Foodbank Whyalla Product List Dated 2/05/19 Phone: 8644 2759

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Foodbank Whyalla Product List Dated 2/05/19 Phone: 8644 2759 Foodbank Whyalla Product List Dated 2/05/19 Phone: 8644 2759 My Agency Code--> Fax: 8644 2760 My Agency Name--> TOTAL $ - My Pickup / Requested Ship Date --> Unit My Order Category Family Item Number Description And Inner Units Expiry Weight Kg Unit Price Limit Quantity Fresh Fruit and Vegetables Fresh Fruit APPLE Apples 1 KG 0.00 Fresh Fruit and Vegetables Fresh Vegetables CARROT Carrot 1 KG 0.00 Fresh Fruit and Vegetables Fresh Vegetables ONION Onion 1 KG 0.00 Fresh Fruit and Vegetables Fresh Vegetables POTATO Potato 1 KG 0.00 Frozen Food Confectionery & Desserts 05000221653196 Cadbury Cake Bars 6 x 10pk BB 3/1/19 1.7 CTN 2.38 Frozen Food Confectionery & Desserts 19347042001915 Connoisseur Choc Brownie w Choc Custard Ice BB 6/6/20 3.4 CTN 8.50 Cream 6 x 1L Frozen Food Confectionery & Desserts 07613030871828 Movenpick Vanilla Dream Ice Cream 4 x 900ml BB 28/2/19 2 CTN 5.00 Frozen Food Frozen Meal S798 Assorted Frozen Family Meals 1kg EACH In Date 1.2 EACH 0.00 Frozen Food Frozen Meal S555 Assorted Frozen Single Meals 400g EACH In Date 0.55 EACH 0.00 Frozen Food Frozen Meal 19300462120048 Lean Cuisine Steam Korean Beef with Rice 6 x BB 1/12/19 2.7 CTN 3.78 2 380g Frozen Food Frozen Meal 19300462120055 Lean Cuisine Steam Vietnamese Chicken with BB 1/12/19 2.7 CTN 3.78 2 Rice 6 x 380g Frozen Food Meat -Raw MEAT Meat 1 KG 1.30 Frozen Food Meat -Raw S528 Slape & Sons Beef Mince 500g EACH BB 12/12/18 0.5 EACH 4.20 Frozen Food Meat -Raw S514 Slape & Sons Premium BBQ Sausages 500g EACH BB 27/8/19 0.5 EACH 2.95 Frozen Food Mixed Groceries FROZEN Assorted Frozen Items 1 KG 1.30 Non Food Non Food 03574661119960 Carefree Plus Light Liners 20's x 12 1.6 CTN 2.00 Non Food Non Food 19310088002178 Depend Fitted Briefs Medium 4 x 11 5.1 CTN 12.75 Non Food Non Food 00036000190663 Depend For Men 2.7 CTN 3.51 Non Food Non Food 19310088009597 Depend Real Fit for Men Large 3 x 8pk 1.6 CTN 5.00 Non Food Non Food 19310088009719 Depend Real Fit for Women Medium 4 x 8pk 2 CTN 8.00 Non Food Non Food 10642863106993 Greenies Dental Treats for Dogs Regular 12 x BB 7/1/19 3 CTN 6.00 85g Non Food Non Food 19310088016830 Huggies Newborn 54pk x 4 4.8 CTN 15.00 Non Food Non Food 19310088011074 Huggies Ultimate Crawler Girls 72pk 3.1 CTN 10.00 Non Food Non Food 19310088011774 Huggies Ultimate Nappy Pants Toddler Boys 5.9 CTN 12.00 31pk x 4 Non Food Non Food 19310088011081 Huggies Ultimate Toddler Boys 58pk 2.9 CTN 10.00 Non Food Non Food 19310088011098 Huggies Ultimate Toddler Girls 58pk 2.8 CTN 10.00 Non Food Non Food 19334214039623 Iams Purrfect Cat Food Ocean Fish & Tuna 24 x BB 6/12/18 3 CTN 4.20 70g Non Food Non Food 19300607090328 Listerine Whitening Plus Enamel Protection UB 31/5/19 6.9 CTN 0.00 Antibacterial Mouthwash 6 x 945ml Non Food Non Food S222 Newborn Nappies 60/ctn 4 CTN 8.00 Non Food Non Food 14902430536018 Oral B All Rounder Healthy 32 Soft 2.9 CTN 25.00 Toothbrushes 144/ctn Non Food Non Food 03014260815448 Oral B Toothbrushes 2pk x 6 x 12 5.1 CTN 22.00 Non Food Non Food 14894063078594 Paperclick Blue Glue 3 x 8 x 43g In Date 2.8 CTN 5.00 Non Food Non Food 19334214039847 Schmackos Meaty Tenderz Chicken 8 x 100g BB 26/10, 10/11/18 1.2 CTN 0.00 Non Food Non Food 07322540546538 Tena Liners Extra Long 6pk x 24 1.2 CTN 5.00 Non Food Non Food 19334214028337 Whiskas Gold Junior Cat Food 5 x 12 x 85g BB 17/11/18 5.9 CTN 0.00 Non Food Non Food 1934214046669 Whiskas Pet Milk Plus 6 x 3 x 250ml BB 28/2/19 5.5 CTN 2.00 Non Food Non Food 19300633717152 Woolworths Flexi Straws Neon 18 x 100pk 1.5 CTN 2.10 Non Food Non Food 19300633357778 Woolworths