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SYDNEY, Sept 1 Asia Pulse - Highlights of today's newspapers:
THE AUSTRALIAN
- Students will be charged more than $A100,000 ($US69,755) for university degrees in almost 50 courses fron next year; Labor is likely to offer tax relief for middle Australia as part of its election package; Liberal Senator George Brandis has been accused of calling Prime Minister John Howard a "lying rodent" over the children overboard affair; Three senior staff have been sacked from the University of Southern Queensland after it was discovered a campus was set up in Dubai without the consent of the vice-chancellor; US President Bush admits America can't win the war on terror.
- The Ranger uranium mine in the Northern Territory was forced to suspend operations yesterday following a damning report into a contamination scare earlier this year.
- Rene Rivkin's sharemarket tip sheet is recommending subscribers dump Rivkin Financial Services stock.
- Telstra executives will be grilled by the ACCC as hostilities escalate over allegations of predatory internet pricing by the telco; Brambles profit hits $A520 million ($US362.73 million) as Chep pallet operations finally turnaround.
THE SYDNEY MORNING HERALD
Source: HighBeam Research, AUSTRALIAN NEWSPAPER HIGHLIGHTS - SEPT 1, 2004.