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Thursday, January 26, 2012

Lightning and Fireworks Ignite Perth Skies in Stunning Australia Day Skyshow



Crowd numbers were slightly down on last year, but the Australia Day celebrations in Perth still attracted 250,000, despite the heat and rain.

Police said today that 139 arrests and summons were made statewide during the Skyworks.

There were 169 move-on notices issued, 67 alcohol related offences and 39 people were charged with disorderly conduct.

Police said four people were charged with driving under the influence with six people caught driving with a blood alcohol level over 0.08%.

There were nine assault charges laid, three assault on a public officer charges and seven drug related offences.

But West Australians were well-behaved during Australia Day celebrations across the state yesterday, police said.


Lightning and Fireworks Ignite Perth Skies in Stunning Australia Day Skyshow

Six Perth Must-Do Activities

PERTH, AUSTRALIA—It’s a city with beautiful scenery, nestled on the shores of the Indian Ocean. And it combines the boomtown energy of Calgary with the sybaritic charm of San Diego. And it’s easier to get to you than you think.

Here’s a half dozen reasons to make Perth part of your Australian vacation.

1. RESIDE AT THE RICHARDSON

There are a lot of great hotels in downtown Perth, but it can get a bit clamorous down there, especially on the weekend. (Think Toronto’s Entertainment District.) That’s why you’d be well advised to try out The Richardson Hotel on the city’s north side. This boutique hotel is constantly rated #1 in Perth and there’s lots of reasons why, like the spacious, beautifully equipped rooms, the wondrous hands-on service, a great spa on site and a super restaurant, Opus, where the chef, Todd Cheavins, is from Yorkton, Saskatchewan! 32 Richardson St.. 618-9217-8888. www.therichardson.com.

2. PARK LIKE A KING

The King’s Park and Botanic Gardens are not only an impressive horticultural exhibit in their own right, but they provide you with some of the most dazzling views of downtown Perth and the scenic Swan River imaginable. Beautifully laid out, carefully tended and with a real user-friendly mentality throughout, this is the kind of place that even herbaphobes will love to visit. Fraser Ave., West Perth. 618-9480- 3600. www.bgpa.wa.gov.au/kings-park.

3. GET FREE IN FREO

Fremantle is every Perth resident’s idea of party central and rightly so. This Victorian harbour town is only 30 minutes from central Perth on the fun and fast “live trains” (as they’re called) that run frequently. It’s a crazy mixture of beautifully preserved Victoria architecture, funky little shops, countless coffee bars and a whole mess of pubs. Any one of them is bound to be friendly, but you’re going to want to save yourself for the main attraction, just below. www. visitfremantle.com.au.

4. EMBRACE YOUR INNER CREATURE

If you want to make direct contact with the Western Australian vibe, then run, don’t walk to Little Creatures. It began as a micro-brewery, grew into a beer hall and then expanded into a dining/drinking/dancing hangout where the crowds never stop, the party lasts till closing time and everybody becomes your new best friend. BTW, the food and brew are first rate as well. 40 Mews Rd., Fremantle. 618-9430-5555. www.littlecreatures.com.

5. ROTTNEST TO THE CORE

Next to being in a pub, Aussies are happiest in the great outdoors and it doesn’t get much greater than Rottnest Island. A Dutch sailor thought the adorable quokkasn only found on the island were giant rats and named its “Rats’ Nest” (or “Rottnest”). First a military post, then an aboriginal prison, it has been a nature resort and tourist destination for over 100 years. People book cabins through an on-line lottery or stay at the less rough and rugged hotels. No cars allowed. Take a shuttle bus that leaves you at any one of two dozen secluded beaches, some for sunning, some for surfing, some for swimming. It’s paradise. You can take a ferry from Perth or Fremantle for a day trip, but I think you’ll want to stay the night. 618-9372-9730. www.rottnestisland.com.

6. DIVE WITH THE DOLPHINS

I know there are lots of places around the world that let you frolic with the dolphins, but not in the Indian Ocean and not in 100% natural conditions. The people at Rockingham Wild Encounters are both people-friendly and eco-friendly as well, so your visits into the water (and yes, you do swim with the dolphins!) don’t hurt the creatures involved. Put on your wet suit, snorkel up, grab the belt of the bloke in front of you and dive in. You’ll never forget it, but I feel that way about all of Perth. P.O. Box 5321, Rockingham Beach. 618-9591-1333. www.dolphins.com.au

By Richard Ouzounian

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Two Big Australia Day Skyshows for Perth

The biggest Australia Day party will again be in Perth with the country's biggest fireworks skyshow on the Swan River foreshore.

