the meeting with the uncomfortable feeling that Apple might end up as a competitor rather than as a partner. But it wasn’t only because of Mr. Jobs’s legendary stubbornness that the Apple meeting apparently went awry. Mr. Varsavsky’s own substantial ego also came into play something he freely acknowledges when he talks about how he first got into business.

That attitude surfaced in other forums as well. In high school in Argentina during the 1970s, he says, he persuaded classmates to open their own office supply store to compete with a store across the street from their school. He also declared his interest in left-leaning politics, which he said attracted the attention of the Argentine military junta that was purging high schools of dissidents. In the “dirty war” of 1976-83, the government killed thousands it suspected of being leftists.

An officer told the school to expel him, Mr. Varsavsky says, and he left for Brazil. Around the same time, he believes, his cousin was kidnapped and killed by the military. The Varsavsky family fled to the United States, and Mr. Varsavsky earned his undergraduate degree in economics and philosophy at New York University in 1981. He later attended Columbia University, where he received graduate degrees in international affairs and business administration.

MR. VARSAVSKY says start-ups got into his blood during graduate school, when he made his first million in a real estate foray: renovating and reselling lofts in New York.

“I used the most money of my own in a company where I lost it all, and I consider it my business black eye,” he recalls, saying that he also drew a valuable lesson from the misadventure: “I don’t invest on my own. If other people don’t want to back me, it’s a sanity check.”

TO that end, Mr. Varsavsky has become a tireless networker, traveling the world to participate in a continuous parade of technology conferences and cultivating a global retinue of friends and contacts. He has also been active on the philanthropic front, earning kudos from a onetime resident of the White House.

“Martin represents the future of entrepreneurial culture and is helping to transform the way people give,” former President Bill Clinton says. “He has found different ways to use his acute business sense and creativity to improve our world and the lives of others.”

This month, Mr. Varsavsky brought together more than 70 Internet business people and technologists from Europe, Asia, Latin America and the United States for a conclave on his Menorca farm. Some guests represented the more than 20 digital enterprises in which he has a stake; others were “friends of Martin,” a loose-knit group that comprises his informal business network around the world.

The four-day conclave featured several unscripted “tech talks” in which entrepreneurs described problems they faced building their businesses. Participants included Lukasz Wejchert, the chief executive of Onet, Poland’s dominant Internet portal.

Deals with companies like Onet will be crucial if Mr. Varsavsky is to make good on his goal of having a million FON customers on each of three continents by 2010. The two companies recently came close to a deal, Mr. Wejchert says, but Onet decided that it was still to early for it to become an Internet service provider in Poland because the regulatory environment worked against new entrants.

That major players like Onet are beginning to find FON a potentially profitable partner is promising, and Mr. Varsavsky’s formidable networking abilities with politicians and entrepreneurs are also a plus. Ultimately, however, FON’s success will hinge on its strategic soundness and operational prowess not on Mr. Varsavsky’s skills at working the cocktail circuit.

He likes to refer to FON as a “revolution,” but so far his crusade has had difficulty gathering momentum because formal corporate alliances have been slow to jell.

In Mr. Varsavsky’s approach, FON’s business is subsidized by non-Foneros passing Web surfers who buy time for access to the network which he can then share with FON’s customers. The approach is different from that of Boingo, a Wi-Fi aggregator based in Los Angeles that charges users a monthly fee for using hotspots while they are traveling.

Yet both FON and Boingo have faced significant resistance from Internet service providers that carefully restrict access to their customers, leaving the idea of a seamless wireless Internet based on Wi-Fi technology an unfulfilled dream so far.

Mr. Varsavsky said he initially hoped that selling $30 Wi-Fi routers embedded with FON software would be all he needed to expand the ranks of Foneros around the globe. But this approach failed to gain traction fast enough, and he shifted gears. Now he is trying to steadily stack up distribution deals with I.S.P.’s.

While some I.S.P.’s have ignored his company, Mr. Varsavsky says FON has gained ground among I.S.P.’s that are looking for a way to attract new customers in competitive markets as well as to compete with high-speed wireless cellular networks.

FON now has a growing range of alliances, including ones with the BT Group, Neuf Cegetel in France, Livedoor, and Time Warner in the United States, as well as a recent agreement with the city of Geneva, which is distributing hundreds of FON routers to residents. Now strongest in Britain, France and Japan, FON has recently made progress with new agreements with two major Japanese retailers and a Taiwanese I.S.P. And Mr. Varsavsky said he is close to major agreements in India and Russia.

The first generation of Wi-Fi technology was limited in range, making it impractical for Foneros to share their routers widely. But a new wireless technology, known as 802.16, which should be more widely available to consumers over the next two years, will offer far greater ranges.

This next generation of wireless communication, called WiMax by Intel and others, may allow him to complete his dream in effect making it possible to weave together a wireless digital network in an urban area with nothing more than an army of Foneros willing to let their routers be used as micro cell towers.

In Europe, the Internet landscape looks more promising. The European Commission’s decision last summer to place a price cap on voice calls to make cellphones more affordable for residents traveling within the European Union didn’t include mobile data. Recent high-speed wireless networks introduced in Europe also use per-megabyte pricing, discouraging the streaming of large files like video.

That leaves a potentially big opportunity for a widely accessible sharing solution for travelers. Yet even in Europe, there are potential roadblocks, not the least of which has been a historically inhospitable atmosphere for entrepreneurial gambits.

“Europe has a larger market than the U.S.A., but it is culturally fragmented and risk-averse,” Mr. Varsavsky says. “But the differences are narrowing, and now there are European venture capitalists and a local entrepreneurial culture.”

Dreams of a worldwide wireless Web

Sunday, May 25th, 2008

Sitting on the porch at Finca Torrenova, his 800-acre retreat on this Mediterranean island, Martin Varsavsky ticks off the credentials of the group of Internet entrepreneurs finishing lunch at a nearby table.

“He has 40 million uniques, he has 50 million, and he has 8 million,” Varsavsky says, referring to the number of visitors to Web sites owned by his guests many of whom are also business associates and have joined him for several days of brainstorming about the digital future.