Homebrand Newborn Nappies 28pk 4.5 CTN 8.00 x 6 Refrigerated Food Butter 19310047010510 Meadow Lea Margarine 12 x 1kg BB 11/6/19 12.8 CTN 17.92 Refrigerated Food Cheese 19311482007509 Cracker Barrel Vintage Cheddar Extra Sharp 12 BB 2/4/19 6.5 CTN 16.25 2 x 500g Refrigerated Food Drinks 19421006043279 Charlies Light Mango & Orange Quencher Juice BB 7/2/19 9 CTN 5.40 6 x 1.5L Refrigerated Food Drinks 19421006043378 Charlies Light Raspberry & Pomegranate BB 20/2/19 9 CTN 5.40 Quencher Juice 6 x 1.5L Room Temperature Food Baking & Cooking 19300695007635 Betty Crocker Gluten Free Coffee Frosting 8 x BB 16/8/19 3.5 CTN 4.90 400g Room Temperature Food Baking & Cooking 19300695003989 Betty Crocker Pancake Mix 6 x 440g BB 1/2/19 2.6 CTN 4.06 Room Temperature Food Baking & Cooking 19310077267595 Black & Gold Brown Vinegar 12 x 1L BB 11/5/20 13.4 CTN 7.50 Room Temperature Food Baking & Cooking 19300644704523 Campbells Real Stock Fish 6 x 500ml BB 9/11/18 3.5 CTN 0.00 Room Temperature Food Baking & Cooking 19300830032935 Continental Stock Cubes Vegetable 12 x 8 x 10g BB 3/8/19 0.1 CTN 12.00 Room Temperature Food Baking & Cooking 19310138246654 Defiance Hi Fibre Grain Bread Mix 1 x 5kg BB 18/9, 25/10/18 5.1 BAG 0.00 Room Temperature Food Baking & Cooking S536 Leggos Napoletana Chunky Tomato & Herbs BB 1/11/20 4.8 CTN 12.00 Pasta Sauce 6 x 500g Room Temperature Food Baking & Cooking 19310012445071 Masterfoods Sweet & Sour Sauce EACH 2.7kg BB 20/5/19 2.7 EACH 3.78 Room Temperature Food Baking & Cooking 19310012022282 Masterfoods Sweet Plum Marinade 6 x 375ml BB 8/9/19 4 CTN 5.60 Room Temperature Food Baking & Cooking 19310047212198 White Wings Organic Self Raising Flour 8 x 1kg BB 16/4/19 8.5 CTN 6.00 Room Temperature Food Baking & Cooking 19310060701686 White Wings Panjacks Mix 6 x 440g BB 30/5/19 2.9 CTN 4.06 Room Temperature Food Biscuits & Snacks 19310072023752 Arnott's Butternut Snap/Choc Ripple Portion BB 27/1, 14/2, 10/3, 23/4/193.2 CTN 4.48 Control 2pk x 150 Room Temperature Food Biscuits & Snacks 19310072000838 Arnott's Cruskits Original 24 x 125g BB 24/9, 30/10, 25/11/184.2 CTN 0.00 Room Temperature Food Biscuits & Snacks 29310072012470 Arnott's Harvest Wheat Biscuits Portion Control BB 29/1/19 3.3 CTN 0.00 2 x 280pk Room Temperature Food Biscuits & Snacks 29310072020925 Arnott's SaladaPage 97% 1 of Fat 3 Free 18 x 250g BB 21/2/19 5.5 CTN 7.70 Room Temperature Food Biscuits & Snacks 19310072028849 Arnott's Vita-Weat Cracker Chips Chilli Lime BB 26/2/19 2.6 CTN 0.00 Coriander 16 x 120g Room Temperature Food Biscuits & Snacks 19310072025107 Arnott's Vita-Weat Cracker Multigrain 20 x 140g BB 23/12/18, 19/3/19 3.4 CTN 0.00 Room Temperature Food Biscuits & Snacks BAKERY Bakery, Rolls, etc. (excluding BREAD) 0.7 EACH 0.00 Room Temperature Food Biscuits & Snacks S782 Beston Chilli Cracker Mix 200 x 20g BB 18/2/19 4.5 CTN 1.00 Room Temperature Food Biscuits & Snacks 19310015245524 Bluebird Gluten Free Salted Chips 12 x 170g BB 10/2/19 2.6 CTN 3.64 Room Temperature Food Biscuits & Snacks 19310988017005 Kettle Mozzarella Basil Pesto Chips 12 x 175g BB 16/3, 23/3/19 2.5 CTN 3.50 2 Room Temperature Food Biscuits & Snacks 19310015242745 Red Rock Champagne Vinaigrette & Shallot BB 9/12/18 2.3 CTN 3.22 Chips 12 x 150g Room Temperature Food Biscuits & Snacks 19310015241045 Sprinters Original Chips 12 x 250g BB 7/4/19 3.8 CTN 5.32 2 Room Temperature Food Biscuits & Snacks 19310015246156 Tostitos Tortilla Chips with Lime 12 x 175g BB 16/12/18, 6/1/19 2.6 CTN 3.64 Room Temperature Food Biscuits & Snacks 19300633694170 Woolworths Crispbread 12 x 125g BB 26/10/18 2.2 CTN 0.00 Room Temperature Food Bread BREAD Bread 0.7 LOAF 0.00 Room Temperature Food Bread 18410076574289 Old El Paso Gluten Free Tortilla 12 x 216g BB 19/1, 