From: Subject: Bulletin > News > WTC attack > Bush: 'We're at war' Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2001 19:05:19 +1000 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/related; boundary="----=_NextPart_000_0036_01C142D0.5B3957C0"; type="text/html" X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V5.00.2615.200 This is a multi-part message in MIME format. ------=_NextPart_000_0036_01C142D0.5B3957C0 Content-Type: text/html; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable Content-Location: http://bulletin.ninemsn.com.au/bulletin/eddesk.nsf/printing/408C5CE916694857CA256ACB001D955B Bulletin > News > WTC attack > Bush: 'We're at = war' News > WTC attack > Bush: 'We're at war'" = name=3DTITLE>



September 19, 2001 =

NEWS > WTC ATTACK
BUSH:=20 'WE'RE AT WAR'=20


As the=20 deadliest attack on American soil in history opens a scary new kind of = conflict,=20 the manhunt begins. By Evan Thomas and Mark Hosenball. =

Such a polite, neat young man. He brought his = landlord=20 coffee and cookies. He remembered to use his frequent-flier number when = he=20 bought his ticket from Boston to Los Angeles – business class. And = a good=20 student, too, reported his flight instructor, though he seemed more = interested=20 in turning the plane than landing it. A little standoffish, maybe, but = he could=20 knock back a vodka with his buddies. So it was uncharacteristic for = Mohamed Atta=20 to be running a little behind when he boarded American Airlines Flight = 11 on=20 Tuesday shortly before 8am. One of his bags never made it aboard, but = maybe that=20 was intentional, too, for inside was a suicide note.=20

The FBI believes that Atta was in control when = Flight 11=20 crashed into the North Tower of the World Trade Center, but maybe not. = The=20 hijackers had an abundance of piloting talent – four of the five = terrorists=20 aboard had some flight training. Indeed, there were enough hijackers = with=20 piloting skills to fly four airliners – two for New York, and two = for=20 Washington.

At the White House on that beautiful, clear = morning, the=20 occupants were running for their lives. Vice-President Dick Cheney had = already=20 been hustled into a bunker designed to withstand the shock of a nuclear = blast=20 when, at about 9:30am, Secret Service men told staffers leaving the West = Wing to=20 run, not walk, as far away as possible. "There's a plane overhead, don't = look=20 back!" shouted a policeman. Agents were yelling at women to shed their=20 high-heeled shoes so they could run faster. Several staffers saw a = civilian=20 airliner, reflecting white in the bright sunlight, appearing to circle = nearby.=20 Perhaps unable to spot the White House, the hijackers at the control of = American=20 Airlines Flight 77 dive-bombed the Pentagon instead.=20

How could a small band of religious zealots knock = down the=20 World Trade Center, the most visible symbol of capitalism, killing = thousands in=20 lower Manhattan, and come so close to destroying the executive mansion = of the=20 most powerful nation on earth? Part of the answer is that few US = government=20 officials really believed they could. Consider the dazed reaction of top = officials of the Federal Aviation Administration, the agency charged = with safely=20 controlling the nation's airways. Although a couple of aircraft had been = behaving erratically on the radar screens of flight controllers for at = least 15=20 minutes, officials at FAA headquarters did not suspect that a hijacking = had=20 occurred until the second plane, United Airlines Flight 175, rammed the = South=20 Tower of the World Trade Center at 9:05. A half hour later, when the = third=20 plane, American Flight 77, hit the Pentagon, the FAA officials responded = in=20 classic bureaucratic fashion. "Get out your security manuals," ordered = one top=20 official. The officials dutifully began reading their manuals to = determine who=20 among them were deemed "essential" and should stay and work, and who = should go=20 home for the day.

US Air Force fighter planes did not arrive to = protect the=20 nation's capital for another 15 minutes. Pentagon officials had watched=20 helplessly as the suicide airliner bore in on the nation's military = command=20 center. In the chaotic aftermath, the plane at the greatest risk of = getting shot=20 down was the one flying the attorney-general of the United States. At = least=20 that's the way it seemed to the pilot, David Clemmer, a Vietnam combat = veteran=20 who received a warning as he flew the nation's chief law-enforcement = officer,=20 John Ashcroft, back to Washington from an aborted speaking engagement in = the=20 Midwest. Land your plane immediately, Clemmer was instructed by an = air-traffic=20 controller, or risk getting shot down by the US Air Force. Clemmer = turned to an=20 FBI agent assigned to guard Ashcroft and said, "Well, Larry, we're in = deep=20 kimchi here, and basically, all the rules you and I know are out the = window."=20 The pilot notified air-traffic controllers that he was carrying the = attorney=20 general – but was worried that the message wouldn't get through to = military=20 commanders controlling the airspace around Washington. "Thinking out of = the=20 box", as Clemmer put it, he asked for – and got – a fighter = escort into=20 Washington. His plane, guarded by an F-16, was one of the last to land = on the=20 East Coast that day.=20

