Doubt cast over Watson’s record attempt

The manager of teenage adventurer Jessica Watson has dismissed talk in sailing circles that she will complete her 200-day journey without achieving her goal – to become the youngest person to sail solo, non-stop and unassisted around the world.

The website Sail-World has published an article saying when Watson arrives in Sydney she will not take Jesse Martin’s record nor will she have even been “around the world”.

Sail-World quoted John Reed, the secretary of the World Sailing Speed Record Council (WSSRC), as saying Watson’s journey does not comply with the definition of around the world and bears no comparison with the achievement of Martin.

But when asked to confirm this was the case, Mr Reed told ABC News Online he made no such statement concerning Watson.

“The WSSRC does not know what route Jessica Watson has taken during her recent voyage,” he said.

“But the WSSRC course for a RTW (round the world) claim is clearly described in rule 26.1.a.”

The website has since removed Mr Reed’s comments and replaced it with a bold section highlighting the council’s rule, which states in part that:

“To sail around the world, a vessel must start from and return to the same point, must cross all meridians of longitude and must cross the equator.

“The shortest orthodromic track of the vessel must be at least 21,600 nautical miles in length calculated based on a perfect sphere.”

Watson will be more than 2,000 nautical miles short of an official record, according to Sail-World editor Rob Kothe.

But Watson’s manager, Andrew Fraser, has dismissed any suggestion she will not break a world record when she arrives in Sydney.

Mr Fraser says the concerns are ludicrous.

“Jess has ticked all those boxes, sailed under the four capes and crossed the equator twice, so in our opinion she will have sailed around the world non-stop, solo, unassisted and travelled almost 23,000 nautical miles in the process,” he said.

“If people want to get caught up with the technical component of a body that doesn’t recognise the record, that’s fine. We can accept that.”

Mr Kothe says by expert calculations, Watson will not break Martin’s record set in 1999 because she did not sail far enough north of the equator.

“We’ve discussed it with her PR team, who weren’t able to give us an exact number, but we gave them a figure of using those calculations of about 18,500 to 19,000 miles,” he said.

He says that leaves her short by 2,500 nautical miles.

“That’s what the WSSRC set up as the definition and that’s the basis on which our records are counted, and that’s the basis on which Jesse Martin sailed around the world,” Mr Kothe said.

“He sailed some 75 miles beyond the minimum distance. And to meet that record – and Jessica could possibly have been the fastest Australian ever to sail around the world, she’s been sailing very quickly – but to meet that, to go into the record books, the official record books of sailing, she would have to sail that distance.”

Mr Kothe says Watson will not be able to claim any officially recognised records.

“What she can claim and everyone will agree, is that she has done, she sailed amazingly well. She’s been a very tough little girl and all Australians should be proud of her,” he said.

Negative publicity

Mr Fraser says he is annoyed about the negative publicity.

“I don’t think anybody can dent her campaign,” he said. “I’m just annoyed that people try and discredit the achievement.

“And that’s OK. We are quite used to that now. She’s had to overcome a lot worse adversity since she started the voyage, so I guess the only positive is that it’s come out now, we can address it and move on.”

He says the WSSRC do not recognise any voyages from sailors under the age of 18, so Watson could never have challenged Martin’s record in the context of the WSSRC criteria.

He says as a result of the WSSRC decision to discontinue recognition of age-related journeys, there is no official body to recognise Jessica’s feat and therefore no official body’s rules that need to be adhered to.

“Jessica actually approached the WSSRC early last year about it and the advice she was given was quite simple. They said they don’t recognise the records,” Mr Fraser told Neil Mitchell on Fairfax Radio.

“It was on her website before we left and everybody knew about it before she left and everything that’s been alluded to was on the website before she left.

“But the particular organisation you’re referring to have decided two weeks out to make some noise probably to drive some traffic to their website.”

Watson is expected to sail into Sydney Harbour on May 16, two days before her 17th birthday.

Lord of the ring marvels at show’s enduring appeal

The name Tom Frankcomb is as about as synonymous with Tasmania’s Huon Valley show as apple cider, fairy floss, dagwood dogs and lost kids.

In fact there has never been a ringmaster at the event that was not called Tom Frankcomb.

