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FACING ASIA A History of the Colombo Plan FACING ASIA A History of the Colombo Plan Daniel Oakman Published by ANU E Press The Australian National University Canberra ACT 0200, Australia Email: [email protected] This title is also available online at: http://epress.anu.edu.au/facing_asia _citation.html National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication Entry Author: Oakman, Daniel. Title: Facing Asia : a history of the Colombo Plan / Daniel Oakman. ISBN: 9781921666926 (pbk.) 9781921666933 (eBook) Notes: Includes bibliographical references. Subjects: Economic assistance--Southeast Asia--History. Economic assistance--Political aspects--Southeast Asia. Economic assistance--Social aspects--Southeast Asia. Dewey Number: 338.910959 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher. Cover design by Emily Brissenden Cover: Lionel Lindsay (1874–1961) was commissioned to produce this bookplate for pasting in the front of books donated under the Colombo Plan. Sir Lionel Lindsay, Bookplate from the Australian people under the Colombo Plan, nla.pic-an11035313, National Library of Australia Printed by Griffin Press This edition © 2010 ANU E Press First edition © 2004 Pandanus Books For Robyn and Colin Acknowledgements Thank you: family, friends and colleagues. I undertook much of the work towards this book as a Visiting Fellow with the Division of Pacific and Asian History in the Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, The Australian National University. There I benefited from the support of the Division and, in particular, Hank Nelson and Donald Denoon. -
National Portrait Gallery of Australia Annual Report 18/19
National Portrait Gallery of Australia Annual Report 18/19 Study of Louis Nowra 2018 by Imants Tillers commissioned with funds provided by Tim Bednall, Jillian Broadbent ao, John Kaldor ao and Naomi Milgrom ao, Anna Meares 2018 by Narelle Autio commissioned with funds provided by King & Wood Mallesons and Li Cunxin 2017–18 by Jun Chen commissioned with funds provided by Tim Fairfax ac. On display as part of the 20/20: Celebrating twenty years with twenty new portrait commissions exhibition. b National Portrait Gallery of Australia Annual Report 18/19 © National Portrait Gallery The National Portrait Gallery is located on of Australia 2019 King Edward Terrace in the Parliamentary Zone of Canberra. issn 2204-0811 Location and opening hours All rights reserved. No part of this publication The National Portrait Gallery is situated in front may be reproduced or transmitted in any form of the High Court and alongside the National or by any means, electronic or mechanical Gallery of Australia. The Gallery is open daily (including photocopying, recording or any from 10.00am to 5.00pm, except for Christmas information storage and retrieval system), Day 25, December. For more information visit without permission from the publisher. portrait.gov.au All photographs unless otherwise stated Parking by Mark Mohell. The underground public car park can be accessed from Parkes Place. The car park is open seven This report is also accessible on the days per week and closes at 5.30pm. Parking National Portrait Gallery’s website spaces for people with mobility difficulties are portrait.gov.au provided in the car park close to the public access lifts. -
Aged Care Service List - VIC - As at 30 June 2017
Aged Care Service List - VIC - as at 30 June 2017 Physical Physical Address Address Post 2015 Aged Care Planning Residential Home Care Restorative 2016-17 Australian Service name Physical Address Line 1 Physical Address Line 2 Physical Address Suburb State Code Region (ACPR) Care Type Places Places Care Places Provider Name Organisation Type ABS Remoteness Latitude Longitude Government Funding Avonlea Hostel 68-72 Macpherson Street NHILL VIC 3418 Grampians Residential 45 Avonlea Inc Community Based Outer Regional Australia -36.335116 141.655153 $ 893,701 SCC Northcliffe Home 10-12 Northcliffe Road EDITHVALE VIC 3196 Southern Metro Residential 60 Southern Cross Care (VIC) Religious Major Cities of Australia -38.04237294 145.1130356 $ 1,793,545 SCC Corben Home 9-15 Brindisi Street MENTONE VIC 3194 Southern Metro Residential 46 Southern Cross Care (VIC) Religious Major Cities of Australia -37.98393195 145.0621723 $ 2,877,184 Margery Cole Residential Care Service Matthews Crescent TRARALGON VIC 3844 Gippsland Residential 120 "Yallambee" Traralgon Village for the Aged Inc Community Based Inner Regional Australia -38.19535682 146.5485063 $ 6,707,606 Manor Court Werribee Aged Care Ltd 5 Hogan Grove WERRIBEE VIC 3030 Western Metro Residential 100 Manor Court Werribee Aged Care Ltd Community Based Major Cities of Australia -37.89658739 144.6569542 $ 4,946,535 Woorayl Lodge Hostel 71-73 McCartin Street LEONGATHA VIC 3953 Gippsland Residential 40 Woorayl Lodge Inc Community Based Inner Regional Australia -38.47934705 145.9421297 $ 1,529,979 Dorothy -
Powerhouse Museum Exhibitions 1988-2018