The City of Perth Skyworks will light up the sky from 8pm (WST), with an Australian Spirit theme.

Internationally-known entertainer Rolf Harris will also contribute a "special feature" for the soundtrack.

But before the pyrotechnics begin, the city will also host free entertainment throughout the afternoon for families.

The Youth Zone concert at Langley Park will begin at 4.30pm with headline acts Amy Meredith and Stone Circle, as well as paintballing and cars.

Earlier, Survival Perth will be held in the Supreme Court Gardens to celebrate Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander history and culture.

Aboriginal artists will perform music over six hours including Kwarbah Djookian, James Scott, Ulla Shay, Walkabout Boys, Bartlett Brothers and The Yabu Band.

Across the river, the City of South Perth will host Celebration Zone at Sir James Mitchell Park with various entertainment and activities.

For those south of the river, the City of Fremantle will celebrate Australia Day with a free sausage sizzle and entertainment, as well as face painting and giant bubbles.

Performers will include the Vegemite Dancers, Aboriginal Dancers, Sunshine Brothers and Blue Shaddy, and the Village Art Markets will also be operating at the Esplanade.

From 8pm, the Cities of Fremantle and Cockburn will co-host the Indian Ocean Skyshow, launching the fireworks from a barge 300m off the coast at Bathers Bay.

Spectators are advised to view the show from Bathers Beach foreshore, the Round House, Esplanade Park, North Mole, Monument Hill, South Beach and Fishing Boat Harbour.

It's expected to reach 40C on Australia Day so people are being warned to remain hydrated.

The Fire and Emergency Services Authority (FESA) warns those attending the Skyworks to leave the sparklers at home because they can easily start a fire.

Police will also be out in force to target anti-social behaviour and alcohol-fuelled violence.

Commissioner Karl O'Callaghan said there would be designated alcohol zones.

"Drinking outside the zones is against the law and offenders face a $200 fine," he said.

"Under the Liquor Act, police have the power to seize alcohol, even if its unopened, from anyone drinking and deemed to be causing or likely to cause undue offence, annoyance, disturbance or inconvenience to others."

Last year, police issued almost 50 move on notices and 23 people were arrested.

Two Big Australia Day Skyshows for Perth

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Top 5 things to do on Australia Day in Perth

Top 5 things to do on Australia Day in Perth

1. Travel back in time

The world's best preserved example of a 19th century port streetscape is in Fremantle. Today 'Freo' is known for its laid-back ambience, street cafe culture, fresh fish and chips, gelato, and its aware winning micro-breweries.

2. The Perth scene

Perth is brimming with a plethora of small bars and restaurants cropping up everywhere in the CBD. Explore the city's laneways and back streets and enjoy the quality and sometimes quirky places to eat and drink at.

3. Picnic and barbecues

Western Australia is teeming with postcard-perfect picnic grounds. Picnicking on the river's edge, a game of frisbee at the park and feasting on a good old Aussie barbecue are popular pastimes in this sunny State.

4. Rediscover your favourite Perth beach

Perth beaches are nothing short of stunning and a trip along the Sunset Coast Tourist Drive is a great way to take in the sandy shores and turquoise waters.

5. Sample the delights of the Swan Valley

From wine tasting to art galleries, the Swan Valley is a perfect spot to awaken the senses, tantalise the tastebuds and escape the hustle and bustle of city life. You'll find some of Western Australia's finest wines and local produce here.

(Source: www.westernaustralia.com)

Celebrate Australia Day in WA

West Australians are getting ready to celebrate one of the State's favourite holidays, and with January 26 falling on a Thursday this year, it's a good chance for many to take an extra day off on Friday to enjoy a four-day weekend and a mini-break in the State.

The Australia Day public holiday presents the perfect time to experience Australian culture as well as take advantage of the many free activities happening around WA.

Around the city, popular celebration locations include vantage points around Perth City and the Swan River for spectacular views of the evening City of Perth Australia Day Skyworks, Western Australia's biggest annual community event, and Cottesloe Beach, where the Haviaianas Australia Day Thong Challenge will take place to raise money for Australian junior lifesaving group Nippers.