The latest one has been calling the shots for the past 15 years, in a tradition started by his grandfather and passed on to his dad.

When it began Tasmania was known as the apple isle and the Huon Valley was its thriving hub.

Times have certainly changed and so too has the Huon show, but it is as popular as ever.

The current Tom Frankcomb reckons keeping the agricultural focus “front and centre” has been an important part of its enduring appeal.

“We try and include all the traditional livestock industries, as well as we’ve got the newer livestock industries which are quite big in the Huon, like the alpaca as well as the cattle, the sheep and those sorts of things,” he said.

Livestock is still an important part of the Huon show routine, but it now reflects the changes that have taken place within the community.

Robert Drummond has been coming to the Huon show for about 40 years.

“Well, the environment’s changed completely in the area as regards full-time farmers. Now this has become more a hobby-farmer style area,” Mr Drummond said.

“The big farms have disappeared – like the big fattener – they don’t exist. It’s more small hobby farmers style, the alpacas and the small cattle holdings.”

What the Huon show does have going for it is diversity.

Bill Robbins is a fifth generation merino breeder who caught the alpaca bug 20 years ago.

Mr Robbins says there has been an alpaca class at the Huon show for the past four years.

“It’s a typical smaller country show and there’s a fair amount of upgrading still to do, but the very best animals here are getting close to where they should be,” he said.

“You go to a lot of country shows – and I’m from New South Wales – and a lot of those just exist on one particular species, whether it be horses or cattle and that’s all you tend to see, but here there’s a bit of everything.”

Mr Drummond says the secret to success is that no-one gets paid except the show secretary.

“Everyone else gets in and does their job and it’s all voluntary, that’s the trick,” he said.

Blondes have more funds

“Is it true blondes have more fun?” asked the famous Clairol ad in the 1950s.

Queensland researchers may not be able to answer that question but they have discovered that fair-haired women have more cash.

Women with golden tresses have long been the brunt of jokes that portray them as clueless, ditsy or downright dumb.

But a recent study from the Queensland University of Technology shows blondes earn 7 per cent more than women with other hair colours.

The survey of 13,000 women showed that the difference in pay was not connected with other factors such as height, weight or education.

The study, published in the journal Economics Letters, also found that blondes tended to marry men who earned an average of 6 per cent more than other women’s husbands.

Dr David Johnston, who led the study, said the researchers could not show why fair-haired women earned more than their non-blonde counterparts, but no other hair colour showed such a trend.

“Blonde women are often depicted as being more attractive than other women, but also less intelligent,” he said.

“But it seems the association between blondes and beauty dominates any perception that they have low intelligence.

“This could explain why the ‘blondeness effect’ is evident in the marriage market.”

Powerful blondes

The president of the International Blondes Association, Olga Uskova, says “blondes really rule the world today”.

“People admire, envy, and make jokes about us, but nobody remains indifferent,” she says on the association’s website.

“[Being blonde] is not only a golden colour of hair, this is a state of mind, lifestyle and philosophy.

“Blondes can also be presidents, ministers, diplomats, business ladies.”

United States secretary of state Hillary Clinton appears to be one example of such a blonde and Australian Governor-General Quentin Bryce is another.

Blonde Westpac boss Gail Kelly came in at number 18 on Forbes magazine’s 2009 list of the world’s most powerful women – the highest-ranking Australian woman.

And fair-haired German chancellor Angela Merkel topped that list.

A skim through the profiles of female MPs in the House of Representatives reveals that more than half are blondes and most of those are bottle blondes.

Dr Ian Ward from the University of Queensland’s School of Political Science says most female politicians will have been advised to pay careful attention to their appearance, and that may account for their choice of hair colour.

But one notable exception from the blonde politicians is redhead Deputy Prime Minister Julia Gillard.

Dr Ward says it is possible Ms Gillard’s hair colour has been used to portray her as feisty and strong-willed.

“I’m sure somewhere in the Labor Party someone’s done a focus group and asked that precise question,” he said.

So if blondes earn more money and redheads can climb to positions of power, where does that leave dark-haired women?

It leaves them married to billionaires, according to a 2008 study by American internet company Lycos, which runs dating websites.

The study found that 78 of the world’s top 100 billionaires had wives or long-term girlfriends with either brunette or raven hair.