Within a day or two, the haplessness, the = confusion, the=20 mentality of "it can't happen here" had been wiped away, perhaps = forever. An=20 aircraft carrier patrolled off New York Harbor, past the skyline so = horrifically=20 sundered by the destruction of the World Trade Center. Washington was an = armed=20 camp on hair-trigger alert. "We're at war," declared President George W. = Bush.=20 "We will not only deal with those who dare attack America, we will deal = with=20 those who harbor them and feed them and house them." The FBI had = launched the=20 largest manhunt in history, code-named PENTTBOM (for Pentagon and Twin = Towers),=20 tracking the suspected 19 suicide bombers and their backers around the = nation=20 and abroad. Intelligence officials told Newsweek that they feared = that between 30=20 and 50 teams of terrorists were still on the loose. It was hard to tell = if the=20 threat was real, or if America was gripped with the sort of frenzy that = seized=20 the nation after the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor – and many = citizens assumed=20 that Japanese troops would soon be marching on Chicago. Northwest = Airlines=20 confirmed that flight attendants were staying away from work in droves. = And bomb=20 scares became routine. By Saturday, FBI agents had detained 25 people = wanted for=20 questioning on immigration violations and issued arrest warrants for two = other=20 "material witnesses."=20

Congress will no doubt hold hearings to assign the = fault for=20 a massive failure of intelligence. At the CIA, Newsweek has learned, = officials looked at=20 the Justice Department's list of dead hijackers aboard American Flight = 77, the=20 plane that hit the Pentagon, and recognized three of them as terrorism = suspects.=20 ("Oh s…t," exclaimed one official.) In late August, the agency had asked the = FBI to find two of the men, one of whom was believed to be = connected to=20 a suspect in the October 2000 bombing of the destroyer the = USS Cole. But the FBI was = still looking=20 when the hijackers struck.=20

The blame game will go on. But the finger-pointing = may miss=20 a darker and more troubling truth about the shocking attack. It is very=20 difficult for a free and open society to defend against terrorists who = are at=20 once patient, smart and willing to die. The operatives run by Al Qaeda, = the=20 terrorist organization that reports to bin Laden, appear to be all = three. As the=20 PENTTBOM investigation exposes the sophisticated and long-conceived = suicide=20 plot, a portrait of evil genius emerges.=20

It is often said that Islamic extremists wish to = turn back=20 history. They want to destroy the Western modernity that threatens to = eclipse=20 their fantasy of an 11th-century theocracy. But, like a judo expert who=20 leverages his opponent's superior weight and mass against him, Islamic=20 terrorists have found a diabolically clever way to flip the Great Satan = on his=20 back. Blending into American society for months and even years, quietly = awaiting=20 the signal to move, bin Laden's operatives have learned how to turn two = of=20 America's greatest strengths – openness and technology – = into weapons against=20 the American people. Armed with pocket knives, they transformed US = airliners=20 into guided missiles, flying bombs packed with 60,000 gallons of = explosive fuel.=20 That feat, while awesome, could be just the beginning. Talking on cell = phones=20 and by encrypted e-mail, operatives in bin Laden's far-flung network can = communicate from Afghanistan to Miami with little risk of immediate = detection.=20 It is chilling to think what they could accomplish if they get their = hands on=20 the acme of Western military science, the nuclear bomb. Without doubt, = they are=20 trying.=20

"The ability to take our expertise and turn it on = us is=20 exhilarating to them," says Senator Ron Wyden, a member of the Senate=20 intelligence committee. "They stay at it and stay at it to learn how to = defeat=20 our technological systems. It's like rattling doors through the = neighborhood,=20 looking for one to break in. That's what they're doing with our = technology." The=20 lock to America's rickety, overburdened air-control system was = especially easy=20 to pick. But America's water and electrical supplies aren't much better=20 safeguarded. And teenage computer hackers have already demonstrated how = to use=20 the wide-open Internet to wreck cyberhavoc on American businesses and=20 homes.=20

For all their professed devotion to medieval = religiosity,=20 the terrorists themselves appear to have comfortably blended into = American=20 culture. They do not appear to be poor, or desperate or down on their = luck, like=20 the stereotype of a young Arab man drawn to the false promise of = entering=20 Paradise through martyrdom. At least one of the 19 had a family, and all = apparently lived comfortable middle-class lives, with enough money to = rent cars,=20 go to school and violate the Quran's ban on alcohol by visiting the = occasional=20 bar. A senior European intelligence official told Newsweek that some of the = hijackers may=20 have had Swiss bank accounts, which have now been frozen by Swiss = authorities.=20 Two of the alleged hijackers aboard Flight 93, Ahmed Alhaznawi and Ziad = Jarrahi,=20 drove a Ford Ranger and lived in a quiet neighborhood in = Lauderdale-by-the-Sea,=20 Florida. In front of the house was a wooden wind chime carrying the = message THIS=20 HOUSE IS FULL OF LOVE. Newsweek has learned that the Pentagon has referred to the FBI = reports that=20 three of the hijackers may have received help from Uncle Sam – as = trainees at=20 Pensacola Naval Air Station in Florida; two others may have studied at = Air Force=20 facilities.=20