Across the State, fireworks will also add a wow-factor to celebrations in Bunbury and Fremantle; Williams, Busselton, and Kalgoorlie will host Australia day breakfast celebrations; the Wind on Water Festival takes place in Geraldton; Rockingham will hold the Fly the Flag Festival, and ceremonies and festivities will take place in Mandurah, Corrigin and towns across WA.

For those lucky enough to also have the Friday off and a four day weekend, it's the perfect chance to getaway for a few days. Whether it's wineries, caves, the coast, camping, fishing, exploring historic towns, taking a WA great drive or soaking up the nostalgia of the outback, the long weekend presents a great time to explore and unwind.

Celebrate Australia Day in WA

Thursday, January 19, 2012

UB40 Star in Perth for 80s Gig


Staving off jetlag with a red, red wine at a city hotel only an hour after landing in Perth yesterday, former UB40 frontman Ali Campbell admitted that he still doesn't travel too well.

"I'm like a fine wine, me," the 52-year-old reggae-pop legend joked to AAA. "Bit of sediment, you know what I mean, and I get shook up."

The Birmingham-born Campbell is in town to headline tomorrow night's 80s Dance Picnic Party, which also features Billy Ocean, Junior Marvin and Big Mountain.

Ian "Molly" Meldrum was due to host the event, before his pre-Christmas fall and subsequent hospitalisation. Campbell sent his best wishes to Meldrum and recalled playing early hit *One in Ten *on Countdown during UB40's first visit in 1981.

The English outfit also scored hits such as *Red Red Wine *, *(I Can't Help) Falling in Love With You *and *Here I Am (Come and Take Me) *in the 80s and early 90s.

Despite enjoying success well into the past decade - they picked up a Grammy nomination for 2006 album Who You Fighting For - Campbell quit UB40 in 2008 and now tours with a new line-up.

The singer explains that he walked after his bandmates refused to give him time off to tour and promote his solo album Running Free.

According to Campbell, there are long-running financial anomalies and he was "demonised" by the band's management as well as his older brother, singer *Robin Campbell *, and saxophonist *Brian Travers *.

The rest of UB40 have carried on without Campbell, with another brother, *Duncan *, joining the band. The singer has not spoken to either brother since he quit.

"I can't believe what they've done," Campbell said. "What they're busy doing is destroying the legacy of UB40. They are absolutely dire. I don't mind saying . . . it's shocking."

Campbell has released three solo albums but says he is still untangling himself from a "massive web of deceit and skulduggery" with his former bandmates.

"There's no going back," he said. "I'm thoroughly enjoying myself and I'm in control. After having compromised with eight people over 24 albums and being with them for 28 years - I could've killed them."

The singer, who embarked on his mission to promote reggae music after seeing *Bob M * *arley * *and the Wailers *play Birmingham in 1975, is happy to reflect on UB40's success.

The band emerged from the racially diverse area of Balsall Heath, where Campbell and his brothers would attend reggae house parties hosted by members of the local West Indian community. Taking their name from the Unemployment Benefit Form 40, their first proper gig was a fundraiser for the pro-welfare Claimant Union in 1980.

"We were disenfranchised, angry youth in Thatcher's Britain," Campbell says.

That same year, *Chrissie Hynde *approached them at a London gig to tour with the Pretenders, then the UK's hottest band. During the tour, UB40's debut single, *King/Food for Thought *was released and went to No. 4. UB40 rapidly became one of Britain's biggest bands, playing Top of the Pops and gracing the cover of Smash Hits. MTV also made them worldwide stars, airing the video to I Got You Babe, the 1985 duet with Hynde.

Campbell laughed at the memory of going from the dole to Top of the Pops in a few years. "I was voted Most Fancied Male at one point in one of the little girlie mags."

Monday, January 16, 2012

Australia Day 'Most important' for Nation

AN overwhelming majority of Australians have nominated Australia Day as the most significant day on the national calendar.

Almost nine in 10 people plan to celebrate the national holiday commemorating the arrival of the First Fleet in 1788 in some way, a survey by the National Australia Day Council shows.

It found 93 per cent of people named Australia Day as a day of importance - more than any other national celebration.

More than five million Australians plan to attend public events on January 26 including breakfasts, concerts, fireworks and celebrations of indigenous culture.