5/2/19 3.7 CTN 5.18 Room Temperature Food Breakfast Cereal 15010477349641 Jordans Oat Clusters Wild About Berries Cereal BB 26/4, 20/6/19 5.1 CTN 12.00 6 x 500g Room Temperature Food Breakfast Cereal 19300652804956 Sanitarium Weet-Bix Breakfast Cereal 12 x BB 18/1, 12/6/19 14.6 CTN 20.44 1.12kg Room Temperature Food Breakfast Cereal 19300633341227 Select Speedy Oats Plain 6 x 340g BB 21/2, 7/3/19 2.7 CTN 3.78 Room Temperature Food Breakfast Cereal 19310060011068 Uncle Toby's Rolled Oats EACH 15kg BB 9/1/19 15 EACH 5.00 Room Temperature Food Breakfast Cereal 19300605063508 Uncle Tobys Plus Fibre 12 x 430g BB 3/10/19 6.4 CTN 39.60 Room Temperature Food Breakfast Cereal S6 Uncle Tobys Vita Brits Breakfast Cereal 1kg x 12 BB 7/11/19, 14/1/20 14.9 CTN 34.00 Room Temperature Food Coffee 19329214005204 Grinders Coffee Capsules 8 x 80g BB 5/11/18 1.2 CTN 0.00 Room Temperature Food Confectionery & Desserts 19300695008243 Betty Crocker Chocolate & Caramel Blondie BB 24/3/19 1 CTN 1.40 Mug Treats 5 x 2 x 80g Room Temperature Food Confectionery & Desserts 19300682052235 Bounty Chocolate Bars 6 x 24 x 57g BB 16/12/18 9 CTN 20.00 Room Temperature Food Confectionery & Desserts 29310034247377 Cadbury Barni Milk Flavour 6 x 5 x 30g BB 25/5/19 1.3 CTN 1.82 Room Temperature Food Confectionery & Desserts 29300617246903 Cadbury Boost Nuts Bars 4 x 35 x 54g BB 2/3/19 8.3 CTN 11.62 Room Temperature Food Confectionery & Desserts 19350086000196 Dr Oetker Easy Choc Icing 4 x 150g BB 31/3/19 1 CTN 1.40 Room Temperature Food Confectionery & Desserts 19300681416816 Foster Clarks Blackberry Jelly Crystals 24 x 85g BB 1/11/18 2.5 CTN 0.00 Room Temperature Food Confectionery & Desserts 19300681417097 Foster Clarks Lemon Jelly Crystals 24 x 85g BB 17/1/19 2.5 CTN 3.50 Room Temperature Food Confectionery & Desserts S841 Galaxy Caramel Mini Celebrations 10kg BULK BB 28/10, 25/11/18, 10/2/1910.7 CTN 0.00 Room Temperature Food Confectionery & Desserts S870 Galaxy Chunk Mini Celebrations 10kg BULK BB 10/2/19 10.7 CTN 10.00 Room Temperature Food Confectionery & Desserts 19300698020853 Kinder Choco Bons 2 x 12 x 104g BB 7/5/19 3.6 CTN 0.00 Room Temperature Food Confectionery & Desserts 19300698018652 Kinder Surprise T48 2 x 24 BB 24/3, 27/5, 24/9/19
Recommended publications
  • Volume 4-2:2011
    JSEALS Journal of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society Managing Editor: Paul Sidwell (Pacific Linguistics, Canberra) Editorial Advisory Board: Mark Alves (USA) George Bedell (Thailand) Marc Brunelle (Canada) Gerard Diffloth (Cambodia) Marlys Macken (USA) Brian Migliazza (USA) Keralapura Nagaraja (India) Peter Norquest (USA) Amara Prasithrathsint (Thailand) Martha Ratliff (USA) Sophana Srichampa (Thailand) Justin Watkins (UK) JSEALS is the peer-reviewed journal of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society, and is devoted to publishing research on the languages of mainland and insular Southeast Asia. It is an electronic journal, distributed freely by Pacific Linguistics (www.pacling.com) and the JSEALS website (jseals.org). JSEALS was formally established by decision of the SEALS 17 meeting, held at the University of Maryland in September 2007. It supersedes the Conference Proceedings, previously published by Arizona State University and later by Pacific Linguistics. JSEALS welcomes articles that are topical, focused on linguistic (as opposed to cultural or anthropological) issues, and which further the lively debate that characterizes the annual SEALS conferences. Although we expect in practice that most JSEALS articles will have been presented and discussed at the SEALS conference, submission is open to all regardless of their participation in SEALS meetings. Papers are expected to be written in English. Each paper is reviewed by at least two scholars, usually a member of the Advisory Board and one or more independent readers. Reviewers are volunteers, and we are grateful for their assistance in ensuring the quality of this publication. As an additional service we also admit data papers, reports and notes, subject to an internal review process.