Osama bin Laden, their spiritual leader and = financier, comes=20 from a privileged background himself. One of more than 50 children of = Yemeni=20 billionaire parents who got rich off construction contracts in Saudi = Arabia, bin=20 Laden, for a time, made money on those most Western of beverages, Coke = and=20 Pepsi. During the early '90s, while he lived in Sudan, he owned part of = a=20 company that produced gum arabic, an essential ingredient of many soft = drinks.=20 Bin Laden may not have a vast personal fortune, at least not the $300 = million=20 ascribed to him, but he is able to secure funds from nefarious sources.=20 According to intelligence sources, his agents are involved in drug = running and=20 he receives "blood money" payment from frightened Arab regimes that want = to buy=20 protection from his zealotry. According to US intelligence sources, bin = Laden is=20 able to pay pensions to the families of suicide bombers.=20

Mohamed Atta was, according to investigators, the = perfect=20 soldier in bin Laden's army. He was a citizen of the world. Traveling on = a=20 passport from the United Arab Emirates, he lived in Germany for a time, = studying=20 at the Technical University in Hamburg. He frequented a nightspot named = Sharky's=20 Billiard Bar ("the Bar With Mega-Possibilities"), wore black jeans, and = rented –=20 but failed to return – a video of John Carpenter's Vampire. At the = same time, he=20 requested and received a prayer room at the university for himself and = about 20=20 other Muslim students. In the last two years, he began to wear Muslim = dress.=20

Atta, 33, may have had a shadowy past. According = to German=20 authorities, he is suspected in the bombing of an Israeli bus in 1986, = when he=20 was only 18 or 19 years old. If true, he should have been denied = immigration=20 visas. Instead, he was able to move freely between Germany and the = United=20 States. He was clearly preparing for some sort of terrorist action for = months.=20 According to law-enforcement authorities, he may have begun casing Logan = Airport=20 in Boston more than six months ago. And, Newsweek has learned, he was = seen last=20 winter in Norfolk, Virginia, where, the FBI believes, he may have been = surveying=20 the giant US Navy base as a target. Already, say investigators, there = are=20 important links between the hijackers who attacked American targets last = week=20 and the plotters who tried to sink the USS=20 Cole in Yemen last October.=20

Atta had plenty of cash. He wrote a $US10,000 = check to take=20 flight lessons at one of Florida's many flight schools. (Because of its=20 year-round good weather and proximity to the beach, Florida attracts = many=20 international flight students, especially from the Middle East; = background=20 checks are said to be minimal.) Last December, he and another man paid = $US1500=20 for six hours in a Boeing 727 simulator. "Looking back at it, it was a = little=20 strange that all they wanted to do was turns," Henry George, who runs = SimCenter,=20 Inc., at Opa-Locka Airport, told The Miami=20 Herald. "Most people who come here want to = do=20 takeoffs and landings."

At the time, Atta aroused no suspicion. When he = turned in=20 his rent-a-car in Pompano Beach, Florida., on September 9, before = heading north=20 on his suicide mission, he reminded the dealer, Brad Warrick, that the = car=20 needed to be serviced. "The only thing out of the ordinary," Warrick = recalled,=20 "was that he was nice enough to let me know the car needed an oil = change."=20

Atta and several friends were regulars at a Venice = bar=20 called the 44th Aero Squadron, decorated in the motif of a = bomber-squadron=20 bunker, complete with sandbags. "I never had any problems with them," = said the=20 owner, Ken Schortzmann. They didn't want to be bothered, but didn't = drink=20 heavily and flirt with the waitresses, like some of the other flight = students.=20 Atta seemed to be the leader. "He had a fanny pack with a big roll of = cash in=20 it," said Schortzmann.

Last week Atta and two of his buddies seem to have = gone out=20 for a farewell bender at a seafood bar called Shuckums. Atta drank five=20 Stoli-and-fruit-juices, while one of the others drank rum and Coke. For = once,=20 Atta and his friends became agitated, shouting curse words in Arabic, = reportedly=20 including a particularly blasphemous one that roughly translates as "F = … k God."=20 There was a squabble when the waitress tried to collect the $US48 bill = (her=20 shift was ending and she wanted her tip). One of the Arabs became = indignant. "I=20 work for American Airlines. I'm a pilot," he said. "What makes you think = I'd=20 have a problem paying the bill?"=20

Although investigators now suspect that Atta may = been the=20 leader of his cell, it is not clear if and when he was, in effect, = "triggered."=20 The pattern of bin Laden's terrorism is to insert operatives into a = country=20 where they are "sleepers," burrowed deep into the local culture, leading = normal=20 lives while awaiting orders. Intelligence sources believe that one or = two=20 control agents run by bin Laden's Qaeda may have slipped into the US in = the last=20 couple of weeks to activate the airliner plot.