Council chief executive Warren Pearson said today the survey found many people felt celebrating Australia Day fulfilled a need to be part of a national community.

"Whether it be through attending major events, taking part in a local community celebration or simply getting your friends and family together, Australia Day plays a significant role in our sense of belonging, unity and identity," he said in a statement.

Australia Day 'Most important' for Nation

'Flawed' Waterfront Lacks Community Touch - Perth Development

THE community was left out of Perth waterfront redevelopment planning, resulting in it being "fundamentally flawed", a lobby of prominent architects and urban planners claims.

In a last-minute intervention, architect Linley Lutton, who heads up the newly-founded City Gatekeepers group, has spoken out about the flaws in the $440 million project, which he says the community does not support.

Major works for the waterfront project are due to start in April, with the State Government planning to transform 10 hectares of the foreshore into a new precinct linking the CBD to the Swan River.

An island will also be created within the inlet and connected to the waterfront by a pedestrian and cycle bridge.

Dr Lutton, director of Urbanix Design and Australian Institute of Urban Studies WA vice chair, told PerthNow it was not too late to put pressure on the State Government to alter the proposed redevelopment.

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Qantas Announces Miranda Kerr as New Qantas Ambassador

Qantas has announced Australian model, author and international superstar Miranda Kerr as a new Qantas Ambassador.

Qantas Chief Executive Officer Alan Joyce said he was delighted to welcome Miranda to the Qantas team.

"Miranda Kerr is one of the most photographed and recognisable people in the world," he said.

"Apart from her work commitments as an international model and businesswoman, Miranda will now represent Australia's premium airline."

"Miranda will make an outstanding contribution to the airline, the brand and its global reputation for premium service and excellence."

Ms Kerr said she was honoured to be chosen as a Qantas Ambassador.

"I grew up with Qantas which is such an iconic Australian brand. I'm proud of my Australian heritage and I'm so excited that I will now be able to represent Australia's premium airline around the world

"I travel frequently and from the moment I step onboard a Qantas flight I feel at home. I always enjoy the wonderful service, fabulous food and stylish cabins."

Miranda will tonight attend the Qantas Spirit of Australia cocktail event in Los Angeles. The party will celebrate Australian talent on the world stage and will be attended by actors, artists, designers, chefs and sports stars that represent the best of modern Australia wherever they go.

Miranda joins current Qantas ambassadors John Travolta, Cathy Freeman, Mark Webber, Greg Norman, Mark Schwarzer and John Eales.

Qantas Announces Miranda Kerr as New Qantas Ambassador

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Tourism WA Appoints Two New Executive Directors

Tourism Western Australia has announced the appointment of two new executive directors to lead the agency's marketing division and Eventscorp.

Following an extensive recruitment process, Gwyn Dolphin was appointed Executive Director Eventscorp and Simon Burley will take on the role of Executive Director Marketing.

Mr Burley joins Tourism WA from international beverage company Pernod Ricard, where he worked as the global brand director of Beefeater and Plymouth Gin. He has also had experience in some of Western Australia's key Asian markets such as China, South Korea and Japan to establish the Ballantine's Golf Championship.

As Executive Director Marketing, Mr Burley will be responsible for developing the State's Experience Extraordinary brand and expanding WA's international and domestic markets.

Mr Dolphin joins Tourism WA with an extensive international background, most recently at the Welsh Rugby Union and Millennium Stadium, where he was group marketing director with a remit covering all events and commercial operations. He previously managed Ford's 100 million Euro sponsorship of the UEFA Champions League football, was a managing partner in the WPP Group, ran Vodafone's global sports investments and, as an employee at Toyota, was a major part of the World Rally Championship-winning operation.

Mr Dolphin will lead Eventscorp and work to develop and attract new and exciting events to the State, while overseeing $36.7 million budget and the Government's sponsorship of around 85 events.

Monday, January 9, 2012

Is Australia’s tourism industry up to scratch?

When did you last feel pampered on an Australian holiday? That is, regardless of price, you felt a tourism operator went out of their way to make your holiday feel special. It might have been friendly hotel staff, an excellent waiter, or a business owner who implied nothing was too much trouble.

I know such tourism enterprises exist. The trouble is, too many slack operators drag others down. They have little regard for repeat business. Get as much as they can from tourists on their first and last visit, seems to be the mantra.

They let Australia’s natural beauty do too much of the work for them and seem lazy compared to overseas tourism operators that are far more professional.