Johnny Rotten leads tributes to king of punk

Former Sex Pistols frontman John Lydon led tributes to the band’s former manager Malcolm McLaren, who has died from cancer at the age of 64.

McLaren died in a hospital in Switzerland following a fight against mesothelioma, a cancer that most commonly affects the lungs, his girlfriend Young Kim said.

Lydon paid tribute in a statement signed “Johnny Rotten”, which was his stage name when he performed with the band.

“For me, Malc was always entertaining and I hope you remember that,” he said.

“Above all else he was an entertainer and I will miss him, and so should you.”

McLaren was a leading figure in the punk rock scene. As well as the Sex Pistols, the seminal British punk rock band of the 1970s, he managed other acts including the New York Dolls and Bow Wow Wow.

News reports said his remains would be flown back to his native London for burial in Highgate cemetery in the north of the capital.

McLaren was a former partner of British fashion designer Vivienne Westwood, with whom he set up a boutique on King’s Road in London’s hip Chelsea district which they renamed Sex, selling fetish-inspired outfits.

Westwood, who said she had not been in touch with McLaren for a long time, remembered him as “a very charismatic, special and talented person”.

“When we were young and I fell in love with Malcolm, I thought he was beautiful and I still do,” she told the Daily Mail newspaper.

McLaren, a one-time art school student, began to manage the Sex Pistols in 1975, bringing Lydon on board as frontman after spotting him in a torn Pink Floyd T-shirt and green hair.

The band released God Save The Queen in 1977, the year of Queen Elizabeth II’s silver jubilee. Its provocative lyrics propelled it to the top of the pop charts despite the BBC banning it from its airwaves.

It was followed later in the year by the quartet’s only official studio album, Never Mind The Bollocks, Here’s The Sex Pistols.

The Sex Pistols embarked on a US tour in 1978, only to split up after a gig in San Francisco.

The band fell out with McLaren and he later lost a court case over royalties.

After his time with the Sex Pistols, McLaren continued to work on music, film and art.

Later projects included composing a theme tune for airline British Airways, BBC radio shows and last year he exhibited his art in Britain and the US.

He split his final years living between New York and Paris, according to his girlfriend.

The British press Friday remembered a man who, despite the controversy he stirred up when he first caught the public’s attention, had become a national institution.

The Times hailed him as the impresario responsible for “the punk movement that traumatised and thrilled 1970s Britain in equal measure”.

“King of punk is dead,” declared the Sun.

Remains of WWI diggers identified as brothers

Two relatives of a New South Wales south coast man have been discovered buried in a mass war grave at Fromelles in France.

Shane Tough, from Basin View, says he recently received a call from the Department of Defence with the news.

Two brothers of Mr Tough’s great-grandmother were killed in World War I while serving in the 53rd Battalion.

He says despite his grandmother spending years documenting family history, the discovery came as a surprise.

“It was amazing. I just felt a real sense of being proud about the guys that went over there as Australian fighters and soldiers and in particular those guys that I was related to them,” he said.

Mr Tough says the bodies have been reburied and several family members have been invited to their memorial.

“There will be an inaugural ceremony rightfully fitting for all the soldiers on the 19th of July this year,” he said.

Aussie cosplayers get their geek on

Fashion and nerds don’t generally mix, but a growing bunch of creative, anime-obsessed Australians are breaking down that stereotype by getting their geek on through cosplay.

Cosplay – a combination of costume and role play – originated in Japan as a way for comic, video game and animation fiends to imitate their favourite characters.

It spread to Australia in 2001 and experts say the often expensive and time-consuming hobby is becoming increasingly popular.

Bryan Marriage, 27, and Melanie de Chantraine, 32, are two of the country’s oldest cosplayers.

The Queenslanders have been cosplaying for nearly eight years. Between them they’ve created more than 40 costumes, spending between $100 and $1,000 on each.

Bryan described his foray into the scene at Brisbane’s 2003 pop culture expo Supanova as nerve-racking.

“I was very nervous because I didn’t know a lot of people there and I’d come from Toowoomba, so I wasn’t in and around the fandom crowd at that stage,” he said.

“Getting up on stage was scary but everyone was cheering and it got the adrenaline going … through that I got in contact with a lot of other cosplayers.”