    [Show full text]
  • Generic CMYK Printer Profile Composite Default Screen
    Color profile: Generic CMYK printer profile Composite Default screen C:\Jobs\Bibliography 2002\Vp\Bibliography.vp Tuesday, December 08, 2009 3:31:45 PM Color profile: Generic CMYK printer profile Composite Default screen Additional copies of this publication may be obtained from: Academic Affairs P.O. Box 2270 CPO 1099 Manila or: [email protected] Ó Summer Institute of Linguistics Philippines, Inc. 1978, 1985, 1988, 2003 All rights reserved. First edition 1978 Fourth edition 2003 Bibliography of the Summer Institute of Linguistics Philippines 1953-2003 ISBN: 971-18-0370-4 0203-4C Printed in the Philippines C:\Jobs\Bibliography 2002\Vp\Bibliography.vp Tuesday, December 08, 2009 3:31:45 PM Color profile: Generic CMYK printer profile Composite Default screen Contents Foreword ...................... xvii OfficialLetters .................... xix Preface ....................... xxiii Introduction ..................... xxv VariantLanguageNames .............. xxvii VariantAuthorNames................ xxxi ListofJournals .................. xxxiii PublisherandInstitutionAbbreviations ...... xxxix GeneralAbbreviations ................ xli Map ......................... xlii General ........................ 1 Anthropology . 1 Linguistics . 3 Literacy and Literature Use . 9 Translation . 11 Various . 16 PhilippineGeneral .................. 23 Anthropology. 23 Linguistics . 28 Literacy and Literature Use . 37 Translation . 40 Various . 40 Working Papers. 42 Agta:Casiguran(Dumagat) .............. 42 Anthropology. 42 Linguistics . 44 Literacy and
    [Show full text]
  • The Case of Hamaxing Jeremy E
    East Asian History NUMBER 21 . JUNE 2001 Institute of Advanced Studies Australian National University Editor Geremie R. Barme Associate Editor Helen Lo Editorial Board Mark Elvin (Convenor) John Clark Andrew Fraser Helen Hardacre Colin Jeffcott W. J. F. Jenner Lo Hui-min Gavan McCormack David MalT Tessa Morris-Suzuki Michael Underdown Design and Production Helen Lo Business Manager Marion Weeks Printed by Goanna Print, Fyshwick, ACT This is the twenty-first issue of East Asian History, printed June 2001 in the series previously entitled Papers on Far Eastern History. This externally refereed journal is published twice a year Contributions to The Editor, East Asian History Division of Pacific and Asian History Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies Australian National University Canberra ACT 0200, Australia Phone +61 26125 3140 Fax +61 26125 5525 email [email protected] Subscription Enquiries to Subscriptions, East Asian History, at the above address, or to [email protected] Annual Subscription Australia A$50 (including GSn Overseas US$45 (GST free) (for two issues) ISSN 1036-6008 iii ~ CONTENTS 1 In search of Erlang Carmelita (Carma) Hinton 33 Treated as Treasures: the Ci rculation of Sutras in Maritime Northeast ASia , from 1388 to the Mid-Sixteenth CentlllY Kenneth R. Robinson 55 Wu T'ai-po in Early Tokugawa Thought: Imperial Ancestor or Ch inese Sage? Wai-ming Ng 65 Liang Qichao in Australia: a Sojourn of No Significance? Gloria Davies 111 La Maison d 'Or- the Sumptuous World of Shao Xunmei Jonathan Hutt 143 Preserving the Remnants of Empire in Taiwan: the Case of Hamaxing Jeremy E.
    [Show full text]
  • CUHK Papers in Linguistics,Number 1. INSTITUTION Chinese Univ