The idea of using suicide pilots may have been = germinating=20 for a long time. One of the other pilot-hijackers on Flight 11, Waleed = Alshehri,=20 attended flight school in Florida in 1997. Last week FBI director Robert = Mueller=20 told a news conference, "The fact that they received flight training in = the US=20 is news." But maybe it shouldn't have been. Only last September an = Orlando,=20 Florida, cabdriver named Ihab Ali was indicted for refusing to answer = questions=20 about his ties to the bin Laden organization, including his "pilot = training in=20 Oklahoma", according to court papers. Indeed, the records of the = terrorism trial=20 in New York for the August 1998 bombings of two US embassies in Africa = offer a=20 wealth of information about bin Laden's use of US-trained pilots. One of = them,=20 Essam Al-Ridi, who had been trained at a Texas flight school, was a key=20 government witness, testifying that bin Laden's associates used him to = try to=20 buy a private jet to transport Stinger ground-to-air missiles from = Pakistan to=20 Sudan.=20

It is not known exactly how many of bin Laden's = operatives=20 are still on the loose. One of the most intriguing suspects may be Amer = Mohammed=20 Kamfar, 41. Last winter or fall, he showed up in Florida and took flight = lessons=20 at FlightSafety Academy. He rented a house in Vero Beach, where he had a = wife,=20 who dressed in the traditional chador, and several children. Kamfar, who = called=20 himself "John", "shopped at Wal-Mart and ate a lot of pizza", according = to a=20 neighbor. Two weeks ago he packed up his family and left the area. Last = week=20 Florida cops put out an all-points bulletin, warning that Kamfar may be = toting=20 an AK-47.

Two of the suicide bombers may have just slipped = out of the=20 federal government's grasp. According to intelligence sources, on August = 21 the=20 CIA passed along information to the Immigration and Naturalization = Service on a=20 man who belonged on the watch list for terror suspects. The man, Khalid=20 al-Midhar, had been videotaped in Kuala Lumpur talking to one of the = suspected=20 terrorists in the Cole=20 bombing (the man is now in jail in Yemen). When the INS ran its = database, it=20 found that al-Midhar was already inside the US. The CIA asked the FBI to = find=20 him and an associate, Salem Alhamzi. But the bureau didn't have much to = go on.=20 They listed their US residence as "the Marriott Hotel in New York". = There are 10=20 Marriott-run hotels in New York. The bureau checked all of them and = found=20 nothing. Al-Midhar and Alhamzi were listed among the five hijackers of = American=20 Airlines Flight 77.=20

Ever since the Customs Service foiled an apparent = bomb plot=20 on the eve of the millennium, US intelligence has been very edgy about = an attack=20 on America. The man caught crossing between British Columbia and Seattle = with=20 explosives and timers in his car, Ahmed Ressam, later confessed that he = planned=20 to blow up Los Angeles International Airport. Ressam allegedly worked = for a=20 shadowy group of Algerian terrorists with ties to bin Laden.=20

Twice a week, the "Threat Committee," a group of = top=20 intelligence officials and diplomats, meets in the White House complex = to review=20 dozens of terrorist threats at home and abroad. In late June the CIA = warned of=20 possible terrorist action against US targets, including those in the US, = for the=20 Fourth of July. Nothing happened, but then in July the agency again = warned about=20 possible attacks overseas. The threat seemed grave enough to force US = ships in=20 Middle Eastern ports to head for sea. Three weeks ago there was another = warning=20 that a terrorist strike might be imminent. But there was no mention of = where. On=20 September 10, Newsweek=20 has learned, a group of top Pentagon officials suddenly cancelled travel = plans=20 for the next morning, apparently because of security concerns.=20

But no one even dreamed that four airliners would = be=20 hijacked and plunged into targets in New York and Washington. Some = officials=20 complain that the intelligence community has been too focused on = terrorists=20 obtaining weapons of mass destruction – biological, chemical and = nuclear – while=20 overlooking low-tech threats – like the use of penknives and box = cutters to=20 hijack a plane.=20

The Threat Committee has every reason to worry = about bin=20 Laden's trying to get hold of a nuke. During the New York trial of the = men=20 accused of bombing the embassies in Africa, one bin Laden associate = testified=20 that the boss had hatched a 1993 plan to spend $1.5 million to buy = black-market=20 uranium. He apparently failed – that time.=20

Now the Bush administration and Congress seemed = primed to do=20 just about anything to foil future attacks. Justice Department lawyers = have been=20 told to take a fresh look at "everything," one official said. Perhaps = the most=20 startling idea under examination would be a new presidential order = authorizing=20 secret military tribunals to try accused terrorists. The idea first = occurred to=20 former attorney general William Barr after the bombing of Pan Am Flight = 103 over=20 Lockerbie, Scotland, in 1988. Barr, at the time chief of the Justice=20 Department's Office of Legal Counsel, got the idea after learning that = his=20 office was used during World War II to try – in secret – = German saboteurs who=20 were later hanged. The idea was rejected, but it's being revived on the = theory=20 that terrorists are de facto military "combatants" who don't deserve the = full=20 run of constitutional rights.=20

Civil libertarians may baulk, but never = underestimate the=20 desire for revenge. Consider some statistics: more people were killed by = the=20 suicide hijackers last week than the number of American soldiers killed = in the=20 entire American Revolution. Or at Antietam, the bloodiest one-day battle = of the=20 Civil War. Or at Pearl Harbor. Or on D-Day. And those were soldiers. War = had=20 become more and more remote and sterile to Americans who experienced = combat as a=20 phenomenon that occurred on TV, either in movies or occasionally by = watching=20 cruise missiles light up Baghdad on the evening news. Now those same = American=20 civilians are in a war. Not as spectators, but as targets.