He admits his obsession is left of centre.

“I was always a little bit bizarre and quirky,” he said.

“At school I did drama and I had a lot of fun doing that, but when cosplay came along it was sort of a release, to do something similar to drama.

“Probably what’s kept me in it is friends and the people I get to meet and also a love for different shows and different series.

“It gives me that extra dimension to show my fandom … you get to display the feelings for a character you have and it lets you release your inner child.”

Melanie, thought to be Australia’s most experienced and well-known cosplayer, says she thrives on the hobby’s creative challenges.

“It’s a creative outlet and it gives me something to do. I can’t imagine what else I’d be doing if I wasn’t doing this,” she said.

“It’s just seeing the challenge – if I can make this 2D character exist in the real world – and sometimes I reckon they’re trying to break me.”

She says Japanese anime is not like anything you see in Australia.

“With Western characters the designs are a bit prudish, but the Japanese characters are just so out there,” she said.

“They don’t care if they look stupid and I think sometimes they look so stupid that they loop back around to awesome.”

Game on

Supanova 2010 begins in Brisbane today. It will then move around the country to Melbourne, Sydney and Perth.

Supanova is a hub for both veteran and budding cosplayers, hosting competitions for them to show off their intricately designed costumes and play out their much-loved characters.

Sydney student, 22-year-old Christie Lee, won the national cosplay competition last year.

While she has only been cosplaying for a few years, the dedicated champion has already concocted more than 30 costumes.

“Making every costume is a learning experience,” she said.

“It’s a way of expressing how much I love a particular story or how much I love a particular character.

“A lot of people appreciate it and they are amazed by how you created your outfits … when you get to a convention it’s kind of like walking into Disneyland.

“You see your favourite characters walking around looking beautiful. It gives you a sense of satisfaction and happiness.”

Her winning piece was based on Alice, the heroine from the Japanese manga (comic) and anime series, Pandora Hearts.

“I’d never made a big, humungous Victorian dress before and I never really want to make another one again,” she said.

Brisbane student, 19-year-old Sabina Myers, is also excited by the costume side of cosplaying.

“A lot of people have different approaches to how they prefer to do cosplay,” she said.

“I like to design my own costumes because it’s more fun and I don’t always pick things from Japanese anime.”

One of her recent designs was an interpretation of the White Rabbit from Alice In Wonderland.

“Even I think it’s weird,” she said.

“My friends and I try to keep real about how strange this hobby is. It is a strange hobby and people will think it’s odd, but I’m okay with that and I enjoy it.”

Popular culture

Madman, an Australian distributor of anime, initiated the national competition last year.

Head judge Sylvester Ip says there are hundreds of cosplayers around Australia.

“We attend about 20 events and every event we go to there are more and more people in costumes and cosplaying in general,” he said.

“We’re definitely seeing an increasingly popular pop culture thing that kids are getting into. It’s definitely increasing and as the years go by we expect to see more and more entrants.”

Veteran cosplayers Bryan and Melanie agree the scene is growing.

“With more conventions, more competitions, people are becoming more aware of it and participating,” Bryan said.

“So it is increasing probably a lot more quickly than I would have ever expected.”

But Melanie says the rise in cosplaying has been accompanied by an increase in cattiness.

“The first con that I went to was in Adelaide and there may have been 10 of us,” she said.

“I went back to that con two years ago and there was over 100, so it has definitely grown … with the rise that I’ve seen over the last eight years it can only get bigger.

“But it is getting competitive and nasty, with a lot of people taking it far too seriously – a lot of bitchiness and people talking behind people’s backs.”

Melanie is an Australian representative for the World Cosplay Summit – an annual international event held in Japan – which includes 15 countries and hundreds of thousands of participants.

Christie just returned from spending a week in Japan, her prize for being last year’s national champion.

After experiencing cosplay there in its most original form, she says she still prefers Australia’s take on it.

“Japan is very strict with the cosplay thing, which was really irksome,” she said.

“Japan cosplay is much more extreme … I’d never seen so many cosplayers in one place in my life. They’re more perfectionist than us. They put much more detail into the hair and their make-up.

“They’re just so used to seeing so many cosplayers all together, I guess it just loses the spark of uniqueness over there.