What’s your view?

Are standards in Australia’s tourism industry falling?

• How do our tourism standards compare to those overseas?
• Have you encountered slack, overpriced tourism joints?
• What are the real problems in Australia’s tourism industry?
• Have the federal and state governments done enough to help the industry?

I feel sorry for passionate tourism operators who lose repeat business because terrible operators in their tourism “ecosystem” turn a potentially great Australian holiday into a good or average one.

Consider my recent family holiday to the Whitsundays. The accommodation was excellent: attentive staff, great service and zero stress. But the restaurant in town took an hour to serve meals, they did not arrive at the same time, and the waiter could not remember the orders.

The ice-cream man in the main street snapped at a nice old Italian woman who did not realise a queue had formed, and an island resort forced patrons to line up for 30 minutes on a hot day for an awful lunch. Not once were we asked where we hailed from, how our holiday was going or had a tourism attraction recommended.

It’s hard to feel sorry for the tourism industry when standards are this poor.

Yes, I’m nit-picking, but it’s a similar story in far too many Australian tourist destinations, where good operators are let down by poor ones, and innovation is lacking.

What would an American tourist think of such patchy service? I still had a good holiday, but not so good that I would rush to return. I thought, “Next year, I’ll spend the same amount on an overseas holiday that feels like a real holiday, rather than just staying in another town.”

To be fair, Australia’s tourism industry is under intense pressure. The global financial crisis saw more international travellers stay home, and our high dollar and cheap airfare packages encourage record numbers of Australians to travel overseas. Heavy discounting has forced some tourism operators to cut costs to maintain profit margins. All too often, service is the first casualty.

The short-term outlook for tourism is poor. “Australia will continue to lose its share of the global international traveller market as many new destinations emerge,” says business forecaster IBISWorld in its latest tourism industry report. IBIS says an equivalent of 30.2 per cent of Australia’s population takes an overseas trip each year and forecasts this to rise to 50 per cent by 2016-17. That’s a great opportunity in itself for nimble entrepreneurs who can cash in on Australia’s overseas travel boom.

Thank goodness many more Chinese tourists this decade will help offset less domestic travel in Australia.

Even so, it will be a terrible shame if more tourist operators give up on the domestic market as they chase Asian tourists. Our tourism industry has too much of a natural competitive advantage – the country’s vast beauty – to lose share to other destinations.

I’m no tourism expert, but I’ve seen too many industries respond poorly to structural and cyclical threats (retail is an example). The main solution has been to cut costs, damage product quality and wreck brands. Company morale falls and staff only turn up for the pay cheque. Decades of hard work are lost in a few years as even loyal customers start to give up on the product. Innovation and great leadership are lacking.

I wondered why tourism operators in my holiday town did not work closer together and find a way to compete and collaborate at the same time by cross-promoting attractions. I wish more tourist towns adopted a service code of ethics for tourism operators and enforced it. Maybe more stringent accreditation for tourist operators is needed. And I wonder if the quality of customer experiences in Australian tourism are audited enough and benchmarked against other countries.

I wasn’t asked once about the quality of my holiday or any product or service bought.

As an observer outside the tourism industry, it seems so much money is spent (and often wasted) on attracting tourists to Australia, and not enough on improving their travel experience and encouraging repeat business. Do enough international travellers to Australia rave about their experience upon returning home? What about domestic travellers?

A relative who recently returned from Hawaii gushed about the experience and customer service (right or wrong, tipping makes a big difference.) I reckon Far North Queensland has Hawaii covered for natural beauty, but with too much patchy service and standards in Australian tourism, it’s getting harder to make the case to holiday locally – at least for big trips.

Disney Live! Mickey's Music Festival

These summer holidays, Mickey Mouse and his band of friends, Minnie Mouse, Donald Duck and Goofy, will perform in the musical extravaganza Disney Live! Mickey's Music Festival. Joined by Disney favourites, Aladdin, The Little Mermaid, and Disney/Pixar's Toy Story, this fun-filled concert experience is sure to entertain the whole family!

Disney hits are remixed to the hottest sounds of today featuring hip hop, pop, swing, reggae, rock, country and much more! The irresistible lineup of performers including, Mickey, Minnie, Donald and Goofy, Ariel, Sebastian and Ursula; Jasmine, Aladdin and Genie, Woody, Buzz and Jessie are among the more than 25 Disney stars featured in this jam session!