    DOCUMENT AESUME ED 364 067 FL 021 534 AUTHOR Ching, Teresa, Ed. TITLE CUHK Papers in Linguistics,Number 1. INSTITUTION Chinese Univ. of Hong Kong.Linguistics Research Lab. SPONS AGENCY Lingnan Univ. (China).; UnitedBoard of Higher Christian Education in Asia. REPORT NO ISSN-1015-1672 PUB DATE Aug 89 NOTE 118p.; For individualpapers, see FL 021 535-539. PUB TYPE Collected Works - Serials (022) JOURNAL CIT CUHK Papers in Linguistics; nlAug 1989 EDRS PRICE MF01/PC05 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS Children; *English (Second Language);*Evaluation Methods; *Grammar; *HeariagImpairments; Language Acquisition; Mandarin Chinese;*Second Language Learning; *Standard SpokenUsage; Syntax IDENTIIIERS *Linear Ordering;Quantifiers ABSTRACT Papers included in thisvolume include the following: "Prosodic Aspects of Hearing-Impaired Children: AQualitative and Quantitative Assessmer' (Teresa Y. C. Ching); "TheRole of Linear Order in the Acquisit: of Quantifier Scope in Chinese"(ThoLas H. T. Lee); "Some Neglected Syntactic Phenomena inNear-standard English" (Mark Newbrook); "The Effect of ExplicitInstruction on the Acquisition of English Grammatical Structures by ChineseLearners" (Yan-ping Zhou); and "An Essay on Toffee Apple andTreacle Tart, Being an Imitation ofCockney Punning for TOEFL W. Ho). (Author/VWL) and TEASL" (Louise S. *********************************************************************** Reproductions supplied byEDRS are the best thatcan be made from the original document. *********************************************************************** CUBIC
    [Show full text]
  • In Defense of the Numeral-Based Model of Austronesian Phylogeny, and of Tsouic*
    Article Language and Linguistics In Defense of the Numeral-based Model of 15(6) 859–882 © The Author(s) 2014 Austronesian Phylogeny, and of Tsouic* Reprints and permissions: sagepub.co.uk/journalsPermissions.nav DOI: 10.1177/1606822X14544623 lin.sagepub.com Laurent Sagart Centre de Recherches Linguistiques sur l’Asie Orientale Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique This paper responds to all of Malcolm Ross’s criticisms, published in Language and Linguistics 13.6 (2012), of Sagart’s numeral-based model of Austronesian phylogeny (Sagart 2004). It shows that a part of these criticisms is addressed to an invented version of Sagart’s model, while another appeals to questionable princi- ples. It points out various errors of fact and interpretation. It also criticizes Ross’s own account of the evolution of early Austronesian numerals, showing that it has little explanatory power, fails to account for phonological irregularities, and cannot explain the observed nesting pattern among numeral isoglosses. Finally, this paper shows that Tsouic, a Formosan subgroup which contradicts Ross’s phylogeny, is valid. Key words: Austronesian, classification, numerals, phylogeny subgrouping 1. Background Sagart (2004) presented a new model of the early phylogeny of the Austronesian family, particularly its Formosan phase. The model placed the PAn homeland in northwest Taiwan, treated Proto-Malayo-Polynesian as a member of a low-level Formosan subgroup and Tai-Kadai as a sister group to Malayo-Polynesian. The argument relied on a set of innovations among numerals, revealed mainly by two independent lines of evidence: first, the observation of a hierarchy of implications among the familiar cardinals from 5 to 10, such that: *puluq ‘10’ << *Siwa ‘9’ << *walu ‘8’ << *enem ‘6’ << *lima ‘5’ << *pitu ‘7’ (where ‘A << B’ means ‘a reflex of A implies the presence of a reflex of B’) Similarly among biological species the presence of hair implies amniotic eggs, which imply four limbs, which imply a bony skeleton, which implies vertebrae.
