| Folio — Newsletter Copy Samples (Scroll)
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More for You at Optus Zoo
Escape into Optus Zoo anywhere, anytime. It’s like the Internet gone mobile. Download a funky ringtone to suit your style. Find music to soothe - or stimulate. Preview the latest movies and check your local session times. Develop a new gaming addiction. Cheer your favourite sporting team. Check out the day’s news. Get the buzz on the new 3G mobile. Connect to Optus Zoo from your mobile and go wild.�
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Welcome to Optus Zoo
Optus Zoo puts a world of fun and useful information into the palm of your hand. The Zoo has everything the Internet offers and more – delivered direct to your mobile while you’re on the move. It’s a place you can escape to when you need entertainment - listen to the latest music, check out the new movies in town or shop for those must-have items. You can also find out what’s happening in the news, check the latest weather updates, follow your favourite sports, get directions to the places you need to be and keep track of your stock. All this and more is waiting for you right now at Optus Zoo.
Take Me There Now!
From your mobileConnect to Optus Zoo via the Zoo button on your mobile.
Need help? Go to www.optus.com.au/zoosetup
From your computer
Or visit Optus Zoo on your PC at www.optus.com.au/zoo�
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Greenpeace
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More Trouble at Sea
High seas bottom trawling (HSBT) is the single most destructive fishing practice in the oceans today. These fishing vessels drag huge nets armed with steel plates and heavy rollers across the seabed, destroying everything in their path.
In order to catch one or two species of fish thousands of tonnes of marine animals are hauled up in nets, only to be thrown back into the oceans dead or dying. In a matter of weeks, bottom trawling can destroy ecosystems that are thousands of years old, leaving the ocean floor barren and devoid of life.
Scientists estimate there are more living organisms in seven cubic centimeters of seafloor sediment than there are people on Earth. Deep sea species number anywhere between 500,000 and 10 million. Greenpeace is calling on the Australian Government to actively support a UN moratorium to stop high seas bottom trawling. There is little economic justification to support this destructive practice. HSBT is conducted by the fleets of just eleven nations, of which the majority are European and the most prolific is Spain.
© 2007 Lynda De Lacey