  • With Michael Isikoff, Dan Klaidman, Martha = Brant,=20 Debra Rosenberg, Weston Kosova, Andy Murr, George Wehrfritz, Catharine = Skipp=20 and John Lantigua.

=A9 = 2001 Newsweek,=20 Inc


Material in The=20 Bulletin is protected under the Commonwealth Copyright Act 1968. No = material may=20 be reproduced in part or in whole without written consent from the = copyright=20 holders. =20 = International politics, Society>Terrorism, Specials>US = Crisis, Industry>Aviation, Government>Security, Government>Armed forces, = Society>Police, Society>Extremism, Society>History, Society>Religion, = Technology>Computer security, Government>Infrastructure, Society>Crime, = Society>Drugs, Society>Education">=20 = ------=_NextPart_000_0036_01C142D0.5B3957C0 Content-Type: application/octet-stream Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64 Content-Location: http://bulletin.ninemsn.com.au/bulletin/eddesk.nsf/Bulletin%20Logo%20Small?OpenImageResource R0lGODlh3ABCAPf/AP///wgICBAQEBgYGCEhISkpKTExMTk5OUJCQkpKSlJSUlpaWmNjY2tra3Nz c3t7e4SEhIyMjJSUlJycnKWlpa2trbW1tb29vcbGxs7OztbW1t7e3ufn5+/v7/f39//39//v73Nr a//n5//e3kI5OffW1v/W1v/Ozv/Gxko5Oe+1tUIxMf+9vSEYGP+1tf+trRgQEP+lpe+UlP+cnCkY GP+UlP+MjP+EhP97e/9zc/9ra/9jY/9aWhgICP9SUv9KSudCQv9CQv85Of8xMf8pKf8hIf8YGOcQ EP8QEP8ICAgAABAAABgAAFIAAFoAAGMAAGsAAHMAAHsAANYAAN4AAOcAAO8AAPcAAP8AAPf//87W 1tbe3t7n57W9vb3GxoyUlJylpXN7e2tzc3uEhGNra1JaWlpjY0pSUkJKSjlCQjE5OSkxMUpaWiEp KRghITlSUhAYGAgQEAAICAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAACwAAAAA3ABCAEAI/wABCBxI sKDBgwgTKlzIsKHDhxAjSpxIsaJFhTNwCMGCxQgOHCIGbsRy4qLJkyhTqoQIggjHlzBjypzJ8UfB GxyFGBxpgkXOgSCSYCECoAZHHUCN0ORY5IPIpRxNrEz4AioWpAY/FIFqJOTUiC2tBjGIQijUGQN1 WLVB8IRVmwJBKF3a9ClUqQXVWoXqw6nAGXtpJhkBQCtUJF4B/LBqIkdgLCxYuny8F0nkvGvbvk0K ta7AkUvxAtC7NAZBF1Z9FKwKFWtBw0sRD1wM9bJAHFZrPAwLdSxBEFuhwhVImibbgW6Fc6brFwBo mqKLU16qmiDrpa4JGn4yR0l370qULP8ZQKD8kiVKaJAgkYJEi/NLYJQvL0D8ku7w50jBotsh76W+ EeSTVWgRlxlym8U1F02eOcdYWlaZNhBqfK1mVXYDGQbFeeIxoQQT6LVgQAEF9PAheh3Ct0QLa5Rn QAvhqSiefvztNtl0B2YYXGA6mEXTcHJ11txzM4lW2BA40oTCQTfuNVhhO84km0C0LbXkQIBB1d9X XHbp5ZdghinmmGSWaaaN0yWRBBJGFDHEDjMYaRBOWOhU0EgjoPBTXEhgUURRHOWQ4YIzNRjEg2c6 BBtNSBCWKFBNzhRgXFEqCWaQzNkV2kMffCACCCA05xCF2J35AQgiiCrRfzRNKpANYhH/JJ1MN2im nIJCagrdQCZYlcQMoM7gI00lmWBDDTPwYNUQM9TgbA1OLSplYlUmOZOEDbFqLUw+OCqrVbUieCsA mDI4JKKj+YqEmmqmZmFrB0kr05SKWXXlX7mh2RtZe2E7a0zhCpTcUkASKlODRMoUXYQWXUcThgIZ 5sQcAmzRAQAeVJBxBxd0oLEFGGAAQAYQWLCBxmBk0AEGG2CQQcgYTLBBBw/MMQcUNfoXqUyuZpmr gVYRgWzCMhX8s4N3DYQbVDwQ5BhUglpnVYM6HkatvQT5TNOWDIHgAxFDgC122GSPDfYQQexwwwsn qIrQBzgQ0SdHaw4BrUAmEGF22US4//ZBEHuLTcQPze3gZuBhe3vQCTcIUcS6MbFJhA8vJLbQBy/w UPbmZ4f0wQ+I6x1EYjoczvkQQ5Q0oel7F/HCo7DHLvvsX86Qw0e44wACljnkYDntwAc/O512ErTR mi/t8C0WcyehuvDQJ6rtthyNbhCsde7E0Ql6Zs8nFknwkMMNOLgw6NGHJh3mCTvo4P777++ArXaV Rq649Ehy1bsOPwxLHUHE0x5JBjQEAEbueR8wWEyKsDuBpG9TYXLYTCAmkBvooHcYxKAOdCc7EOQP QAaR4LUGsgNwEaR7BDsfXRoIgAfu6iAisMHOGAQSgxhlW4RJ4GG8Va2ZXAYH/oNJwP9288FWkSWI MbHNv4RoqxRGTIEwYeBAXFgkAVEvJq8DgNbSlMP6waRRs7EKFBn1O4V4MFYEiUHQRLXElwxxYD9S IYNYSEWFKY1hE7JK1AYiwphQUF72CyNXVPcCJMKEaws5I/V+4IIRuA1CUHljggozRqbQEV1t5Mj8 SEWT6vDxQvHy4kvASCWsYSlf/imilHawAx8IYW5QGQIbTSguJ1KyM5dUX7quGBNPCqSPMPmjKDli BB6aUiBq1BIR0ZjGvTwvk1iQ5Lh0uMIpYvJCKHCBNrfJzW4+75egzMpWJuYAAGxAAR7IgAACYDN2 BkAOcygABB7AgAgoYA7uxKfN9jn/Bw1ggJ84Q6QZVcmzIxIIkkuRpi2pOUdr6hKa8wPmS4YDTniJ EwsTgwAAJrAAAERAAxXQwAIU4FEAOMABGujABgrAAQtkQAMBwMAFLPCFCmSAAhVg2QU84AA2PCFn 2SJoTFwFAOxBxXxAW4ryPjnNSvoplxDcZWlO4y6pWfQ1w2SeMaFyLy2iMqh7GYLjKMO1LfJyOAwt FFRfSC6ngs8HPIDlUr4JgAFRpos7FORSbONVZaaSlzDZ42uEGjkT9KqpuHRoVIHig20hYX4FEYFb X/IkQH5xq3vN2lejx9nOevazoA2taEdL2tKa9rSoNS3RRDOSrqb2taPFHlFH4gId/wzOch+ogRBQ xwPXwva3i2OBcIdL3OKewLAjYCFDZCtAHZQQCwX8nhE+gD0cCKi4xe3qCbBb3EcGDwXcHS4KvEum 6VlLCJAdCJ1mu73uFQ8Ec5PbUZbTUAeiK3qWHWUZzWRe6hHhd+sVoAncOxAR9OlPItCmaNJ6sObU MSZy6pJEObJUrOY1dv29IlJfVT0BExhXztOLdZ+Ivvt6acJXiZdTSQm7DHd4ICPoYaGag4KPFChr H0EVDm5wY4GwgH8+wIHiGLxAB5tYwuE8rYuxQFQ6QSWLAHjBBTOYQR3wVQRTpvL+bkzkKBpZlwgx VivDZgQkgO0HO7BB2xCCggviQP/GMSECDjDIQQDcQMsZrLMWs4xnb8XQB0MoghEGJ+SJLJmoKFzK lqCp0DiSOFP2BfNAYiDXxyThOKfclueyymI4w2RJD46JYLM1Q5gQFY40gTKjm+joW0K6hSZe2hUr bFbKbPrC9VrKryb7Yp0xk6mxIV2OAIDqoslxxopla665Mlk73dBaeA22XgELGX2BsCChfkmPoYlp Yk+yyy8xFLqSmVADQgWynJxgKHHtaZgk4QfZhkmPE1nqlwwBBfh2wQ4MSTe+SpUmjZ4JWp0qbl0+ d6p5ZNq7SnVRaZcSKt1urF9JTe0i5EC5CAU4qwV+7AYnu4pJpckmqwpsmlSYfuz/PiagJt61egdm CDzYQQ3ul/GZdLvYMRl4iR+6FlSlqtbcWvjD1u3wZVsq04q2NrWNICdub9zYjzbXx+0YcsD6MspW OXnVYoPZo+OL5fT+tQja/ZL5rbqWrQY3U74cVWji6OooFiYWrEAFKlTB7ng/wgmy4IEsAAHvU5gC FQSPdxXwve82wPvdF08FKwC15b8WyNOqWXVaPT3nHS/y1CFc87MKfSZaj9g456AACBxAng4QAD/5 aQYAaIECW3DA6mcfADHcc58BVbqkDJLumWzY6WjneNSRHem2WwXKE4n7uicmgA1s1AINaEDMHpCB CWCAAhcAwwQqYAELVMD6EsDA/wMucIERXQADB5CABSBAAXZG4fFh31dBTsBvjtwY+AL7NsHZzlaI tiXmrBSAAcgDiIRioQclGDUHA6ABDuB8XuBRFfAAFOABGHMBB6AyFUBSF9MBDtABFjABFwAAFyAB FUABHcABFGAz7ydQCXFoBkF/B1V5AHN5MKFzrxZvWLAw50ZVFWJVDGdhTTAHa5AAByAHCAAHbhAG aEAxBhAACBAHbZAAZdAGc6AGbrAGa0AxI4VPZkAGcJAGCJAGaIAAb5B7viZ/PrgUqkZL+YdYN3hN