“But here there is a lot more variety. No-one really looks the same and it’s much more open here in saying: ‘Oh my god, your outfit looks awesome. Can I take your photo?’.”

Inmates call the shots at Alice footy

Prisoners from the Alice Springs jail will be umpiring football matches in the 2010 Central Australian AFL season.

The Central Australian league took the unprecedented measure because it was struggling to find enough umpires for the competition to go ahead this year.

The chairwoman of AFL Central Australia Bev Ellis says the idea came from a prison worker who is a former coach of one of the teams.

“He could see that these young men, they loved their football, they were keen on football, and a good part of the day was spent on not terribly productive use,” Ms Ellis said.

A group of inmates have received training to take on umpiring duties in the town.

Six prisoners will umpire under-17s and reserve grade games and will be supervised.

Ms Ellis says the prisoners are close to the end of their sentence and will have the opportunity to keep their jobs when they’re released from prison.

“The screening process that’s been conducted out at the Correctional Centre has been very thorough,” she said.

“Prisoners who have been selected have all been taken through the umpires training courses and I should add that they won’t just turn up Traeger Park. They will be supervised.”

The season begins in Alice Springs tonight.

Olympic star Bright flashes gold in Cooma

Olympic gold medal-winning snowboarder Torah Bright will be back in her home town of Cooma tomorrow for a parade in her honour.

Bright won the women’s halfpipe at the Vancouver Winter Olympics in February.

She says her life has been surreal since the win.

“Life’s been pretty hectic, still trooping around the world to finish off the rest of the winter and sponsor commitments and all sorts of media requests,” she said.

“I’m really looking forward to the weekend actually, heading home and sharing in the excitement with everybody.

“And then have some time with the family.”

Bright says the parade will also celebrate the achievements of other Cooma and Jindabyne locals on the Winter Olympics team.

“There’s one pretty cool little thing; there’s three of us all from the same [Cooma] primary school.”

Broke Cage loses LA mansion

Financially troubled Oscar winner Nicolas Cage has lost one of his personal treasures.

His 11,817 square-foot mansion in the upscale Los Angeles neighbourhood of Bel Air failed to get any bids at its $US10.4 million asking price this week and ownership reverted to a foreclosing lender, media reports said.

The Los Angeles Times reported that Cage originally tried to sell the property for $US35 million.

The newspaper quoted a real estate agent who called the interior design “frat house bordello” with framed comic books on walls.

The mansion also had model train sets on raised tracks in some rooms in addition to a central tower, a home theatre and an Olympic-sized swimming pool, the newspaper said.

A spokeswoman for Cage was not available for comment on the report.

Cage, the star of the National Treasure action franchise, filed a $US20 million lawsuit in October against his former business manager, accusing him of harming his personal finances.

The manager, Samuel Levin, later filed a countersuit against Cage that accused him of overspending.

Cage a year ago sold his castle in Germany and told a magazine there that tough economic times forced him to make the sale.

Cage won an Oscar for his role as an alcoholic with a death wish in the 1995 drama Leaving Las Vegas.

The actor has also starred in Ghost Rider, World Trade Centre and Adaptation.

Jessica Watson ‘excited’ as voyage nears end

The mother of teenage sailor Jessica Watson says her daughter is starting to get excited as she edges closer to Australia.

The 16-year-old from Queensland’s Sunshine Coast has has less than 4,000 nautical miles to go in her quest to become the youngest person to sail solo around the world.

She is expected to round Cape Leeuwin, the most south-westerly mainland point of Australia, in the next few days and enter Australian waters within a week.

Julie Watson says her daughter hopes to reach Sydney early next month, in time to celebrate her 17th birthday on May 18.

“I was really surprised, because she just kept saying all the way … she was just having so much fun out there,” Ms Watson said.

“Now you can hear her starting to turn her mind to, ‘when I get back I’m going to do this’, and she’s getting really excited.”

Drunken tourists banned from fish market

The early-morning tuna fish auction in the Japanese capital Tokyo has been closed to visitors for a month after traders complained tourists were hampering business.

Market workers say camera flashes obscure their hand signals during bidding.

There has also been outrage at some drunken visitors from the city’s nightclubs embracing and kissing the tuna.