These days, commercial victory on the Internet is all about scale, and Varsavsky, a 48-year-old from Argentina, can be forgiven for speaking longingly and in detail about his peers’ achievements. No stranger to success — he has had a tidy crop of new media and telecommunications hits since the 1990s he is still struggling to bring his newest Internet venture to fruition.

Three years ago, aiming to create a global wireless network, he founded FON, a company based in Madrid that wants to unlock the potential power of the social Internet. FON’s gamble is that Internet users will share a portion of their wireless connection with strangers in exchange for access to wireless hotspots controlled by others.

The two camps, known as WiMax and LTE, for “long-term evolution,” are both top-down, highly structured approaches that will cost billions of dollars to build and may close a door on some of the architectural openness that led to the rapid growth of the Internet.

But their potential advantage is that closed standards can encourage the kind of growth that offers more access to mainstream consumers and business users, as occurred when Microsoft imposed a measure of conformity on software development.

For his part, Varsavsky hopes that FON can offer a middle ground deploying the original, bottom-up strengths of the early Internet movement and at the same time wedding them to a more formal, corporate approach to expansion.

Although FON faces huge obstacles in realizing those ambitions, the company also has a growing number of devotees.

“The wireless Internet market today is fragmented and complex it can be accessed through 3G operators, through WiMax, through private hotspots, through paid hotspots and through corporate networks,” said Michael Jackson, a partner at Mangrove Capital in London and a former FON board member. “In summary, it is a nightmare for a consumer. FON can and will change this.”

Undeterred, Varsavsky says that what he currently lacks in scale he can make up for in huge cost savings, particularly because FON avoids the expensive proposition of having to build a worldwide network of cellular towers and Wi-Fi nodes from scratch.

“Our army of Foneros is a much more efficient way of distributing a signal,” he says. “We believe WiMax operators will be happy to have some customers use their services for free and save billions in infrastructure deployment.”

Varsavsky has worked overtime trying to line up more high-profile partners for FON. To that end, he traveled to Cupertino, California, last fall to meet with Steve Jobs, the chief executive of Apple.

Web Design Company in UK Now Offers Joomla Development and Joomla Web Design Service for Businesses

Saturday, May 3rd, 2008

Kronik media, the award winning web Design Company in London are now offering Joomla development and Joomla web design service for businesses small or large in UK. Joomla is a powerful content management system that can be used to design simple websites to large websites with complex functionality.

Kronik Media are offering services in all areas of Joomla development including Joomla template design, Joomla component and module development and also end to end website solutions powered by Joomla content management system.

Their new range of Joomla development service is designed to appeal to a diverse clientele form start up ventures and small businesses to established businesses with more complex requirements.

The spokesperson for Kronik Media added “We are already k known for our excellence in Web design, eCommerce and search engine optimisation. The past year has witnessed an exponential increase in demand for quality affordable website design. Our Joomla based websites offer powerful functionality that traditional websites cannot deliver.

Our Joomla website development service can meet the needs of businesses small or large whether the requirement is for a simple website design or design of a complex website. We also offer Joomla outsourcing services for other website design and software development businesses that may not have specialist Joomla development experience in-house. ”

Torch concludes topsy-turvy tour of S.F.