    [Show full text]
  • Intonational Phonology in Colloquial Singaporean English*
    Intonational Phonology in Colloquial Singaporean English* Kelly Banciella Smemo A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Arts in Linguistics Swarthmore College December 2015 Abstract One of the primary goals of intonational phonology is to explore how meaning is assigned to an utterance through various suprasegmental features at the word level and above. This can be modeled using Autosegmental Metrical theory which creates a hierarchical prosodic structure for an utterance. How these different levels interact with each other is dependent on the language in question (Ladd, 2008). This thesis explores Colloquial Singaporean English (CSE), a language native to the city-state of Singapore. Standard English along with Mandarin Chinese, Malay and Tamil are recognized as the official languages of the area. This puts CSE in a stigmatized role, despite its use in almost all spheres of life, barring government policy and writing in general. The dialect differs greatly from standard forms with heavy borrowing from languages such as Mandarin, Hokkien and Tamil on phonetic, syntactic and semantic levels (Harada, 2009). Within CSE, there is contention on how to accurately describe its intonational system due to the lack of empirical data. One model, developed by Ng posits that each syllable of the word is assigned a specific tone based on it's place in the word (e.g. Ng, 2011). Another model, argued for by Chong, uses Autosegmental Metrical theory to break up utterances into accentual phrases (e.g. Chong, 2013). In order to test the merit of each model, I collected novel data from two consul­ tants focusing on target words of varying syllable length.
    [Show full text]
  • Foodbank SA Product List Dated 24/10/19 Phone: 8351 1136
    Foodbank SA Product List Dated 24/10/19 Phone: 8351 1136 My Agency Code--> Fax: 8351 1137 My Agency Name--> TOTAL $ - My Pickup / Requested Ship Date --> Unit My Order Category Family Item Number Description And Inner Units Expiry Weight Kg Unit Price Limit Quantity Fresh Fruit and Vegetables Fresh Fruit APPLE Apples 1 KG 0.00 Fresh Fruit and Vegetables Fresh Fruit MANDARIN Mandarins 1 KG 0.00 Fresh Fruit and Vegetables Fresh Fruit ORANGE Oranges 1 KG 0.00 Fresh Fruit and Vegetables Fresh Fruit PEAR Pear 1 KG 0.00 Fresh Fruit and Vegetables Fresh Fruit WATERMELON Watermelon 1 KG 0.00 Fresh Fruit and Vegetables Fresh Vegetables CARROT Carrot 1 KG 0.00 Fresh Fruit and Vegetables Fresh Vegetables ONION Onion 1 KG 0.00 Fresh Fruit and Vegetables Fresh Vegetables POTATO Potato 1 KG 0.00 Fresh Fruit and Vegetables Fresh Vegetables TOMATO Tomatoes 1 KG 0.00 Frozen Food Bread 19329018035872 All Fruit Hot Cross Buns 22 x 6pk BB 27/9/19 10.5 CTN 14.70 Frozen Food Confectionery & Desserts 19312353007161 Haagen Dazs Caramel Biscuit & Cream Ice BB 30/7, 1.1 CTN 2.75 Cream 12 x 80ml 24/9/19 Frozen Food Frozen Meal 19300657823716 Kraft Easy Mac & Cheese Cracked Pepper & BB 20/11/19 4.5 CTN 6.30 Parmesan 10 x 400g Frozen Food Meat - Processed 99326451436064 Don Kabana 1 x 7.5kg UB 4/6/19 8 CTN 11.20 Frozen Food Meat -Raw MEAT Meat 1 KG 2.00 Frozen Food Meat -Raw S346 Primo BBQ Beef & Lamb Sausages 9 x 500g BB 14/10, 4.5 CTN 13.50 2 28/10/19 Frozen Food Meat -Raw S528 Slape & Sons Beef Mince 500g EACH BB 12/12/19 0.5 EACH 4.20 Frozen Food Meat -Raw S514
    [Show full text]
  • Philippine Studies Ateneo De Manila University • Loyola Heights, Quezon City • 1108 Philippines