The sale of tuna at the market usually draws hundreds of sightseers.

China climbs down in Everest height fight

China and Nepal have agreed a solution to a long-running disagreement over the height of Mount Everest.

They agreed the world’s highest mountain, which traverses the border of the two countries, should be recognised as being 8,848 metres tall.

Chinese officials had argued it should be measured by its rock height, but Nepal said it should be measured by its snow height, which is four metres higher.

China has accepted that claim during talks in Nepal’s capital, Kathmandu.

‘Moody, homesick’ Watson nears Australia

Teen sailor Jessica Watson admits she has been struggling emotionally as her journey nears its end, with less than 400 nautical miles to go until she reaches Australia.

The 16-year-old from Queensland’s Sunshine Coast is attempting to be the youngest person to sail solo around the world.

On Monday, Watson dealt with gale-force winds of up to 45 knots and extremely rough seas, dampening her mood for the next few days.

“Even though the conditions weren’t at all the worst we’ve been through, for some reason or another the uncomfortable motion and my damp bunk really got to me, making me pretty moody and a little homesick,” she wrote in her latest blog.

“Normally I can pull myself out of a bad mood in a few hours tops, but this time I didn’t have the energy and managed to be grouchy for a full few days, a voyage record!

“But it only took a proper meal and some good progress to get me back to my normal self and singing away [very badly] at the top of my voice to my current favourite song, Forever Young.”

Even Easter eggs could not help lift the teen’s spirits.

“Turns out that no-one remembered to pack any Easter eggs for me, but it wasn’t the end of the world because I’ve got more than enough chocolate,” she said.

In a recent video diary, recorded on March 20, Watson also confessed to feeling homesick.

“Australia’s sure creeping up on us now,” she said.

“I joke about wanting to do a second lap and wanting to do it all again straight away, but to be honest I think I am ready to come home now.

“Love it out here still but I think enough is enough.”

In just a few days Watson will reach Cape Leeuwin, the most south-westerly mainland point of Australia.

From there it is about 2,000 nautical miles to Tasmania and a further 500 nautical miles to Sydney.

If things continue going to plan, she will arrive in Sydney at the start of next month when swarms of supporters will be cheering her on.

Sculpture to honour ‘suntan man’

A bronze sculpture that honours a former tourism icon has been poured on the Gold Coast in south-east Queensland today.

For more than three decades, Al Baldwin, or Al the Suntan man, sprayed lotion on visitors to Surfers Paradise beach.

He died in 2004 at the age of 74.

The Gold Coast City Council has commissioned a sculpture which replicates the Suntan Man’s famous deck chair and cap.

Lead sculptor Frederic Berjot says many people have fond memories of Al Baldwin, including his own mother-in-law.

“She’s always mentioned this guy who used to be on the Gold Coast and used to spray all of these young girls and he was handsome-looking,” he said.

The sculpture will be finished next year and will be placed on the Surfers Paradise beachfront

Ex-Yugoslav leader Tito’s elephant dies

An elephant given as a present to former Yugoslav leader Josip Broz Tito 40 years ago has died suddenly, a Croatian newspaper reported on Wednesday.

Late Indian prime minister Indira Gandhi gave Sony to the communist leader in 1970 when the bull elephant was a two-year-old calf, the Jutarnji List daily reported.

Sony, who lived at Croatia’s northern national Brijuni islands park where Mr Tito had a private zoo, died on Friday.

An autopsy is to determine the cause of his death. In the wild, elephants can live up to 70 years.

The islands were once reserved for Mr Tito and his close friends but are now frequented by officials and tourists.

Sony lived there among other exotic animals including Lanka, a cow elephant.

“We were all shocked by his death. We simply cannot believe that he is not here any more,” Vesna Klunic of the national park told the media.

“Now we will take special care of Lanka since it’s not easy for her.”

Mr Tito ruled the former Yugoslav federation, of which Croatia was a part, for 35 years until his death in 1980.

A decade after his death, Yugoslavia broke up in a series of internecine wars.

13yo to make Everest bid

A 13-year-old California boy will attempt to become the youngest person to scale Mount Everest later this year, his latest stop in a bid to climb the highest peaks on seven continents.