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

SAN FRANCISCO Last-minute changes to the Olympic torch’s route through the only North American city on its world tour helped it evade not only protesters, but also fans who lined up for hours waiting for a historic sight that never arrived.”I’m disappointed, annoyed, tired, frustrated,” Sydney Sullivan, 18, said after unsuccessfully trying to chase the flame through the city. “I mean, it’s not every day you get to see the Olympic torch.”After its parade was rerouted and shortened to prevent disruptions by massive crowds of protesters, a planned closing ceremony at the waterfront was canceled and moved to San Francisco International Airport. The flame was placed on a plane and was not displayed.International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge expressed relief that the San Francisco relay avoided the turmoil of the torch’s previous stops in London and Paris, where demonstrators had tried to snuff out the flame.”Fortunately, the situation was better … in San Francisco,” Rogge said at an Olympic meeting in Beijing. “It was, however, not the joyous party that we had wished it to be.”The torch’s 85,000-mile, 20-nation global journey is the longest in Olympic history, and is meant to build excitement for the Beijing Games. But it has also been targeted by activists angered over China’s human rights record, its rule of Tibet and its support for the governments of Myanmar and Sudan.Chinese officials declared the San Francisco event a success and praised the route changes as a clever strategy for thwarting “Tibetan separatists.”The activists “ran into a brick wall in San Francisco,” the Global Times newspaper, published by the Communist Party mouthpiece People’s Daily, said on its Web site. It called the changes a “brilliant idea.”Jiang Xiayou, executive vice president of the Beijing Olympic torch relay committee, thanked San Francisco.”Perhaps some of them failed to see the sacred flame today,” Jiang said, speaking through a translator at San Francisco’s closing ceremony. “But we all have felt the passion of the Olympic movement.”Less than an hour before the relay began, officials cut the original six-mile route nearly in half.Then, at the opening ceremony, the first torchbearer took the flame from a lantern brought to the stage and held it aloft before running into a waterfront warehouse. A motorcycle escort departed, but the torchbearer was nowhere in sight.Officials drove the Olympic torch about a mile inland and handed it off to two runners away from protesters and media. The runners began jogging in the opposite direction of the crowds, and the procession gave front-row views to nearby residents, who leaned out their windows for the unexpected sight. More confusion followed, and the torch convoy apparently stopped near the Golden Gate Bridge before heading southward to the airport.As the flame traveled toward the airport, news dribbled through the crowds of more than 10,000 spectators and protesters gathered at the waterfront that the torch wasn’t coming. While Olympic fans dispersed in disappointment, many protesters were undeterred by the development.”I think it was very strange that the torch seemed to be running away from the people, but it was a good day because attention was focused on some very important issues,” said Jerry Fowler, president of the Save Darfur Coalition.San Francisco Police Chief Heather Fong said the decision was made after protesters who swarmed into the street along the original route refused police orders to get back behind barricades. Disputes among China protesters and supporters were escalating into “pushing and shoving matches,” Fong said, and one protest group began breaking windows on a bus.”We had serious concerns about the possibility of additional violence, of additional disruption … if the torch bearers were to run along this route,” Fong said. “We felt it would not be safe.”There were signs of tension even before the torch relay began. Pro-Tibet and pro-China groups had side-by-side permits to demonstrate, and representatives from both sides spilled from their sanctioned sites across a major street and shouted at each other nose to nose, with no visible police presence to separate them.Farther along the planned route, about 200 Chinese college students mobbed a car carrying two people waving Tibetan flags in front of the city’s Pier 39 tourist destination. The students, who arrived by bus from the University of California, Davis, banged drums and chanted “Go Olympics” in Chinese.”I’m proud to be Chinese and I’m outraged because there are so many people who are so ignorant they don’t know Tibet is part of China,” Yi Che said. “It was and is and will forever be part of China.”Only a handful of arrests were made, and no major incidents were reported, police said.Local officials say they support the diversity of viewpoints, but tightened security following chaotic protests during the torch’s stops in London and Paris and a demonstration Monday in which activists hung banners from the Golden Gate Bridge.Vans were deployed to haul away arrested protesters, and the Federal Aviation Administration restricted flights over the city. One of the runners who planned to carry the torch dropped out earlier this week because of safety concerns, officials said.Torchbearers in other cities have complained of aggressive behavior by paramilitary police in blue track suits sent by Beijing to guard the Olympic flame. Although there were no major problems reported in California, they did make their presence felt.At least one torchbearer decided to show her support for Tibetan independence during her moment in the spotlight. After being passed the Olympic flame, Majora Carter pulled out a small Tibetan flag that she had hidden in her shirt sleeve.”The Chinese security and cops were on me like white on rice, it was no joke,” said Carter, 41, who runs a nonprofit organization in New York. “They pulled me out of the race, and then San Francisco police officers pushed me back into the crowd on the side of the street.”Peter Ueberroth, chairman of the United States Olympic Committee, said the U.S. had struck the right balance between preserving freedom of speech for protesters, providing an exhilarating experience for the torchbearers, and preventing a repeat of the chaotic demonstrations that accompanied the torch in London and Paris.”As close as anybody can do in a free society, so far it’s looking very good,” Ueberroth said. “Virtually anybody and everybody is being heard.”On Friday, the IOC’s executive board is to discuss whether to end the remaining international legs of the relay after San Francisco because of widespread protest. The torch is scheduled to travel to Buenos Aires, Argentina, and then to a dozen other countries before arriving in China on May 4. The Olympics begin Aug. 8.After the San Francisco event, Indonesian officials announced it would significantly shorten its leg of the Olympic torch relay in the capital, Jakarta, citing security concerns. Their relay was scheduled for April 22.Rogge has refrained from criticizing China, saying he prefers to engage in “silent diplomacy” with the Chinese.Meanwhile, the White House said anew that President Bush would attend the Olympics, but left open the possibility that he would skip the opening ceremonies. Asked whether Bush would go to that portion of the games, White House press secretary Dana Perino demurred, citing the fluid nature of a foreign trip schedule.A spokesman for British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said he would not attend the opening ceremony. Brown’s office said the decision was not aimed at sending a message of protest to the Chinese government, that Olympics Minister Tessa Jowell will represent the British government at the opening, and that Brown would attend the closing ceremony.London is hosting the 2012 Olympics and British officials were expected to attend events throughout the games.French President Nicolas Sarkozy has said he is debating not attending the opening ceremony as a protest of China’s crackdown in Tibet.

