1992_10_october_addpar

The common-law rights that might be expected in an implied bill of rights would be such things as freedom of speech, assembly and religion, freedom from search and seizure without a warrant based on sworn evidence and stating what can be searched and seized, freedom from arbitrary arrest, freedom from confiscation of property without compensation and no torture or other cruel and unusual punishment and a right to trial by jury for serious crimes.

1992_09_september_yanks

The following appears in a US legal database: “”My name is Barry Krusch, and I am president of an organisation called Americans for a Constitutional Convention. üWhy We Need an New Constitution@ was written to provide a summary of the defects and obsolescences of the Constitution. This essay is the product of over six months’ extensive research, involving the analysis of dozens of books, law review articles, historical documents, debates printed in the Congressional Record, and newspaper clippings. The essay itself took over 200 hours to write, and is the most compact and complete document of its kind this author has yet seen.”

Barry is obviously very impressed with his own essay.

Essentially, the essay points to a military-industrial complex in the US that corrupts members of the House of Representatives by pork-barrelling and blackmail. The essay itself is less impressive than by the fact its author wrote it and put on a public database.
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1992_09_september_will

The story you have been dying to hear: the do-it-yourself will kit. You will be coughing up a mere $14.95, instead of undertaking to pay a lawyer perhaps $100 or more for the relatively easy task of disposing of your property to you near and dear upon death.

The Blue Ribbon Will was launched this week by Senator Barney Cooney at Mortuary Station in Sydney. It is published by Legal and Commercial Publishing PO Box 583 Potts Point 2011. Phone 02 3681015.

The kit sets out the legal requirements for a will and gives a dozen examples. It provides definitions of terms.
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1992_09_september_waight

A law lecturer at the Australian National University has begun defamation proceedings against 18 students.

The lecturer, Peter Waight, asserts he was defamed over a letter of complaint they made to the Dean of the Law School, Professor Dennis Pearce, which he says was circulated beyond what was necessary.

Mr Waight’s solicitor, John Little, said yesterday that the action had begun in the ACT Magistrates’ Court. About half a dozen students had apologised to Mr Waight or had indicated they would do so and they had not be sued. Many of the 18 students were in Mr Waight’s class, others not so.
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1992_09_september_tinpot

The ACT Government was accused yesterday of “”tin-pot fascism” over the sending of police to The Canberra Times on Tuesday with a search warrant to discover the source of leaked Budget documents.

Two detectives came to The Canberra Times on Tuesday armed with a search warrant directed at Federal Capital Press, publisher of üThe Canberra Times, and journalist Crispin Hull. The warrant was for all documents, diary notes and fax records relating to ACT Budget records, or matters to or from the ACT Department of Health or the office of the Minister of Health, Wayne Berry.

The Canberra Times ran an article last Sunday detailing the health budget. The ACT Budget is expected to be brought down by the Chief Minsiter, Rosemary Follett, on September 15.
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1992_09_september_test

This time last year the Australian Football League was under attack for the unfairness of its finals series.< New par begins. This year it has changed the system slightly. The result is a completely fair finals system. Let me explain.< New par begins. Last year the AFL had just moved from having a final five to having a final six.< New par begins.

New par type two. The new final-six system was branded as unfair. It was unfair (for reasons which don’t matter now) and needed modifications. As a result of the changes no-one should complain. This is what happens.
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1992_09_september_slist15

Baby brian inquest. 1. critical machine not working at time of death. drapes not strung properly.

2. Littlemore buckets CT asks magistrate to exclude evidence that CT might use irresponsibly. Magistrate resfuses. evidence is that nurse says she coudl tell of things that would incriminate her colleagues.

3. cops not trained in inquiries into hospital deaths.

1992_09_september_skrz

Politicians of both sides had made a full-scale retreat from taking responsibility for Canberra, the chairman of the National Capital Planning Authority, Joseph Skrzynski, said yesterday.

They had wrongly assumed that Canberra was not popular and that they could adopt the attitude “”let’s not do anything about Canberra”.

Mr Skrzynski matched his message to his audience.

The audience was the Building Owners and Managers Association, a group of property developers.
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1992_09_september_service

The chairman of the ACT board of health should not be a smoker who dislikes exercise.

Jim Service is.

He is manager of J. G. Service Pty Ltd, which co-ordinates the construction of buildings, among other things, and chairman of the Advance Bank and a director of Canberra Centre Holdings.

At lunch at the Nineteenth Hole overlooking the Federal Golf Course in Narrabundah, he agrees that golf is a selfish game. The trouble is, each player has his own ball and attempts to do the impossible: shoot a round of 18 holes in 18 shots. It is a recipe for a a self-centred game.
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1992_09_september_prison

The need for a jail in the ACT had receded, the ACT Attorney-General, Terry Connolly, said yesterday.

He was commenting after the publication of the Australian Institute of Criminology annual national prison census.

The figures, on their face, showed a large increase in ACT prisoners on remand at the Belconnen Remand Centre. However, they were based on small samples and subject to wide monthly fluctuations.
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