Bendigo Advertiser Memorial Notices
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Central Bendigo Map
Central Bendigo MAP MARONG Garden Gully To Schweppes Centre Res. MAIDEN GULLY Niemann St Legend (Bendigo Stadium) EAGLEHAWK MILDURA Parking (All Day) Toilets Niemann St To Exhibition Centre Valentine St & Showgrounds Parking (Time Restricted) Tram Route d St Parking for Long Vehicles Tram Stops To St. John Floo e East Moor Catholic e St e East ne Tc t Tc of God Hospital a L College Police Station ttle St Drought est S St est Barkly Ba Wa Barkly rna For rd St For Barkly St Stewart St w St e St Thunder St Vi ft ro Anne Caudle Barnard St Hope St Bendigo Banc Centre St cy To Chinese Joss terloo St Hospital Wa Mer Ba St Nolan House 1km rnard St St yne Arnold St Arnold Ba Bendigo Lucan St Queen Bendigo Richar Aquatic Lucan St d St Elizabeth Bowls Rowan St Centre Oval Club St Tennis Tom Flood Don Sports Wa St. Johns Centre ter St Mackenzie St Presbyterian Gaol Rd Bridge St Church View Hill Capital Theatre way) one Fellowship Camp Hill Bendigo Old Lake Mack ( Rd rk enzie St Art Gallery Primary Sec. Bendigo Pa Weeroona t St e School College Gaol Observation Tower Viol Golden Bendigo Tennis Sacred Heart Dragon Bridge St MELBOURNE Museum Complex Cathedral t St est St est Cascades ELMORE Calder Hwy Hi Shor r gh Fo ECHUCA ew St ew St Forest Street Vi Rosiland Park Fernery Farmers Lane y Central Deborah Midland Hw Uniting Church (one way) Gold Mine ne St To Bendigo Pottery Vi Creek St No RSL Howarde St. -
Advanced Aesthetic Composite Techniques and Componeer Lecture and Workshop
COMPONEER™ WHAT WILL YOU LEARN? LECTURE/WORKSHOP REGISTRATION COMPONEER™ • How to create a treatment plan for aesthetic Register online at restorative cases on the basis of the free-handed www.henryschein.com.au/education Advanced Aesthetic Composite delivery of composite resin. Registration enquiries: Kira Meyers Techniques and Componeer • A step by step guide to the direct application of composite resin from tooth etching to fnishing of Phone (02) 9697 6361 Lecture and Workshop the restoration Email [email protected] • What are, where and how can I use Componeers? Registrations close: • Techniques involved in the application of 7th March - Melbourne 27th June - Adelaide Componeers LECTURE: 3.25 24th April - Brisbane 4th July - Melbourne CPD HOURS 6th June - Sydney 1st August - Brisbane WORKSHOP: 4.25 CPD HOURS WORKSHOP Lecture $65 Workshop (Limit 20) $300 • Complete anterior tooth restoration using Both Lecture & Workshop $325 7.5 Componeer on a model TOTAL CPD • Step-by-step exercises from preparation to polishing HOURS • Using the new COMPONEER instruments VENUE Melbourne: 14th March 2014 Stamford Plaza Melbourne,111 Little Collins Street, MELBOURNE VIC 3000 Ph: 9659 1000 GOAL Brisbane: 2nd May 2014 Hilton Brisbane, 190 Elizabeth Street, At the completion of the lecture/hands on program the BRISBANE QLD 4000 Ph: 3231 3246 Dentist should be able to understand when to use direct free handed bonding of composite resin versus the use of Sydney: 13th June 2014 Componeers. ParkRoyal Darling Harbour, 150 Day Street, SYDNEY NSW -
Tuesday, 18 September 2012
Article No. 7135 Available on www.roymorgan.com Link to Roy Morgan Profiles Thursday, 9 February 2017 Digital audience growth continued to drive newspaper readership higher in 2016 Roy Morgan Research today releases the latest Print Readership and Cross-Platform Audience results for Australian Newspapers for the 12 months to December 2016. Alongside a number of success stories in print, just over half of mastheads increased their total E cross-platform reach compared with the previous results to September 2016—and readership via websites and apps was again the driving force behind that growth. Print Readership Highlights 8,153,000 million Australians aged 14+ (41 percent) read print newspapers in an average week in 2016. This is down 4.3 percent, or just over half a million readers, compared with 2015. Appetite for print news continues to hold strongest on Saturdays. 4.9 million read Saturday print newspapers in an average week (down 2.7 percent). Sunday titles reach 4.4 million (down 4.3 percent), and Monday to Friday dailies reach a combined 5.7 million readers during the week (down 4.8 percent). Readers return to weekday national titles News Corp’s and Fairfax’s national titles have both gained weekday readers. The Australian is up 8.0 percent year-on-year, with 336,000 readers per average Monday to Friday issue in 2016— 25,000 more than in 2015. The Australian Financial Review is up 3.1 percent to 201,000 readers. FOR IMMEDIATE RELEAS Melbourne vs Sydney The Daily Telegraph and Herald Sun each continued to post strong readership results in print on weekdays and Saturdays. -
Community Services Directory 2010/2011