O5hw/5OGoLduVlAFeJiHeHgEJcB3fqeHgIiHLHB4WSADgZiHVwB/ZuRyTGYQZOYHPs80NYlBNDWY eV62eTChg0vRY0D3Ek1DhzJxdaJnNdPmQ5oFdotoFULgFCDQGIFBUbJGbTYodcXHVr0nE0hVFngk h9RxXIY1ilxXijLRVZ3IESyIEEuWJF1BEIdFbVgwi8QHa2AWi1dEVCZQfzJxa0X3iMS4WfHnjJ9Y EEb1Fs2YdvuHiS8hJyPAiHsxbwMxeYGhjYzSdTPRjajYgln1GEWwAxFGECNAWBxBBEuCc5WIK28o aROCg5GzA/vVFuzIETm0YvQ4jKeYdJ01AsN1Ag15kduVkSaAccAVkiI5kiRZkrAVEAA7 ------=_NextPart_000_0036_01C142D0.5B3957C0 Content-Type: application/octet-stream Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64 Content-Location: http://server-au.imrworldwide.com/cgi-bin/count?cid=au_ninemsn_bulletin R0lGODlhAQABAPAAAAAAAAAAACH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAICRAEAOwA= ------=_NextPart_000_0036_01C142D0.5B3957C0 Content-Type: application/octet-stream Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable Content-Location: http://bulletin.ninemsn.com.au/bulletin/eddesk.nsf/style.css?openpage BODY { FONT-FAMILY: Arial,Helvetica, sans serif; FONT-SIZE: 11px } TD { FONT-FAMILY: Arial,Helvetica, sans serif; FONT-SIZE: 11px } INPUT { FONT-FAMILY: Arial,Helvetica, sans serif; FONT-SIZE: 11px } TEXTAREA { FONT-FAMILY: Arial,Helvetica, sans serif; FONT-SIZE: 11px } .BList { COLOR: #ffffff; FONT-FAMILY: Arial Narrow, Arial, Helvetica, = sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: 11pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .BHeading1 { COLOR: #000000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 18pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .BHeading2 { COLOR: #000000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 14pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .BHeading3 { COLOR: #000000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 11pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .BBody1 { COLOR: #000000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 11pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .BBody2 { COLOR: #000000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 10pt; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .BTagLine { COLOR: #000000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 11pt; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .BDate { COLOR: #ad9400; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 8pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .BBreadcrumbs { COLOR: #ffffff; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 8pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .BTableBody { COLOR: #000000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 8pt; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .BHomeTableBody { COLOR: #00009c; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 8pt; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .BTableBodySmall { COLOR: #000000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 7pt; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .BTablehead { COLOR: #000000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 8pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .BBodySmall { COLOR: #666666; FONT-FAMILY: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; = FONT-SIZE: 7pt; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .BSearch { COLOR: #ad9400; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 14pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .BToolsHead { COLOR: #ad9400; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 9pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .BToolsBody { COLOR: #ad9400; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 7pt; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .BContents { COLOR: #000000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 9pt; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .BBodyPages { COLOR: #000000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 9pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .BByline { COLOR: #7676ad; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 7pt; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .homeBody { COLOR: #666666; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 11pt; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .homeSubHead { COLOR: #000000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 13pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .copy { COLOR: #006666; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 7pt } .homebreadcrumbs { COLOR: #8455a5; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 7pt; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .nav { COLOR: #006666; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 7pt; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .tablehead { COLOR: #ffffff; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 8pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .navHead { COLOR: #8455a5; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 10pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .navSubHead { COLOR: #000000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 8pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .navBody { COLOR: #666666; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 10pt; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .newsBody { COLOR: #333366; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 7pt; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .contentmenu { COLOR: #6666cc; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 8pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .topmenu { COLOR: #ffffff; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 7pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .ProfileHead { COLOR: #6666cc; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 8pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .ProfileBody { COLOR: #6666cc; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 8pt; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .search { COLOR: #ffffff; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 7pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .advsearch { COLOR: #ad9400; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 7pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .searchresults { COLOR: #000000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 11pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .SectSubHead { COLOR: #0000cc; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 10pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .SectBody { COLOR: #000000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 7pt } A { TEXT-DECORATION: none } A:hover { COLOR: #ff0000; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.advsearch:link { COLOR: #ad9400; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 7pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.advsearch:hover { COLOR: #ad9400; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 7pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.advsearch:visited { COLOR: #ad9400; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 7pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.BBreadcrumbs:link { COLOR: #ffffff; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 8pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.BBreadcrumbs:hover { COLOR: #cc0000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 8pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.BBodyPages:link { COLOR: #00009c; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 9pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: underline } A.BBodyPages:hover { COLOR: #cc0000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 9pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: underline } A.BBodyPages:visited { COLOR: #00009c; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 9pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: underline } A.BTableBody { COLOR: #00009c; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 8pt; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.BTableBody:link { COLOR: #00009c; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 8pt; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.BTableBody:hover { COLOR: #cc0000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 8pt; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.BTableBody:visited { FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: 8pt; = TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.BHomeTableBody { COLOR: #00009c; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 8pt; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.BHomeTableBody:link { COLOR: #00009c; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 8pt; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.BHomeTableBody:hover { COLOR: #cc0000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 8pt; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.BHomeTableBody:visited { FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: 8pt; = TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.BTablehead { COLOR: #00009c; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 8pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.BTablehead:link { COLOR: #00009c; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 8pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.BTablehead:hover { COLOR: #cc0000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 8pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.BTablehead:visited { FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: 8pt; FONT-WEIGHT: = bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .BHomeTablehead:link { COLOR: #00009c; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 8pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .BHomeTablehead:hover { COLOR: #cc0000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 8pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .BHomeTablehead:visited { FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: 8pt; FONT-WEIGHT: = bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.BHeading1:link { COLOR: #000000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 18pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.BHeading1:hover { COLOR: #ff0000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 18pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.BHeading2:link { COLOR: #000000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 14pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.BHeading2:hover { COLOR: #ff0000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 14pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.BHeading3:link { COLOR: #000000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 11pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.BHeading3:hover { COLOR: #ff0000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 11pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.BBody1:link { COLOR: #000000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 11pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.BBody1:hover { COLOR: #ff0000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 11pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.BBody2:link { COLOR: #000000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 10pt; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.BBody2:hover { COLOR: #ff0000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 10pt; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.BContents:link { COLOR: #000000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 9pt; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.BContents:hover { COLOR: #ff0000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 9pt; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A:link { COLOR: #003399 } A.more { COLOR: #000099; FONT-SIZE: 11px } A.listlink { TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.leftnav { COLOR: #ffffff; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.rightnav { COLOR: #990000; TEXT-DECORATION: underline } A.leftnav:hover { COLOR: #ff9900; FONT-WEIGHT: bold } A.rightnav:hover { COLOR: #990000; FONT-WEIGHT: normal } .menu { COLOR: #ffffff; FONT-FAMILY: Arial Narrow, Arial, Helvetica, = sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: 9pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.menu:link { COLOR: #ffffff; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.menu:hover { COLOR: #ad9400; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .bmenu { COLOR: #ffffff; FONT-FAMILY: Arial Narrow, Arial, Helvetica, = sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: 9pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.bmenu:link { COLOR: #ffffff; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.bmenu:hover { COLOR: #ad9400; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .blmenu { COLOR: #ffffff; FONT-FAMILY: Arial Narrow, Arial, Helvetica, = sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: 9pt; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.blmenu:link { COLOR: #ffffff; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.blmenu:hover { COLOR: #ad9400; TEXT-DECORATION: none } .menuselect { COLOR: #ad9400; FONT-FAMILY: Arial Narrow, Arial, Helvetica, = sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: 11pt; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.menuselect:link { COLOR: #ffffff; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.menuselect:hover { COLOR: #ff0000; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.navlink { COLOR: #ffffff; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.navlink:hover { BACKGROUND-COLOR: #000000; COLOR: #ffcc00; FONT-WEIGHT: bold; HEIGHT: = 20px; LEFT: 6px; TEXT-DECORATION: none; WIDTH: 149px } A.subnav { COLOR: #ffffff; FONT-SIZE: 11px; TEXT-DECORATION: none } A.subnav:hover { COLOR: #ffcc00; FONT-SIZE: 11px; TEXT-DECORATION: none } #mE { CURSOR: hand; WIDTH: 150px } #mN { CURSOR: hand; WIDTH: 135px } #mD { COLOR: #000000; POSITION: relative; WIDTH: 135px } .sD { BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ad9400; BORDER-BOTTOM: #ad9400 1px solid; = BORDER-LEFT: #ad9400 1px solid; BORDER-RIGHT: #ad9400 1px solid; = BORDER-TOP: #ad9400 1px solid; COLOR: #ffffff; FONT-SIZE: 8pt; LEFT: = 135px; POSITION: absolute; VISIBILITY: hidden; WIDTH: 150px } .fN { COLOR: #ffffff; TEXT-DECORATION: none } H2 { COLOR: #000000; FONT-FAMILY: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; FONT-SIZE: = 10pt; TEXT-DECORATION: none } ------=_NextPart_000_0036_01C142D0.5B3957C0 Content-Type: application/x-javascript Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable Content-Location: http://server-au.imrworldwide.com/a1.js =0A= ------=_NextPart_000_0036_01C142D0.5B3957C0--