Our next generation of thinkers has its say

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

SCOTT BULFIN, 31,
PhD student at Monash Unversity
Education will be a major talking point at the 2020 summit, and
Scott Bulfin, of Bayswater, has a few ideas about what should be
discussed. Bulfin trained as a secondary school teacher and has
spent his career working at government schools in Melbourne’s
east.
“I love teaching, it’s my passion, but I always thought I’d do a
research degree as well,” he says. “I like the idea of making a
different kind of contribution.”
That project, conducted at Monash University, is called Being
Digital in School, Home and Community, a national survey of 15 and
16-year-olds.
“It examines how young people use new media at school, home and
in the community and the implications this has for their language
learning in and out of schools,” Bulfin says.
He believes the summit should focus on how to teach students in
the new digital age, when young people spend more time on the
internet, watching TV, playing video games and texting on mobile
phones than reading.
“We must pay attention to what young people are actually doing
with new media technologies %26#133; while some young people are more
media savvy than their parents, educators have a prime
responsibility to teach all young people to think critically about
what they read and put online.”
ANITA FOERSTER, 32,
PhD student at Melbourne University
She grew up in New South Wales, studied arts/law at ANU in
Canberra, worked in Sydney with environmental groups like the World
Wide Fund for Nature, and now lives in Woodend, near Melbourne,
with her young family.
Foerster knows southern Australia well, and the importance to it
of the Murray-Darling River system. Her PhD covers the legal and
institutional frameworks for environmental water allocation in the
Murray-Darling Basin.
“If we are really serious about a sustainable Murray-Darling
system, then we need to set and implement ecologically based limits
to water use now,” she says.
“The 2007 National Water Plan proposes new sustainable diversion
limits, but it will take 10 to 15 years before these are required
to be implemented by the states.”
Safeguarding river systems requires not only more water but, in
this age of climate change, legal protection for that water.
“Provision of a water regime that will sustain a basic level of
ecological health should be prioritised to at least the same level
as basic human needs during times of water shortage,” she says.
THE FUTURE OF THE AUSTRALIAN ECONOMY
SEAN CHUA, 33, Sean Chua came to Australia from Singapore
to study architecture. He graduated from RMIT in 1994 but after
three years in the field decided IT was more his bag. A consultant
in the area for the past four years, Chua is now studying a master
of business at Melbourne University part-time, with the aim of
running IT in large organisations.
master of business student
at Melbourne University
Chua believes improving broadband in Australia is essential.
“Broadband is what you’re going to get from a lot of people (at the
summit),” he says. “I’ve had a lot of interactions with a lot of
Asian countries over the last couple of years and the kinds of
speeds they were getting compared to the speeds and plans we’re
running on %26#133; it’s what developing countries in Asia were using
many years ago.”
He believes Australia needs to get its broadband act together
quickly. “In Australia, you pay so much and get so much broadband,”
he says. “In a lot of other countries these days you find that
people are paying a flat fee and getting unlimited use.”
If broadband policy moves in the right direction, “and keeps up
with a lot of the other countries, then that will really advance a
lot of things in terms of technology”.
FUTURE DIRECTIONS FOR RURAL INDUSTRIES AND RURAL
COMMUNITIES
LA VERGNE LEHMANN, 44, La Vergne Lehmann has lived in the
Wimmera all her life, helping her family run a tourism business.
Like many rural industries, tourism has been badly affected by
drought. Lehmann remembers when, before the drought, the region’s
Lake Hindmarsh was one of the largest freshwater lakes in the
southern hemisphere. “That hasn’t had water in it for 10 years
now,” she says. “It used to have an inland sea atmosphere where
people came for holidays.”
PhD student at Ballarat University
She also remembers when the Wimmera River used to host rowing
regattas and other events. “Now it’s just a series of little
puddles, it’s in a shocking state,” she says.
But can lack of water be turned into a positive? Her Ballarat
University PhD is about valuing water in dry-land areas,
particularly with regard to tourism operations. How can rural areas
afflicted by drought successfully market themselves?
“Water is quintessentially associated with tourism activities,
whether you’re in a wetter area or a drier one,” she says. “Once
you don’t have water, you’ve lost that ability to earn that kind of
income.” Therefore, it’s a mistake for tourism operators in
semi-arid regions such as the Wimmera to focus on water %26#151;
because, unfortunately, there isn’t much. “How then do you look at
marketing without water? That’s where my PhD is going.”
Lehmann admits it’s not easy to make a tourism virtue of
drought. On the other hand, look at Egypt and Morocco %26#151; no one
expects there to be a lot of water, notwithstanding the odd oasis.
“Desert tourism is easier in a lot of ways,” she says. “Our
marketing is all wrong. We need to step back and look at how we
market regional inland areas.”
STRENGTHENING COMMUNITIES, SUPPORTING FAMILIES AND SOCIAL
INCLUSION
Leanne Sheeran, 47, In the Australia of 2020, as today,
both parents will be working. How do we look after the
children?
PhD student at RMIT
This, one of the greatest challenges facing the Australian
family, is the topic of Leanne Sheeran’s PhD: “Mum’s the Word;
Exploring Early Motherhood.” Sheeran, of Kilmore, has
undergraduate, postgraduate and masters degrees in midwifery and
nursing from La Trobe and Deakin universities. She works three days
a week as a child health-care nurse with Mitchell Shire Council.
And she’s the mother of three teenage boys.
“I’m seeing mothers in my centres who have stopped breastfeeding
because they have to go back to work because interest rates have
gone up. If we had paid maternity leave, they could stay longer
with their babies.”
Lack of maternity leave, limited child-care places and the
shortage of GPs in rural areas are some of the challenges facing
working mums. So what to do? “I would like to see our society put
greater value on health promotion programs for women’s and
children’s health, instead of problem management,” she says. “We’re
educating parents about birth, but not necessarily about the
parenting that they’ll need in the next 18 years. It’s thinking
outside the hospital and thinking of things that will benefit the
country long-term. The more investment you put into childhood’s
early years pays out multiple-fold down the track.”
Some of her other ideas include home help for women with
postnatal depression, paid maternity leave for all women, more
child care for women who choose to return to work, and more
training for nurses and midwives in rural areas.
LONG-TERM NATIONAL HEALTH STRATEGY
Dionne Holland, 28, Australia needs people like Dionne
Holland to help meet the challenges of obesity, depression and an
ageing population. Holland, of Montrose, became interested in
health at her high school, Tintern, when a visiting dietician
stressed the importance of good diet for overall health.
PhD student at Deakin University