MOUNT ALEXANDER SHIRE Community Services Directory 2010/2011 This directory was compiled by the Mount Alexander Community Information Centre with the support of Mount Alexander Shire Council. Council acknowledges the valuable work undertaken by this organisation in compiling the directory. Telephone: 5472 2688 Email: [email protected] Directory Website: http://users.vic.chariot.net.au/~cic Mount Alexander Community Services Directory Mount Alexander Shire Council Community Services Directory Table Of Contents ACCOMMODATION . 1 Caravan Parks . 1 Emergency Accommodation . 1 Holiday . 1 Hostels . 2 Nursing Homes . 2 Public Housing . 2 Tenancy . 3 AGED AND DISABILITY SERVICES . 4 Aids and Appliances . 4 Intellectual Disabilities . 4 Home Services . 5 Learning Difficulties . 5 Psychiatric Disabilities . 5 Physical Disabilities . 6 Senior Citizen's Centres . 6 Rehabilitation . 7 Respite Services . 7 ANIMAL WELFARE . 8 Animal Welfare Groups . 8 Boarding Kennels . 8 Dog Grooming . 8 Equine Dentist . 8 Veterinary Clinics . 9 ANIMALS . 9 Cats . 9 Dingos . 9 Dogs . 9 Goats . 9 Horses . 9 Pony Clubs . 10 Pigeons . 10 ANTIQUES AND SECONDHAND GOODS . 10 Antique Shops . 10 Opportunity Shops . 10 Secondhand Goods . 11 ARTS AND CRAFTS . 11 Ballet . 11 Dancing . 11 Drama . 12 Drawing . 12 Embroidery . 12 Film . 13 Hobbies . 13 Instruction . 13 Knitting . 15 Music and Singing . 15 Painting . 16 Photography . 16 Picture Framing . 17 Quilting . 17 Spinning and Weaving . .. -
Anthony Kelly, Guinness World Record
ANTHONY KELLY, GUINNESS WORLD RECORD ........................................................................ 3125 ARMIDALE AND DISTRICT WOMEN'S CENTRE ........................................................................... 3163 BAULKHAM HILLS CHRISTMAS CARD COMPETITION ............................................................. 3125 BAYS PRECINCT URBAN RENEWAL PROGRAM ......................................................................... 3134 BUDGET ESTIMATES AND RELATED PAPERS ................................................................... 3119, 3152 BULAHDELAH DISTRICT SOLDIERS MEMORIAL GATES 1914-1918 ....................................... 3166 BUSINESS OF THE HOUSE .................................................................................. 3090, 3117, 3142, 3143 CALLAGHAN COLLEGE WALLSEND SOLAR CAR EVENT ........................................................ 3125 CARAVAN REGISTRATION COSTS ................................................................................................. 3117 CHESTER HILL BAPTIST CHURCH EIGHTY-FIFTH ANNIVERSARY ........................................ 3124 COAL DUST AND AIR QUALITY ...................................................................................................... 3113 COMMUNITY RECOGNITION STATEMENTS ................................................................................ 3123 CONSIDERATION OF MOTIONS TO BE ACCORDED PRIORITY ................................................ 3146 CRIME COMMISSION LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2014................................................ -
Annual Report
Annual Report 2019/2020 BENDIGO FOODSHARE ABN: 80673290971| PHONE: 03 5444 3409 FACTORY: 2/ 43 HAVILAH ROAD, LONG GULLY VICTORIA, 3550 WEB: WWW.BENDIGOFOODSHARE.ORG.AU Chairperson’s Report Well, what a rollercoaster of a year it has been. In 2019 our amazing team stepped in to double our supermarket food rescue, increase growing, cooking and sharing food, and reduce waste. With a great band of local service clubs, our Mobile Christmas Food Pantry helped get food out over the holidays. We paused and took a breath in February and then COVID struck. Since then it’s the support from you, our community, that has kept Bendigo Foodshare going. There are many highlights. I cannot name them all, but standing out are: When many of our older volunteers had to self-isolate, 246 new volunteers answered our call for help. The City of Greater Bendigo supported us with fluoro vests, hand sanitiser and access to their online volunteer management system. Local farmers have been donating much-appreciated food, including apples, chickpeas, lentils, chickens, pumpkins and local fruit and vegetables and more. Through Cafes for COVID, our local cafes and schools have produced meals for people in need. We couldn’t run our fundraising, but your donations have kept our lights on and our fridges operating. With the pandemic continuing, work hasn’t stopped. Many more changes are underway to empower our volunteer teams and keep them safe during these difficult times. I would like to thank everyone who has worked tirelessly so that we can: continue to source, rescue, sort and warehouse food, and get it out to people in need across the region; teach skills for food security; and keep our community in touch with us through the many stories and the highs and lows of life at Bendigo Foodshare. -
Community Financial Services Limited