Jordan Romero left Los Angeles late Monday (local time) for Nepal where he will launch what would be a record-breaking assault on the world’s highest mountain, which soars to 8,848 metres, local media reports said.

“I’ve been looking forward to this for so long and now it’s finally happening and man, you can’t even imagine the feeling of what it’s like right now,” he told America’s ABC News in Los Angeles.

Romero, who turns 14 in July, is aiming to become the youngest person to climb the highest summits on seven continents by the end of 2010.

According to his website, Romero has already bagged most of them, including Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania.

Romero’s father and step-mother are accompanying him on the Everest mission.

“This is all his mission. This is all his idea. It’s all his timeline. We’re just packing the bags, chasing him around the world. It’s pretty fun,” Jordan’s father, Paul Romero, said.

Women arrested taking corpse onto plane

Two women have been arrested at a British airport on suspicion of trying to smuggle a dead relative onto a flight bound for Germany, police said.

The 91-year-old deceased man was pushed in a wheelchair through Liverpool’s John Lennon airport wearing sunglasses before check-in staff became suspicious and he was prevented from boarding the plane.

He was believed to have been driven about 56 kilometres to the airport by taxi from Oldham, Greater Manchester, police added.

The women were arrested on suspicion of failing to give notification of a death and were released on bail.

The cause of death is not known.

Pair charged over $100k in suitcase

A man and woman have been charged with theft by finding after they bought a suitcase lined with tens of thousands of dollars from a Salvation Army store.

The suitcase had been deposited at the Beaconsfield Salvo store in Melbourne’s south-east in March by the owner’s wife after a clean-out before it was purchased by a Berwick couple – a 34-year-old woman and a 44-year-old man.

They were arrested and charged on March 18.

Police say they have recovered most of the money which had been put into different bank accounts.

Before the suitcase was recovered Salvation Army spokesman Brad Halse said the new owner was probably unaware of what was inside the case.

“The person could find himself in a bit of trouble if he went overseas with the suitcase and customs went through it,” Mr Halse said.

“But our experience is that most people are honest when they find a significant amount of money like this.”

Supreme Court rules on restricted dog breeds

A Supreme Court ruling in Queensland has found the american staffordshire terrier is the same breed as the “restricted” american pit bull terrier.

The legal clarification has been prompted by a long-running dispute over a dog on the state’s Gold Coast.

In 2004, the Gold Coast City Council decided a dog named “Tango” was a pit bull and ordered he be destroyed.

Kylie Louise Chivers, who is not the dog’s owner, appealed on the grounds “Tango” was an american staffordshire terrier or ‘amstaff’, and not a pit bull.

Justice Glenn Martin found the breed has two names for the purposes of promotion and “Tango” is a restricted dog.

Gold Coast City Councillor Bob la Castra says the Queensland Government needs to clarify the law.

“They now have to determine whether an amstaff is indeed a pit bull,” he said.

The council says Tango no longer lives in Queensland.

Perth woman turns 107

There are plenty of reasons to celebrate when you reach 107 years old as Perth resident Isabel ‘Mopsy’ Munro did today.

Miss Munro was born in 1903 when Edward VII was on the throne in England, Australia still had its first prime minister Edmund Barton, women were not allowed to vote and the Ford motor company began production of the Model A.

She was born in North Perth and had six siblings who spent their childhoods in various WA towns.

Miss Munro and her sister Catherine went into business designing and sewing suits and dresses.

Her niece Pat Campbell says she was a poorly child, fainting regularly, and it was for this reason she never married.

“I didn’t know about all these suitors until some years ago, I couldn’t understand myself how come she didn’t get married because she was so gorgeous and she was so tall and gracious and lovely and very charming,” she said.

“She had no shortage of suitors, but her father and mother always warned them that she wasn’t well.”

It was not until she was 67 that she was diagnosed with a rare heart condition.

Lynn Robinson from the Chrystal Halliday Nursing Home in the northern Perth suburb of Karrinyup says the secret to her long life is her single status.

“We say that Mopsy has reached this age because she never got married, and she didn’t have the stress of having a family,” she said.

“Throughout her whole life, she looked after us as kids, she and her sister Cathy took on my two children when they were two-and-a-half and five-and-a-half,” Ms Campbell said.

Mopsy was presented with gifts and a morning tea was held in her honour.