She finished an honours degree in food science and nutrition at
Deakin, followed by a master’s in public health. “It was probably
at this stage that I realised my passion lay in more preventative
health as opposed to curative,” she says. “In pursuit of good
research I then took up my PhD.”
Her doctorate focuses on how external agencies can work with
schools to implement health programs. The earlier people are taught
about good health, the better, she believes, but schools need help
from outside. “Schools are a fantastic environment to implement
these projects but the only problem is the curriculum is so
overcrowded and the teachers are so overburdened that they don’t
necessarily have the skills and tools to implement these
programs.”
It also means some radical curriculum changes. “Kids need to
learn about health not only in PE, but they need to learn about it
in maths and they need to learn about it in English.”
OPTIONS FOR THE FUTURE OF INDIGENOUS AUSTRALIA
Steven Kelly, 38, Steven Kelly has not started his PhD
yet %26#151; in fact, he’s only three months into his master’s
degree, focusing on Aboriginal men’s health. But he has many ideas
on what the 2020 Summit ought to be talking about.
master of social health student at Melbourne University
Kelly, a Yamatji man from Western Australia, studied at Edith
Cowan University, Perth, and at Charles Darwin University in
Darwin, completing a bachelor of arts majoring in anthropology in
the first semester of 2005. He moved to Melbourne this year to
tackle his master’s in social health, inspired by the dire state of
indigenous health in outback communities, which he believes is the
number one issue for indigenous Australia.
“Aboriginal people are dying from lifestyle diseases that are
preventable. These people (medical graduates) are just not getting
it,” he says. “A lot of doctors coming through think Aboriginal
people get sick because of uncleanliness %26#133; they’re just not
exposed to what’s going on.
“(Medical students), who are living a really privileged life,
need to be shown exactly what’s going on in these communities. They
need to be taken out from their little bubble and put out in
communities to do a stint to see exactly what’s going on.”
While more doctors %26#151; and indigenous doctors especially
%26#151; are needed in outback communities, Australian medical
faculties also need reform, he says. “Indigenous traditional
doctors and health practices should be recognised and be accepted
within the Western biomedical health system.”
TOWARDS A CREATIVE AUSTRALIA: THE FUTURE OF ARTS, FILM AND
DESIGN
Greg Creek, 48, “Philanthropy %26#151; that goes from
funding films all the way to the smallest theatre group.”
PhD student at RMIT
Greg Creek is talking about how the arts in Australia can thrive
in the decades ahead. In the face of government cutbacks, tax laws
in Australia must be changed, he believes, so the private sector
can shoulder the burden.
Creek is an artist, specialising in drawing. He also lectures in
sculpture at RMIT’s school of art while pursuing his PhD, which
focuses on the link between political cartooning and the visual
arts.
How he ended up so involved in art he doesn’t know. He grew up
with his family around Bendigo and the Wimmera, but none of them
had an artistic bent. He moved to Melbourne in the early 1980s
%26#151; he now lives in Alphington %26#151; finishing his
undergraduate and postgraduate degrees at Victoria College and the
Victorian College of the Arts.
Besides reforming tax laws, Creek believes Australian art can
best be advanced over the next two decades by interacting with the
world via the internet.
“Twenty years ago when I was studying, the notion of anything
overseas was completely distant,” he says. “(My students) have been
doing some collaborative projects with universities in London, all
based on the web.
“The great value of this is that they are going face-to-face in
real time, young people talking to each other. It makes a huge
difference because it changes the perception of how we’re seen
overseas.”
The 2020 Summit must discuss how Australian artists and students
can use the web to interact with the rest of the world, he says.
“The students think we’re all part of the one community rather than
this divorced, separate community at the end of the world.”
THE FUTURE OF AUSTRALIAN GOVERNANCE
Zareh Ghazarian, 28, Even as a student at high school in
Springvale, Zareh Ghazarian can remember being glued to the
television on election nights. His interest carried over to his
tertiary studies: an arts/science degree at Deakin, honours in
politics at Monash, and now a PhD in politics at Monash,
specialising in the role of minor political parties.
PhD student at Monash University
Over the past 30 years, new minor parties such as the Democrats,
One Nation, Greens and Family First have challenged the ALP and the
Coalition in the Senate. Ghazarian believes the big question in
Australian politics is %26#151; do these parties enhance democracy?
“Recent history suggests they do. In 1999, the Australian democrats
played a crucial role in smoothing some of the hard edges off the
Howard government’s GST %26#133; and had the government needed to
negotiate with a minor party %26#133; WorkChoices may have been a far
more constructive piece of legislation.”
But how do we support the minor parties, and the political
process more generally? Ghazarian, who lives in Edithvale, believes
the 2020 Summit should look at ways of ramping up political studies
at primary and secondary schools.
“One of the key issues facing us is the level of community
engagement with politics. Some people are intimidated by politics
or see it as being too boring. My research aims to make politics
more accessible to Australians.
“Through education and understanding, citizens can be more
active in the political process. This would help strengthen our
democracy, and governance, beyond 2020.”
AUSTRALIA’S FUTURE SECURITY AND PROSPERITY IN A RAPIDLY
CHANGING REGION AND WORLD
Larry Marshall, 54, It’s little wonder Larry Marshall is
interested in international politics. Born in Sri Lanka, he
migrated to Australia in his high school years. After completing an
honours degree in politics and economics at La Trobe University, he
taught commerce and humanities at high school for 10 years before
working in the Philippines for four years with Australian
Volunteers Abroad.
PhD student at La Trobe University
Upon returning to Melbourne, he finished a master’s degree in
media and cinema studies. He currently juggles working for La
Trobe’s Centre for Dialogue, where he is undertaking projects
involving the Muslim community, and a PhD in international
relations.
He sees many threats to Australian and world security. “Climate
change, nuclear disarmament, the movements of refugees across
borders, and the movement of financial streams of money that can
kill an economy or support it very quickly,” Marshall says.
“Nuclear disarmament is a receding issue for many people but
it’s still one of the most crucial issues in the background which
must be handled at a global level.”
So what ideas should the 2020 Summit be canvassing to achieve a
more secure world?
“I would hope that post-summit we could engage in a continual
national dialogue. A real democracy doesn’t only function once
every three or four years,” he says. “I think if a government
thinks it has all the answers it’s going to be wrong. (It must
listen to) the voices of its most creative people, its insightful
people, people who have been beavering away and working hard on a
variety of things.”