You can't resist dancing, singing, playing your air-guitar and laughing with this band of characters! Come join them at Disney Live! Mickey's Music Festival for a lively concert experience guaranteed to deliver enough rockin' memories to last a lifetime.

For more information visit www.disneylive.com.au

TOUR DATES*:

Wed 28 - Fri 30 Dec - Riverside Theatre, Perth Convention and Exhibition Centre
Fri 6 & Sat 7 Jan - Gold Coast Convention and Exhibition Centre
Mon 9 & Tue 10 Jan - Brisbane Convention and Exhibition Centre
Tue 17 & Wed 18 Jan - Newcastle Entertainment Centre
Sat 21 Jan - WIN Entertainment Centre, Wollongong
Mon 23 & Tue 24 Jan - Adelaide Entertainment Centre
*Ticketek is selling for the above venues only.

Book at Ticketek

Disney Live! Mickey's Music Festival

Test Selectors Set to Go with Spinner for Perth, Meaning Paceman Mitchell Starc is Set to Miss Out

CURATOR Cam Sutherland will need to lose his lawnmower for Michael Starc to play as the fourth fast bowler in Perth.

The tall and talented NSW left armer bowled some unplayable deliveries on the way to claiming three cheap wickets during a man of the match performance for the Sydney Sixers against the Sydney Thunder in Sunday night’s rain-marred Big Bash derby at ANZ Stadium.

And the WACA Ground pitch is currently as green as St Patrick’s Day.

But Sydney Sixers chief executive Stuart Clark is one who believes it would be a mistake to include his young and unpredictable paceman for the third Test against India, beginning on Friday.

Clark was part of a four-man pace attack when Australia last played India in Perth four years ago, and lost there to India for the first time.

Shaun Tait was the extra fast bowler, who failed to take wicket in either innings and then broke down with physical and mental exhaustion.

“I always felt that with four quicks there was an extra bowler for no apparent reason,” Clark told Summer of Cricket yesterday.

“I don’t think the attack is balanced without a spinner or another option.

“I’m sure if the wicket is that green there may be the option not to play a spinner but that’s few and far between.

“Without a spinner you’ve got over rate issues.

“And with the breeze over there (in Perth), if you can find an off-spinner who can curve the ball, which Lyon can do really well, that would always be my go.”

There is the counter argument that Australia thrashed England in Perth last summer for their only Test victory during a miserable Ashes series by playing four quicks for just the third time in 20 years. The other two were against India.

The returning Ryan Harris and injured Mitchell Johnson claimed nine wickets each while Peter Siddle and Ben Hilfenhaus claimed just one apiece.

And with the breeze blowing from the east, instead of the prevailing Fremantle Doctor from the south west, Johnson, a left-armer like Starc, rediscovered the inswinger for one of the few times in his career.

While captain Michael Clarke and coach Mickey Arthur are hedging their bets to see how the wicket will look closer to Test, it will take a huge change in philosophy or little change in the pitch for Starc to make the final XI.

Both men have made it clear in recent days that they prefer to take a spinner into every Test.

“I'm hoping that wicket is similar to what we played on against England last summer where it's got a lot of pace and bounce and some sideways movement,” Clarke said after Australia thumped India by an innings at the SCG to take a 2-0 lead in the four-Test series.

“If that's the case there's an option there (to play four fast bowlers) but I always love having a spinner in our team and I continue to say I think Nathan Lyon is doing a terrific job for this team.”

A day later Arthur reinforced his captain’s view.

“I don't like going into a Test match without a spinner because I think a spinner changes tempo, it just gives you variation,” Arthur said.

Test Selectors Set to Go with Spinner for Perth, Meaning Paceman Mitchell Starc is Set to Miss Out

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons - Perth Show - Australia

Legendary American pop music icon Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons will perform in Perth on Tuesday, March 27 at the Pioneer Women's Memorial, Kings Park & Botanic Garden from 4pm.

Coming to fame in the 1960s Valli’s is stronger than ever in the 21st Century.

Fans can expect to hear Valli and his band The Four Seasons perform much loved hits on their national tour of Australia, including songs such as Sherry, Let’s Hang On, Bye Bye Baby (Baby Goodbye), Big Girls Don’t Cry, Walk Like a Man, Rag Doll, Can’t Take My Eyes Off You and Working My Way Back To You.