March 2013 Henty Community Financial Services Limited Chairman’s report Good for equally within 24 hours to fill the void. We have Initiative your now committed a total of $140,000 to bringing Henty Community Bank® Branch led the way in this vital project into being. uniting the Community Bank® branches across community the Riverina and Bendigo Bank’s Wagga Wagga branch to financially support Ronald McDonald ATM House in Wagga Wagga. It was an idea that Every month the use of our Community Bank® started in Henty and was quickly embraced by the branch’s ATM grows, along with its profit. Bendigo Board profile – whole of the Bendigo Bank family in this region. Bank customers have fee-free access to the ATM. The House fulfils a very real need for the Riverina The gardens around the ATM have been improved Helen McRorie to make using the alcove more welcoming. by providing accommodation for families when No. of years their children are in hospital. Branch upgrade on the Henty Board: This year’s Bendigo Bank Foundation Small An automatic door installed at the Community Coming up on Grants Program is about to kick off. It is a Bank® branch building last year is making four years. chance for community organisations to ask the access easier, in particular for people with Community Bank® branch for its help in funding mobility problems. It is but the first of several Do you play their projects. Grants are for the establishment or improvements to the building to improve the any sport? improvement of facilities or services which will lift comfort and amenity for customers and staff No sport, I the quality of life for the whole community. -
REPORTED in the MEDIA Newspapers
REPORTED IN THE MEDIA Newspapers • Mortgage Interest Rates The Age , Banks Dudding Customers for Years, 4/10/2012, Front page . The Sydney Morning Herald, The Big Banks Take with One Hand - and the Other , 4/10/ 2012, p.2 The results of my research on the RBA’s rate cuts and the asymmetric behaviour of Big 4 banks in setting their mortgage rates also attracted widespread media attention on 4 October 2012: Melbourne Weekly, Brisbane Times, Stock & Land, Stock Journal, The West Australian, Brisbane Times, Finders News, Southwest Advertiser, Daily Life, Dungog Chronicle, Western Magazine, Frankston Weekly, The Mercury , Sun City News . http://theage.com.au/business/the-big-banks-take-with-one-hand--and-the-other-20121003- 26ztm.html http://smh.com.au/business/the-big-banks-take-with-one-hand--and-the-other-20121003-26ztm.html http://nationaltimes.com.au/business/the-big-banks-take-with-one-hand--and-the-other-20121003- 26ztm.html • University Research Performance Just a Matter of Time Before Universities Take Off, Australian Financial Review , 31/7/2006, p.34 Melbourne on a High, The Australian , 26/7/2006, p.23. Smaller Universities Top of their Class, The Sydney Morning Herald, 20/7/2005, p.10. Sutton's New Vision, Illawarra Mercury (Wollongong), 21/7/2005, p.7. Uni Gets Top Grade, The Newcastle Herald, 20/7/2005, p. 21. • Petrol Prices Call for Bowser Boycott, The Telegraph , 28/3/2013, p.3. Pump your Pockets, Herald Sun , 28/3/2013, p.9. Drivers Urged to Fill Up on Cheaper Days, Courier Mail , 28/3/2013, p.11 Reward to Eagle-Eyed Motorists, Courier Mail, Brisbane, 10/8/2001, p.5. -
Munibung Musings
Munibung Musings No.2 - Autumn 2019 Stop Press Proposed conservation park has been placed on the market The Newcastle Herald (9.3.2019) carried the story in the Commercial Property section of Domain, under the The pitch to headline: Munibung Hill being sold developers by Renee Valentine ‘A superb development “A Speers Point property of around 80 hectares of land at 1A opportunity now and Raymond Street is being marketed by Barry Price, Ray White into the future.’ Newcastle and Lake Macquarie, and John Parnham, of Ray White Commercial. That can only mean a challenge to the current area- It has development application approval for 115 residential lots on a small part of the site, which is bordered by Boolaroo, Zoned E2 to allow for more Warners Bay and Macquarie Hills. streets and housing. That would be another case of Is this what we can look forward to on The landmark property has been held by its current owners for Munibung Hill in the future as the around 80 years and enjoys extensive views of Lake Macquarie “mission creep” and that result of this 80 ha sell off? and Mount Sugarloaf. would mean in addition to the approved 115 lots on 11 ha, another 721 residential “It’s a very large piece of land and twice the size of most of the lots on 69 ha, in place of this important conservation suburbs around it," Mr Price said. “It’s got some outstanding lake views from many many places and is 800 metres from the and wildlife area. Urban forest destroyed. -
Some Unpublished Correspondence of the Rev. W.B. Clarke D.F
Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales, Vol. 141, p. 1–31, 2008 ISSN 0035-9173/08/02001–31 $4.00/1 Some Unpublished Correspondence of the Rev. W.B. Clarke d.f. branagan and t.g. vallance Abstract: Four previously unpublished letters, with memoranda of Rev. W.B. Clarke to W.S. Macleay, written between 1842 and 1845 clarify the ideas of both about the mode of formation of coal and the age of the stratigraphical succession in the Sydney Basin. Clarke makes the first mention of his discovery of the Lake Macquarie fossil forest, the first identification of the zeolite stilbite in New South Wales and gives details of his study of the volcanic rocks of the Upper Hunter Valley. Keywords: Clarke, Macleay, coal formation, Sydney Basin, stilbite INTRODUCTION essentially self-contained, although, of course, almost no letter can stand alone, but depends When Dr Thomas G. Vallance died in 1993 a on the correspondents. Each letter has some considerable amount of his historical jottings importance in dealing with aspects of Clarke’s and memorabilia on the history of Australian geological work, as will be noted. science, and particularly geology, was passed The first and longest letter, which is ac- on to me (David Branagan) through his wife, companied by a long series of memoranda and Hilary Vallance. For various reasons, only now a labelled sketch fits between two letters from have I been able to delve, even tentatively, into MacLeay (28 June & 4 July 1842) to Clarke. this treasure house. The present note con- Both these MacLeay letters have been repro- cerns four letters of the Reverend W.B. -
Snakes, Spiders and a Painter's Eye
REBECCA RATH BFA HONS Assoc. Dip Arts (Fine Arts) M: 0412572651 E: [email protected] W: www.rebeccarath.com.au Social Media: @rebeccarathart Snakes, Spiders and a Painter’s Eye. “Rebecca is an incredibly talented artist who has an innate ability to capture the very soul of the valley. I feel as if the land is speaking to me through her use of colour and texture on canvas - they remind me of home every time I gaze upon them and they evoke the heat, the intense storms, the very essence of the amazing landscape that is the Hunter (Australia). I love my paintings so much and feel privileged to have them in my home. I know I will collect more in the coming years.” Susan Arrowsmith. I close my eyes and feel the warm sun on my back, the circling sound of the wind in the grass and the sweep of my brush. There is nothing more tranquil, peaceful and wildly free than being in the Australian bush and painting her splendor. The idea of one of the world’s most venomous snakes do tug at the back of my mind, yet the lure of Australia’s vast plains and majestic skies always entice my painter’s curiosity. Her powerful colour palette and rogue visceral texture is a feast for any painter’s eye. At times it is challenging to get outside. Insects, spiders and snakes are at the back of my mind, when I sit among the tall grass and paint the sprawling landscape in front of my eyes. -
After a Dark Decade for Australia's Regional Newspapers, a Hopeful Light Flickers Steinar Ellingsen University of Wollongong, [email protected]
University of Wollongong Research Online Faculty of Law, Humanities and the Arts - Papers Faculty of Law, Humanities and the Arts 2019 After a dark decade for Australia's regional newspapers, a hopeful light flickers Steinar Ellingsen University of Wollongong, [email protected] Publication Details Ellingsen, S. "After a dark decade for Australia's regional newspapers, a hopeful light flickers." The onC versation 6 May (2019): 1-5. Research Online is the open access institutional repository for the University of Wollongong. For further information contact the UOW Library: [email protected] After a dark decade for Australia's regional newspapers, a hopeful light flickers Abstract Over the past decade the profits of 160-odd regional and rural publications that make up the former Fairfax business division known as Australian Community Media (ACM) have fallen steeply. Disciplines Arts and Humanities | Law Publication Details Ellingsen, S. "After a dark decade for Australia's regional newspapers, a hopeful light flickers." The Conversation 6 May (2019): 1-5. This journal article is available at Research Online: https://ro.uow.edu.au/lhapapers/3873 Create a stronger public debate. Academic rigour, journalistic flair After a dark decade for Australia’s regional newspapers, a hopeful light flickers May 6, 2019 1.55pm AEST Australian Community Media’s mastheads include The Canberra Times, The Newcastle Herald, The Border Mail (in Albury), The Illawarra Mercury (in Wollongong), The Ballarat Courier, The Examiner (in Launceston) and the Bendigo Advertiser. Shutterstock After a dark decade for Australia’s regional newspapers, a hopeful light flickers May 6, 2019 1.55pm AEST Over the past decade the profits of 160-odd regional and rural publications that make up Author the former Fairfax business division known as Australian Community Media (ACM) have fallen steeply.