Torch concludes topsy-turvy tour of S.F.

Sunday, April 13th, 2008

SAN FRANCISCO Last-minute changes to the Olympic torch’s route through the only North American city on its world tour helped it evade not only protesters, but also fans who lined up for hours waiting for a historic sight that never arrived.”I’m disappointed, annoyed, tired, frustrated,” Sydney Sullivan, 18, said after unsuccessfully trying to chase the flame through the city. “I mean, it’s not every day you get to see the Olympic torch.”After its parade was rerouted and shortened to prevent disruptions by massive crowds of protesters, a planned closing ceremony at the waterfront was canceled and moved to San Francisco International Airport. The flame was placed on a plane and was not displayed.International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge expressed relief that the San Francisco relay avoided the turmoil of the torch’s previous stops in London and Paris, where demonstrators had tried to snuff out the flame.”Fortunately, the situation was better … in San Francisco,” Rogge said at an Olympic meeting in Beijing. “It was, however, not the joyous party that we had wished it to be.”The torch’s 85,000-mile, 20-nation global journey is the longest in Olympic history, and is meant to build excitement for the Beijing Games. But it has also been targeted by activists angered over China’s human rights record, its rule of Tibet and its support for the governments of Myanmar and Sudan.Chinese officials declared the San Francisco event a success and praised the route changes as a clever strategy for thwarting “Tibetan separatists.”The activists “ran into a brick wall in San Francisco,” the Global Times newspaper, published by the Communist Party mouthpiece People’s Daily, said on its Web site. It called the changes a “brilliant idea.”Jiang Xiayou, executive vice president of the Beijing Olympic torch relay committee, thanked San Francisco.”Perhaps some of them failed to see the sacred flame today,” Jiang said, speaking through a translator at San Francisco’s closing ceremony. “But we all have felt the passion of the Olympic movement.”Less than an hour before the relay began, officials cut the original six-mile route nearly in half.Then, at the opening ceremony, the first torchbearer took the flame from a lantern brought to the stage and held it aloft before running into a waterfront warehouse. A motorcycle escort departed, but the torchbearer was nowhere in sight.Officials drove the Olympic torch about a mile inland and handed it off to two runners away from protesters and media. The runners began jogging in the opposite direction of the crowds, and the procession gave front-row views to nearby residents, who leaned out their windows for the unexpected sight. More confusion followed, and the torch convoy apparently stopped near the Golden Gate Bridge before heading southward to the airport.As the flame traveled toward the airport, news dribbled through the crowds of more than 10,000 spectators and protesters gathered at the waterfront that the torch wasn’t coming. While Olympic fans dispersed in disappointment, many protesters were undeterred by the development.”I think it was very strange that the torch seemed to be running away from the people, but it was a good day because attention was focused on some very important issues,” said Jerry Fowler, president of the Save Darfur Coalition.San Francisco Police Chief Heather Fong said the decision was made after protesters who swarmed into the street along the original route refused police orders to get back behind barricades. Disputes among China protesters and supporters were escalating into “pushing and shoving matches,” Fong said, and one protest group began breaking windows on a bus.”We had serious concerns about the possibility of additional violence, of additional disruption … if the torch bearers were to run along this route,” Fong said. “We felt it would not be safe.”There were signs of tension even before the torch relay began. Pro-Tibet and pro-China groups had side-by-side permits to demonstrate, and representatives from both sides spilled from their sanctioned sites across a major street and shouted at each other nose to nose, with no visible police presence to separate them.Farther along the planned route, about 200 Chinese college students mobbed a car carrying two people waving Tibetan flags in front of the city’s Pier 39 tourist destination. The students, who arrived by bus from the University of California, Davis, banged drums and chanted “Go Olympics” in Chinese.”I’m proud to be Chinese and I’m outraged because there are so many people who are so ignorant they don’t know Tibet is part of China,” Yi Che said. “It was and is and will forever be part of China.”Only a handful of arrests were made, and no major incidents were reported, police said.Local officials say they support the diversity of viewpoints, but tightened security following chaotic protests during the torch’s stops in London and Paris and a demonstration Monday in which activists hung banners from the Golden Gate Bridge.Vans were deployed to haul away arrested protesters, and the Federal Aviation Administration restricted flights over the city. One of the runners who planned to carry the torch dropped out earlier this week because of safety concerns, officials said.Torchbearers in other cities have complained of aggressive behavior by paramilitary police in blue track suits sent by Beijing to guard the Olympic flame. Although there were no major problems reported in California, they did make their presence felt.At least one torchbearer decided to show her support for Tibetan independence during her moment in the spotlight. After being passed the Olympic flame, Majora Carter pulled out a small Tibetan flag that she had hidden in her shirt sleeve.”The Chinese security and cops were on me like white on rice, it was no joke,” said Carter, 41, who runs a nonprofit organization in New York. “They pulled me out of the race, and then San Francisco police officers pushed me back into the crowd on the side of the street.”Peter Ueberroth, chairman of the United States Olympic Committee, said the U.S. had struck the right balance between preserving freedom of speech for protesters, providing an exhilarating experience for the torchbearers, and preventing a repeat of the chaotic demonstrations that accompanied the torch in London and Paris.”As close as anybody can do in a free society, so far it’s looking very good,” Ueberroth said. “Virtually anybody and everybody is being heard.”On Friday, the IOC’s executive board is to discuss whether to end the remaining international legs of the relay after San Francisco because of widespread protest. The torch is scheduled to travel to Buenos Aires, Argentina, and then to a dozen other countries before arriving in China on May 4. The Olympics begin Aug. 8.After the San Francisco event, Indonesian officials announced it would significantly shorten its leg of the Olympic torch relay in the capital, Jakarta, citing security concerns. Their relay was scheduled for April 22.Rogge has refrained from criticizing China, saying he prefers to engage in “silent diplomacy” with the Chinese.Meanwhile, the White House said anew that President Bush would attend the Olympics, but left open the possibility that he would skip the opening ceremonies. Asked whether Bush would go to that portion of the games, White House press secretary Dana Perino demurred, citing the fluid nature of a foreign trip schedule.A spokesman for British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said he would not attend the opening ceremony. Brown’s office said the decision was not aimed at sending a message of protest to the Chinese government, that Olympics Minister Tessa Jowell will represent the British government at the opening, and that Brown would attend the closing ceremony.London is hosting the 2012 Olympics and British officials were expected to attend events throughout the games.French President Nicolas Sarkozy has said he is debating not attending the opening ceremony as a protest of China’s crackdown in Tibet.

Leaders gather for summit

Monday, April 7th, 2008

LONDON British Prime Minister Gordon Brown is meeting with about 20 world leaders and key officials over the weekend on climate change, the economy and global poverty, his office said Friday.Chilean President Michelle Bachelet, Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd and South African President Thabo Mbeki are be among the chief executives attending the two-day summit in Watford, according to a provisional list of summit participants.Former President Clinton, the World Bank’s Pascal Lamy and European Union trade chief Peter Mandelson were also expected.Summit participants were due to hold two round-table discussions focusing on climate change, development, and globalization, with leaders planning to issue a short joint statement and hold a news conference. The discussions were due to be broadcast live over the Web.

China alleges Tibetan ’suicide squads’