The band has had 71 chart hits in the US including 40 in the Top 40, 19 in the Top 10 and eight reaching number one.

Valli has toured constantly since 1962 and his songs have featured in such movies as The Deer Hunter, Dirty Dancing, Mrs. Doubtfire, Conspiracy Theory and The Wanderers.

As many as 200 artists have done cover versions of Valli’s Can’t Take My Eyes Off You from Nancy Wilson to Lauryn Hill.

Tickets are on sale now for $109 at www.ticketmaster.com.au or 136 100.

Health Experts Fume Over Perth Airport’s New Smoking Rooms

Perth has decided to allow smoking at the airport – not in the main concourse but in specially designated smoking rooms.

The West Australian reports that a purpose-built smokers’ area is being built at the southern end of the domestic terminal. It will open next month, with a second facility to follow in the international terminal.

Smoking rooms – usually unadorned and grim-looking places with extractor fans working overtime to suck out as much smoke as possible – are a feature of many airports in Asia and Europe. Even Singapore Changi has one, though Singapore’s official policy is firmly anti-smoking.

Those airports accept that if smokers cannot smoke in flight, they may want to do so on arrival. Airports don’t want smokers sneaking illicit puffs in toilets.

In Australia, the Airports Act 1996 prohibits smoking in any part of an airport in which there is a sign bearing the words ‘No-Smoking’. While designated smoking rooms are permissible, they have been removed from, or not installed at, Australian airports. As a result, desperate smokers rush outside and light up outside terminals, creating clouds of passive smoke that plagues non-smokers and risks the health of children.

Australian Council on Smoking and Health president Mike Daube labelled the prospect of a purpose-built smoking room at Perth Airport “a shocking step backwards”.

The airport should just have banned smoking outright, he said.

Western Australia, famed for its healthy lifestyle, has one of the lowest rates of smoking in Australia.

“We can now confidently predict that smoking will decline from 16.6% nationally (14.8% in WA) to below 10% within a few years, and will then go into freefall,” Daube said last year.

Cigarettes kill one in two regular users, he added.

Written by : Peter Needham

(Source: eglobaltravelmedia.com.au)

Health Experts Fume Over Perth Airport’s New Smoking Rooms

Monday, January 2, 2012

The Hopman Cup is to Stay in Perth

THE official with the job of securing the operational rights of the Hopman Cup for Tennis Australia yesterday guaranteed the tournament's future remained in Perth.

Tennis Australia's commercial director Steve Ayles dismissed fears the national body, which has submitted a detailed proposal to the International Tennis Federation amid a review of the tournament, had any desire to downgrade or delete the event should it win the managerial rights.

He said Tennis Australia would happily accept any contractual requirements that would require the Hopman Cup, which will move from the Burswood Dome to the new Perth Arena next year, to be played in Western Australia under its current format.

"We have no interest in moving the week. We have no interest in moving the location," Ayles said.

"From our perspective it is an event that Perth really supports, really gets behind.

"We only have an interest in growing it, making it bigger and integrating it in with the Western Australian tennis community more than it currently is."

He questioned suggestions the field would be weakened if Tennis Australia, which runs the Brisbane International in the same week, were successful in its bidding.

Ayles said the Hopman Cup's history of hosting future winners of the Australian Open ensured quality players would always consider it an option.

Tournament director and founder Paul McNamee has lured 24 top-ranked players to Perth in its 24-year history.

"First of all, the players choose where they go for their preparation. Some players like the more relaxed nature of the Hopman Cup and some players prefer the more intense tour competition," Ayles said.

"The players will choose the best pathway to give them the best opportunity to win the Australian Open. That is what the Hopman Cup is about. That is what Brisbane is about . . . that is what those events do.

"Just look at the fields this year for both of the events. They have both attracted great fields and there is no reason why we can't grow that."

The Tennis Australia guarantee comes as McNamee yesterday said he feared for the future of the long-running event if the ITF chose to change management.

McNamee transferred ownership rights to the ITF, which is expected to decide on the rights to the tournament at a meeting in March, in 2002 in the belief it would secure its long-term future.

"I've been heavily involved since the beginning. I love the tournament," McNamee he said.

"There always needs to be transition and succession and everything else. That's normal. But I feel like I've earned the right to have a say in that transition."

Quality Perth Hotel Accommodation at Metro Hotel Perth