    philippine studies Ateneo de Manila University • Loyola Heights, Quezon City • 1108 Philippines Forms of Consciousness in El Filibusterismo Benedict R. O’Gorman Anderson Philippine Studies vol. 54, no, 3 (2006): 315–356 Copyright © Ateneo de Manila University Philippine Studies is published by the Ateneo de Manila University. Contents may not be copied or sent via email or other means to multiple sites and posted to a listserv without the copyright holder’s written permission. Users may down- load and print articles for individual, noncommercial use only. However, unless prior permission has been obtained, you may not download an entire issue of a journal, or download mul- tiple copies of articles. Please contact the publisher for any further use of this work at [email protected]. http://www.philippinestudies.net Fri June 27 13:30:20 2008 Forms of Consciousness in El Filibusterismo Benedict R. O'Gorman Anderson This sequel to "Forms of Consciousness in Noli me tangere" turns to El Filibusterismo. The article shows that Rizal's new conception of Philip- pine society as a racial "pyramid," pitting indios against chinos and Spaniards, produced an anti-Chinese racism absent in the Noli. It also shows RizalS dificulties in coping with the Philippines' ethnolinguistic variety. A further section considers the reasons for the surprising pov- erty of the Fili's political vocabulary. Finally, attention is focused on RizalS problems in locating a linguistic vehicle for effective communica- tion among his countrymen. The Fili goes beyond the Noli's Spanish- Tagalog binary to introduce a hybrid, urban lingua franca. KEYWORDS: nationalism, racism, Rizal, Chinese, lingua franca In the article "Forms of Consciousness in Noh me tangere," whch Phil- ippine Studies published at the end of 2003, I promised that it would be followed rapidly by a parallel text on El Filibusterismo.
    [Show full text]
  • Safe Haven: Mon Refugees at the Capitals of Siam from the 1500S to the 1800S
    151 Safe Haven: Mon Refugees at the Capitals of Siam from the 1500s to the 1800s Edward Van Roy From the 16th to the early 19th centuries Siam received a series of migrations of Mon refugees fleeing Burmese oppression, as well as sporadic inflows of Mon war captives. Large numbers of those arrivals were settled along the Chaophraya River and at the successive capitals of Ayutthaya, Thonburi, and Bangkok. This article examines the patterns of Mon settlement at the successive capitals and the patronage system whereby the Mon were granted privileged status and residence in return for military services. It considers the Old-Mon–New-Mon tensions that were generated by the series of migrations, including those that marked the transition to the Bangkok era. In closing, it refers to the waning of Mon ethnic identity and influence within Bangkok over the course of the 19th century. That analysis of the Mon role provides fresh insight into the evolving social organization and spatial structure of the three consecutive Siamese capitals. Old Mon and New Over the course of the past millennium and more, a succession of Mon migrations crossed the Tenasserim Hills to settle in the Chaophraya watershed. Each new migration encountered earlier groups of Mon settlers. In many cases the encounter entailed tensions between the old and the new settler groups, and in each case the newly settled groups, or “New Mon,” became established communi- ties or “Old Mon” who were to face yet newer Mon immigrants. The distinction between Old and New Mon thus historically presented a “moving target” in the history of Mon migration into the Chaophraya watershed and their interaction with Thai civilization.