Monday, April 7th, 2008

BEIJING China has branded the Dalai Lama a “wolf in monk’s robes” and his followers the “scum of Buddhism.” It stepped up the rhetoric Tuesday, accusing the Nobel Peace laureate and his supporters of planning suicide attacks.The Tibetan government-in-exile swiftly denied the charge, and the Bush administration rushed to the Tibetan Buddhist leader’s defense, calling him “a man of peace.”"There is absolutely no indication that he wants to do anything other than have a dialogue with China on how to discuss the serious issues there,” State Department spokesman Tom Casey said.Wu Heping, spokesman for China’s Ministry of Public Security, claimed searches of monasteries in the Tibetan capital had turned up a large cache of weapons. They included 176 guns, 13,013 bullets, 7,725 pounds of explosives, 19,000 sticks of dynamite and 350 knives, he said.”To our knowledge, the next plan of the Tibetan independence forces is to organize suicide squads to launch violent attacks,” Wu told a news conference. “They claimed that they fear neither bloodshed nor sacrifice.”Wu provided no details or evidence. He used the term “gan si dui,” a rarely used phrase directly translated as “dare-to-die corps.” The official English version of his remarks translated the term as “suicide squads.”Wu said police had arrested an individual who he claimed was an operative of the “Dalai Lama clique,” responsible for gathering intelligence and distributing pamphlets calling for an uprising.The suspect admitted to using code words to communicate with his contacts, including “uncle” for the Dalai Lama and “skirts” for the banned Tibetan snow lion flag, Wu said.Beijing has repeatedly accused the Dalai Lama and his supporters of orchestrating violence in Lhasa, the Tibetan capital. Protests which began peacefully there on the March 10 anniversary of a 1959 uprising against Chinese rule spiraled out of control four days later.Chinese officials have put the death toll at 22, most of them Han Chinese; the government-in-exile says 140 Tibetans were killed.China also says sympathy protests that spread to surrounding provinces are part of a campaign by the Dalai Lama to sabotage the Beijing Olympics and promote Tibetan independence.The 72-year-old Dalai Lama has condemned the violence and denied any links to it, urging an independent international inquiry into the unrest.”Tibetan exiles are 100 percent committed to nonviolence. There is no question of suicide attacks,” Samdhong Rinpoche, prime minister of the government-in-exile in Dharmsala, India, said Tuesday. “But we fear that Chinese might masquerade as Tibetans and plan such attacks to give bad publicity to Tibetans.”Experts on terrorism and security risks facing Beijing and the Olympics have not cited any Tibet group as a threat.Scholars said the claim of suicide squads was a calculated move by China allowing it to step up its crackdown in Tibetan areas.”There is no evidence of support for any kind of violence against China or Chinese,” said Dibyesh Anand, a Tibet expert at Westminster University in London.Instead, Beijing is “portraying to the rest of China and the rest of the world: these people are basically irrational” and that there was no room for compromise, he said.Tuesday’s accusations could also further divide the Tibetan government-in-exile and other groups like the Tibetan Youth Congress, which has challenged the Dalai Lama’s policy of nonviolence, Anand said.”This is a way of pressuring the Dalai Lama to renounce Tibetans who have created violence,” he said.Andrew Fischer, a fellow at the London School of Economics who researches Chinese development policies in Tibetan areas of China, dismissed Wu’s warnings as “completely ridiculous.”What China is trying to do “is justify this massive troop deployment, a massive crackdown on Tibetan areas and they’re trying to justify intensification of hard-line policies,” Fischer said.Drawing from a deep historical reserve of angry rhetoric, Tibet’s tough-talking Chinese Communist Party boss, Zhang Qingli, recently called the Dalai Lama a “wolf in monk’s robes, a devil with a human face, but the heart of a beast” and deemed the current conflict a “life-and-death battle.” State media has denounced protesting monks as the “scum of Buddhism.”The campaign against the Dalai Lama has been underscored in recent days with showings of decades-old propaganda films on state television portraying Tibetan society as cruel and primitive before the 1950 invasion by communist troops.The escalation of the rhetoric to include claims of possible suicide attacks may also touch upon another sensitive issue for China’s communist leadership - unrest in Xinjiang, a predominantly Muslim region to Tibet’s north, and Beijing’s tight security measures in the area.On Tuesday, a local government Web site in Xinjiang reported that a protest has broken out in a market in the region on March 23. One official linked the incident to the unrest in Tibet.But U.S.-government funded Radio Free Asia, which first reported the demonstration, said the protesters were demanding authorities not ban headscarves, and that they stop torturing Uighurs and release all political prisoners. It said several hundred Uighurs staged the protests in Hotan and a nearby county and were taken into custody.Fu Chao, an official with the Hotan Regional Administrative Office, disputed that characterization. “The riot was nothing to do with the ban on headscarves, but about responding to the riots in Tibet,” Fu said.Last month, Chinese state media reported that a woman had confessed to attempting to hijack and crash a Chinese passenger plane from Xinjiang in what officials say was part of a terror campaign by a radical Islamic independence group, the East Turkestan Islamic Movement. The reports said the woman was from China’s Turkic Muslim Uighur minority.While the United States has labeled the East Turkestan Islamic Movement a terrorist organization, the State Department alleges widespread abuses of the legal and educational systems by the communist authorities to suppress Uighur culture and religion.Fischer said China has tried to change the “nonviolent, compassionate” image of Tibetans into one of violence and brutality to draw parallels to the pro-independence stance in Xinjiang.”If they succeed in portraying them that way, then they can treat them the same way they treat Muslims in Xinjiang,” he said.

