Re: Chiffres du ch�mage: la r�ponse d'une radi�e de l'ANPE
Sujet: Re: Chiffres du ch�mage: la r�ponse d'une radi�e de l'ANPE De: sirjohnhoward (l' arobase) gmail.com (Sir John Howard) Groupes: fr.soc.politique, alt.religion.islam, aus.general, aus.politics, uk.politics.misc
Organisation: http://groups.google.com
Date: 06. Jul 2008, 04:30:54
Bob Hawke wrote:
"theloneranger100@aol.com" <thelonerangerl0O@aol.com> wrote in message
news:Fp6dnVKAQrIote3VnZ2dnUVZ_oWdnZ2d@posted.toastnet...
"leptitquinquin" <leptitquinquin@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:b37b169c-83b8-4959-adf6-3e2eb41b491e@c58g2000hsc.googlegroups.com....
Chiffres du ch�mage: la r�ponse d'une radi�e de l'ANPE
� Pas besoin d'aller chercher bien loin pour se faire une id�e
de la
mauvaise foi qui se cache derri�re ces chiffres du ch�mage, il
suffit
de jeter un oil � ces lettres de conseillers de l'ANPE dont on
attend
plus rien �. Radi�e par l'ANPE apr�s avoir accept� un CDD de
quatre
mois, Val�rie t�moigne des pratiques de l'administration qui
expliquent aussi la baisse de 8,4 % � 7,2 % du taux de ch�mage.
A vraiment dire, le votre n'est pas mal, aux Etats Unis, nous
avons 6,9 % � 7,2 % du taux de ch�mage. Un grand Merci � Bush
pour le success de leur gouvernement.
France embarrassed by rampant Wallabies
James Horwill is congratulated by Matt Giteau after scoring
Photo: AAP
Saturday, July 5, 2008 - 10:30 PM
Source: ABC News
Matt Giteau starred as Australia outclassed the French 40-10 in the second
Test at Lang Park, making it a clean sweep of the series and recording its
biggest win against France.
The fly-half did not score a try but was instrumental in all four and had a
perfect night with the boot to continue Australia's preparations for the
Tri-Nations in fine fashion.
Ryan Cross scored a brace in the second half to add to Peter Hynes's and
James Horwill's efforts in the first half, as the home side took advantage
of a French side that did not look at the top of its game.
Chabal's powerful hit on Hynes in the first half was one of only a few signs
of toughness from the visiting side, who were dominated by a forward pack
featuring the inexperienced second-row combination of Horwill and Dean Mumm.
The win made it three from three for coach Robbie Deans, and captain
Stirling Mortlock says the team is working hard to make sure it is at full
strength for the Tri-Nations.
"I think it was an improvement from last week, but look at our bench there
are a fair few injuries," he told Channel Seven after the match.
"We take a lot of pride in our defence and I think that showed tonight," he
said.
"The effort and the work rate of the forwards tonight was brilliant."
Giteau show
After slotting an early penalty Giteau floated a superb cross-field kick
into the waiting arms of Peter Hynes on the right-hand side to give the home
side its first try of the evening.
The Wallabies put consistent pressure on an unimpressive French side, and
Giteau took advantage of a number of penalties to extend the lead.
Horwill silenced the doubters who suggested his pairing with Mumm would
struggle, collecting a sublime flick pass from Giteau in the 37th minute to
cross next to the posts for his second Test try.
But his joy would have evaporated a minute later when he was penalised for
coming in late to a ruck, sparking a ferocious melee that left him with a
severely swollen left eye. The injury forced him to sit out the second half.
The Australians looked impatient in the early stages of the second half, and
stuttering attacking moves were let down with simple skill errors and bad
decision-making.
But that turned around when Cross scored on the hour mark soon after coming
off the bench, running through a gap at inside centre after a flat pass from
Giteau and outpacing the French defence to touch down on the right-hand
side.
France was left vulnerable when Benjamin Boyet was yellow carded for a late
tackle in the 64th minute and Cross completed his double three minutes later
with an easy finish after the Wallabies had laid siege to the French line..
Benjamin Thiery made a scintillating run down the left-hand wing in the
final minute, passing inside to Francois Trinh-Duc who scored underneath the
posts to give the tourists some consolation.
The Wallabies will sweat on the fitness of Cameron Shepherd and Berrick
Barnes, who picked up knee and shoulder injuries respectively.
Wallabies: 40 (R Cross 2, J Horwill, P Hynes tries; M Giteau 4 conversions;
Giteau 4 penalties.)
France: 10 (F Trinh-Duc try; D Yashvili conversion; Trinh-Duc penalty.)
I can't help but notice that on the French side, none of the names are
really Frog names. Whereas on the Australian side, one of them does
sound French. Might be a message in that for the Frogs.
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