    [Show full text]
  • Infrastructures of Language and Chinese Scripts in an Age of Global Information Revolution Ulug Kuzuoglu
    Codes of Modernity: Infrastructures of Language and Chinese Scripts In an Age of Global Information Revolution Ulug Kuzuoglu Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 2018 ©2018 Ulug Kuzuoglu All rights reserved ABSTRACT Codes of Modernity: Infrastructures of Language and Chinese Scripts in an Age of Global Information Revolution Ulug Kuzuoglu This dissertation explores the global history of Chinese script reforms—the effort to phoneticize Chinese language and/or simplify the writing system—from its inception in the 1890s to its demise in the 1980s. These reforms took place at the intersection of industrialization, colonialism, and new information technologies, such as alphabet-based telegraphy and breakthroughs in printing technologies. As these social and technological transformations put unprecedented pressure on knowledge management and the use of mental and clerical labor, many Chinese intellectuals claimed that learning Chinese characters consumed too much time and mental energy. Chinese script reforms, this dissertation argues, were an effort to increase speed in producing, transmitting, and accessing information, and thus meet the demands of the industrializing knowledge economy. The industrializing knowledge economy that this dissertation explores was built on and sustained by a psychological understanding of the human subject as a knowledge machine, and it was part of a global moment in which the optimization of labor in knowledge production was a key concern for all modernizing economies. While Chinese intellectuals were inventing new signs of inscription, American behavioral psychologists, Soviet psycho-economists, and Central Asian and Ottoman technicians were all experimenting with new scripts in order to increase mental efficiency and productivity.
    [Show full text]
  • Myths and Legends of China, by E
    1 CHAPTER I CHAPTER II CHAPTER III CHAPTER IV CHAPTER V CHAPTER VI CHAPTER VII CHAPTER VIII CHAPTER IX CHAPTER X CHAPTER XI CHAPTER XII CHAPTER XIII CHAPTER XIV CHAPTER XV CHAPTER XVI Myths and Legends of China, by E. T. C. Werner 2 Myths and Legends of China, by E. T. C. Werner The Project Gutenberg EBook of Myths and Legends of China, by E. T. C. Werner This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net Title: Myths and Legends of China Author: E. T. C. Werner Release Date: March 4, 2005 [EBook #15250] Language: English Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MYTHS AND LEGENDS OF CHINA *** Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Jeroen Hellingman and the PG Online Distributed Proofreading Team. Myths & Legends of China By E.T.C. Werner H.B.M. Consul Foochow (Retired) Barrister-at-law Middle Temple Late Member of The Chinese Government Historiographical Bureau Peking Author of "Descriptive Sociology: Chinese" "China of the Chinese" Etc. Myths and Legends of China, by E. T. C. Werner 3 George G. Harrap & Co. Ltd. London Bombay Sydney In Memoriam Gladys Nina Chalmers Werner Preface The chief literary sources of Chinese myths are the Li tai shên hsien t'ung chien, in thirty-two volumes, the Shên hsien lieh chuan, in eight volumes, the Fêng shên yen i, in eight volumes, and the Sou shên chi, in ten volumes.
    [Show full text]
  • Chinese in Indonesia: a Background Study
    DigitalResources Electronic Survey Report 2011-028 ® Chinese in Indonesia: A Background Study Hermanto Lim David Mead Chinese in Indonesia: A Background Study Hermanto Lim and David Mead SIL International® 2011 SIL Electronic Survey Report 2011-028, March 2011 Copyright © 2011 Hermanto Lim, David Mead, and SIL International® All rights reserved 2 Contents Abstract 1 Introduction (by David Mead) 2 Introduction (by Hermanto Lim) 3 How should I address my Chinese neighbor? 3.1 Tionghoa 3.2 Cina 3.3 Teng Lang 3.4 WNI Keturunan 3.5 Nonpribumi 3.6 Chinese 3.7 Summary 4 Old and new Chinese immigrants in the archipelago 4.1 Overview of Chinese immigration 4.2 Peranakan versus Totok 4.3 Characteristics of Peranakan versus Totok 5 Chinese languages and dialects in Indonesia 5.1 Hokkien 5.2 Cantonese 5.3 Hakka 5.4 Teochew 5.5 Hainan 5.6 Hokchiu 5.7 Henghua 5.8 Hokchhia 5.9 Kwongsai 5.10 Chao An 5.11 Luichow 5.12 Shanghai 5.13 Ningpo 5.14 Mandarin 6 Government policy toward Chinese writing and Chinese languages Appendix: Some notes about written Chinese References 3 Abstract In this document we discuss the fourteen major varieties of Chinese which are reported to be spoken in the country of Indonesia, giving particular attention to the five largest communities: Hokkien, Cantonese, Hakka, Teochew, and Hainan. Additional sections discuss terms which have been used in the Indonesian context for referring to people of Chinese descent, overview of Chinese immigration into Indonesia over the previous centuries, and recent government policy toward Chinese languages and Chinese writing.
    [Show full text]