Business Highlights

Monday, April 7th, 2008

WASHINGTON It’s a Herculean task: revamping a financial regulatory system dating back to the Civil War to deal with 21st century crises imperiling the country.Under an ambitious Bush administration plan, the Federal Reserve would take on the unwieldy role of uber cop in charge of financial market stability. Other regulatory agencies could see their influence diminished.The proposal won’t fix the host of economic and financial problems that threatens to plunge the United States into a deep recession, but it might help guard against future troubles. It would take years and a lot of political wrangling - in Congress, on Wall Street, in statehouses and elsewhere - to implement all the changes envisioned.Yet, the initiative, formally announced Monday, casts a fresh spotlight on the best way to protect the country from financial catastrophes in an intricate web of complex, often-changing financial products and the wide array of financial players using them in the United States and beyond. That debate probably will take center stage in the next president’s administration.—Stocks gain on last day of quarterNEW YORK (AP) - Wall Street managed a moderate gain in the final session of a dismal first quarter Monday, but stock prices and the major indexes still ended the first three months of 2007 with massive losses, the casualties of the still continuing credit crisis. The Standard %26 Poor’s 500 index, the benchmark for many widely held investments such as mutual funds, suffered a loss for the quarter of nearly 10 percent.The blip upward came from a better than expected reading in the Chicago Purchasing Managers Index, which is considered a precursor to the Institute for Supply Management’s manufacturing survey on Tuesday. The index rose to 48.2 in March from 44.5 a month earlier; economists had been expecting a reading of 47.3, according to Dow Jones Newswires. Though the number topped forecasts, a figure below 50 nonetheless indicates a contraction in manufacturing activity.The market’s reaction, however, was likely not as enthusiastic as it might seem from Monday’s gains by the major indexes. Price movements tend to be skewed when volume is as light as it was Monday.It was a difficult quarter on Wall Street, with financial companies’ ongoing credit market losses and the flagging economy wiping out many investors’ appetite for stocks. While the market saw a number of up days during the quarter, the overall trend was sharply lower, with reports of asset write-downs and shaky financial companies pummeling the market - in particular, the near-collapse of Bear Stearns %26 Cos. in mid-March.—Pernod Ricard buys maker of AbsolutSTOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) - Spirits group Pernod Ricard SA is adding Swedish flavor to a liquor cabinet stacked with Scotch whisky, French champagne and Cuban rum with its $8.34 billion purchase of the state-owned maker of Absolut vodka.The company said Monday it was delighted to add the premium vodka brand to its assortment of drinks, after the Swedish government accepted its bid for Absolut’s parent company, Vin %26 Sprit.The Swedish government celebrated the higher-than-expected price tag for Vin %26 Sprit, but investors were less exuberant, sending shares in France-based Pernod Ricard down 4.3 percent to $103.03 in Paris.Sweden said it selected the Pernod Ricard bid on Sunday over three other offers, by U.S.-based Fortune Brands Inc., Bermuda-based Bacardi Ltd. and an investment group controlled by Sweden’s Wallenberg family.—Less corn could mean higher food pricesWASHINGTON (AP) - From chicken nuggets to corn flakes, food prices at grocery stores and dinner tables could be headed even higher as farmers cut back on the land they’re planting in corn this spring.Corn prices already are high, and a drop in supply should keep them rising. Combine that with the huge demand for corn-based ethanol fuel - and higher energy costs for transporting food - and consumers are likely to see their food bills going up and up.Farmers are now expected to plant 86 million acres of corn this year, the Department of Agriculture predicted Monday, down 8 percent from last year, which was the highest since World War II.Corn is almost everywhere you look in the U.S. food supply. Poultry, beef and pork companies use it to feed their animals. High fructose corn syrup is used in soft drinks and many other foods, including lunch meats and salad dressings. Corn is often an ingredient in breads, peanut butter, oatmeal and potato chips.—Merck, Schering-Plough sink on VytorinNEW YORK (AP) - Shares of Merck %26 Co. and Schering-Plough Corp. fell to record lows Monday, as analysts warned new clinical data would cause sales of their blockbuster cholesterol drug Vytorin to fall further.The companies market Vytorin through a joint venture, but earlier this year, partial results from a clinical study showed that it was no more effective at limiting plaque buildup than Merck’s Zocor, a drug that is already available in generic form. Full results of that study were released Sunday.Vytorin is a combination of Zocor and Schering-Plough’s drug Zetia.Schering-Plough shares plunged as low as $14, touching their lowest levels since August 1996. Merck shares fell as low as $36.82, their lowest since June 2006.Leading physicians are now recommending the use of older drugs called statins before putting patients on Vytorin. Many physicians had prescribed Vytorin in lieu of higher doses of statins because of what some said was an undue fear of side effects.— HUD chief resigns amid criminal probeWASHINGTON (AP) - HUD Secretary Alphonso Jackson, his tenure tarnished by allegations of political favoritism and a criminal investigation, announced his resignation Monday amid the wreckage of the national housing crisis.He leaves behind a trail of unanswered questions about whether he tilted the Department of Housing and Urban Development toward Republican contractors and cronies.The move comes at a shaky time for the economy when soaring mortgage foreclosures imperil the nation’s credit markets.Some Congressional Democrats had pushed for Jackson to leave.House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said HUD will be called on to work with Congress on assisting refinancing for borrowers faced with imminent foreclosure.—Oil prices slide, retail gas hits recordNEW YORK (AP) - Prices surged at the gas pump, hitting a new record Monday even as crude oil accelerated its slide amid a broad-based commodities sell-off.The average price for a gallon of regular unleaded rose to $3.287, according to AAA and the Oil Price Information Service. Prices were highest in Hawaii and California, where the average price topped $3.60 a gallon.Gasoline prices are expected to keep rising as the summer driving season brings with it greater demand for the fuel. Last year, prices peaked in May before backtracking; with gasoline already at a record it will like only continue its advance.If crude oil prices, which set records of their own during March continue their advance, that will also add to the cost of gasoline at the pump.On Monday, however, light, sweet crude for May delivery dropped $4.04 to settle at $101.58 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, adding to a decline of nearly $2 a barrel on Friday. Even so, prices finished the first three months of the year 5.8 percent higher than where they started; crude set a record of $111.80 in March before giving up ground.—Citi splits consumer banking, card unitsNEW YORK (AP) - Citigroup named a veteran retail banker Monday to head its North American consumer banking unit, splitting it off from its credit-card business as Citi struggles to become profitable again after suffering its biggest quarterly loss in its 196-year history.The latest move is the biggest sign yet that CEO Vikram Pandit, appointed in December, wants to fix Citi’s major parts rather than sell them off to raise cash - at least for now.It also shows what steps Pandit would take to attract more consumers to Citi’s retail banking unit.Citi’s worst problems are in its investment banking segment, which made huge losing bets on the mortgage industry. But its bread-and-butter business of lending to and collecting deposits from average people has also been underwhelming shareholders.Citi is ubiquitous throughout the United States, but in recent years has lost customers to rival banks such as JPMorgan Chase %26 Co. and Wachovia Corp.—Major indexes rise, commodities slip as quarter endsOn the last day of the quarter, the Dow Jones industrial average rose 46.49, or 0.38 percent, to 12,262.89.Broader stock indicators also rose. The S%26P 500 index advanced 7.48, or 0.57 percent, to 1,322.70, and the Nasdaq composite index rose 17.92, or 0.79 percent, to 2,279.10.Light, sweet crude for May delivery dropped $4.04 to settle at $101.58 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, adding to a decline of nearly $2 a barrel on Friday. Even so, prices finished the first three months of the year 5.8 percent higher than where they started; crude set a record of $111.80 in March before giving up ground.In other Nymex trading, heating oil futures fell 5.58 cents to settle at $3.0492 a gallon, while gasoline futures sank 10.07 cents to settle at $2.6163 a gallon. Brent crude futures fell $3.47 to settle at $100.30 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange in London.

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