Majorclinical programs and services include: emergency services; critical care;cardiac care; neurosciences; stroke center; cancer care; childbirth services;bariatric surgery; sports medicine; medical rehabilitation; geropsychiatriccenter; Gamma Knife(R) Center; diagnostic imaging; laboratory services; andeducation and wellness programs, among others. Further information, including copies of theDecember 19, 2008 and January 16, 2009 Orders can be found on the websiteof KPMG Inc. Mark Kemp-Gee,KPMG Inc.777 Dunsmuir Street, PO Box 10426Vancouver, BC V7Y 1K3Telephone: (604) 691-3397Facsimile: (604) 691-3036Email: bout Adanac Molybdenum CorporationAdanac Molybdenum Corporation is listed on the TSX and Frankfurtexchanges and owns the Ruby Creek Project in northern British Columbia.The Company has advanced the project through feasibility studies, aproduction decision and has previously ordered long-lead equipment,completed permitting for construction, constructed a road to the site andsecured US$80 million in bridge financing.Cautionary Notice: This news release contains "forward-lookinginformation" within the meaning of applicable Canadian securitieslegislation and United States securities laws. Forward-looking information is based on the opinions andestimates of management at the date the information is made, and is basedon a number of assumptions and subject to a variety of risks anduncertainties and other factors that could cause actual events or resultsto differ materially from those projected in the forward lookinginformation. Many of these assumptions are based on factors and eventsthat are not within the control of the Company and there is no assurancethey will prove to be correct. Factors that could cause actual results tovary materially from results anticipated by such forward lookinginformation include risk factors discussed in the Annual Information Formfor the year ended April 30, 2008 for the Company available at 
Although the Company has attempted to identify importantfactors that could cause actual actions, events or results to differmaterially from those described in forward-looking information, there maybe other factors that cause actions, events or results not to beanticipated, estimated or intended. There can be no assurance thatforward-looking information will prove to be accurate, as actual resultsand future events could differ materially from those anticipated in suchinformation. JonesChairman & CEO(604) 535-6834(604) 536-8411 (FAX)Email: Copyright 2009, Market Wire, All rights reserved.-0-. JABALYA, Gaza (Reuters) - The destruction is total, as if a terrible earthquake had struck But this was no natural disaster. WorldOnce there were citrus orchards and olive groves here, locals say, big homes with courtyards and scratching chickens.Now there is nothing but shattered buildings, thrown up in the air and half-buried, tossed in a pitching sea of plowed-up earth, a bizarre vista of devastation.They are the ruins left behind from a three-week Israeli assault, an offensive undertaken, Israel said, to stop Hamas militants firing rockets into Israeli towns and cities.Palestinians on Monday surveyed the broken, blackened wreckage of East Jabalya, a neighborhood with the misfortune to occupy a high ridge above the city of Gaza.Israeli forces wanted it.

They pounded it with bombs, blasted it with tanks, then bulldozed the trees and gardens to get a clear firing platform overlooking the streets below.Some parts of Gaza city look strangely normal after 22 days of non-stop bombardment by air land and sea. There are streets quite unscathed, apart from broken windows and rotting garbage.But drive up into the suburb that once sat proudly on the ridge, and it's as if one had turned a corner of Stalingrad, a dark scene from some World War Two battle of annihilation.Fighting was heavy here, say the locals. But most civilians had already fled to the shelter of U.N.-run schools in the city.Now roofless, they squat among the twisted concrete of what used to be their homes, cooking scraps of food over camp fires in blackened living rooms missing their outside walls.Men scavenge precariously under giant slabs of fractured concrete, looking for blankets, door-frames, timber, pictures, books anything dear or still useful that they could pull from the ruins of their lives."There is no garden, no trees, no stones, no house," says Amna Abueide, whose three-storey house lies collapsed, like a tiered cake of cement smashed by a sledgehammer.Her daughter Fatma, 29, stares at the family cat prowling over splintered walls, sniffing his former home now mysteriously transformed.SHATTERED LANDSCAPENearby a goat lies dead But a neighbor has found the kid, bleating for food. Mohamed Abed, 47, has gathered seven white chickens in the shell of his house. Exploded Israeli 155mm shells lie outside."This was what brought the phosphorus," he says "It was almost beautiful, like fireworks.