"1 The Powerhouse Museum: an exhibition archive 1988-2018 Exhibitions developed by and/or displayed at the Powerhouse Museum, the Observatory, the Mint, the Hyde Park Barracks, the Powerhouse (now Museum) Discovery Centre and online from 1988, when the Powerhouse opened its doors in its new Ultimo location, to 2018. Abbreviations: PHM Powerhouse Museum MNT The Mint Museum HPB The Hyde Park Barracks HB Harwood Building (previously Stage One) OBS The Sydney Observatory PDC Powerhouse (now Museum) Discovery Centre WP Web-based Project AMOL Australian Museums and Galleries Online TR Travelling exhibition PP Powerhouse publication EP External publication Preface From its original establishment in the 1880s to the present day, the Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences, previously under different names and now known as MAAS, has proudly and diligently exhibited different aspects of its outstanding collection. The following list seeks to provide a record of exhibitions from the opening of the new Powerhouse Museum venue in Ultimo in March 1988 through the 30 subsequent fruitful years. The list also documents exhibitions in associated venues including the Sydney Observatory, for some years the Hyde Park Barracks and the Mint Museum, as well as touring exhibitions. Many years of rigorous planning preceded the 1988 opening of the Powerhouse Museum, which was heralded as the most important cultural development in Sydney since the opening of the Opera House, and a major event in Australia’s bicentennial year. A museum for us all, a museum of creativity, curiosity and community, the Powerhouse Museum set out to explore the interrelationship of science, art and people in an Australian context. -
AMREP Research Report 2009
The Alfred Medical Research and Education Precinct Research Report 2009 Alfred Health Commercial Road, Melbourne, Victoria 3004, Australia Telephone + 61 3 9076 2000 Facsimile + 61 3 9076 2222 2009 www.alfred.org.au The Alfred Medical Research & Education Precinct The Alfred Medical Research and Education Precinct © Alfred Health 2010 This work is copyright. Apart from any use as permitted under the Copyright Act 1968, no part of this publication may be reproduced by any process without prior written permission from Alfred Health. Production team: Liana Friedman, Heather Gallichio, Cherry Yu, Eve Kovesdy Enquiries should be directed to the Research Office, [email protected] Design: abCreative Productions ISSN 1445-8853 Printing: Print Media Group contEnts AMREP in 2009/2010 2 AMREP’s Research Performance 4 AMREP Research Facilities 5 About AMREP Ian Potter Library 8 AMREP − Alfred Medical Research and Education Precinct − was established in 2002 Human Research Ethics Committee 9 as a partnership between Alfred Health, Monash University, Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Animal Ethics Committee 11 Institute and the Macfarlane Burnet Institute for Medical Research and Public Health Translating Research into Clinical Practice 12 (Burnet Institute). La Trobe University and Deakin University joined the partnership in Allergy, Immunology and Respiratory Medicine 14 2005. AMREP is located on the campus of the Alfred Hospital, Melbourne and is one Anaesthesia and Perioperative Medicine 16 of Australia’s leading centres for medical research. -
Crawford Australian Leadership Forum
CRAWFORD AUSTRALIAN LEADERSHIP F ORUM Global Realities, Domestic Choices 29 June - 1 July 2014 CRAWFORD SC HOOL OF PUBLIC POLICY KEY NOTE SPEAKE RS, CHA IRS & PANELISTS Gary Banks Ken Boal Dean, Australian and New Zealand Vice President, Cisco Australia & New School of Government Zealand Dean and CEO of ANZSOG since Joined Cisco in 2004 and led the January 2013, following fifteen years company’s engagement in the heading the Productivity Commission. public sector with Australia’s federal, Formerly Executive Commissioner state and territory governments, with the Industry Commission; defence, education and healthcare; Senior Economist with the GATT subsequently was responsible for Secretariat in Geneva; Visiting Fellow identifying and leading growth and at the Trade Policy Research Centre, development, and managing the sales London. Chaired the COAG Steering Committee for the Review force, in the enterprise and public sectors. Graduated from the of Government Services, and now the OECD’s Regulatory University of Queensland in 1991 with a Bachelor of Electrical Policy Committee. Recently joined the Macquarie Group as an Engineering (Communications & Electronics), commenced his independent director, and appointed to the Prime Minister’s career at Honeywell, and prior to joining Cisco spent ten years at Business Advisory Council. Professorial Fellow at Melbourne Anixter Inc/NetStar, an Asia Pacific network systems integrator as University, and Adjunct Professor and Crawford Public Policy Southern Region General Manager. Fellow at the ANU. Glenys Beauchamp Roger Bradbury Secretary, Department of Industry Coordinator, National Security Research, National Security College, Secretary of the Department of ANU Industry since September 2013. Formerly Secretary, Department of Heads Strategy and Statecraft in Regional Australia, Local Government, Cyberspace research program at Arts and Sport; Deputy Secretary the National Security College in the in Departments of Prime Minister Crawford School of Public Policy. -
Australian War Memorial Annual Report 2009-2010
Australian War Memorial War Australian Annual Report 2009-2010 Annual Report Australian War Memorial Annual Report 2009-2010 Australian War Memorial Annual Report 2009–2010 Then Prime Minister of Australia, the Honourable The Council Chair walks with Governor-General Her Excellency Kevin Rudd MP, delivers the Address on ANZAC Ms Quentin Bryce through the Commemorative Area following Day 2010. the 2009 Remembrance Day ceremony. Australian War Memorial Annual Report 2009–2010 Annual report for the year ended 30 June 2010, together with the financial statements and the report of the Auditor-General Images produced courtesy of the Australian War Memorial, Canberra Cover image: New Eastern Precinct development at night (AWM PAIU2010/028.11) Back cover image: The sculpture of Sir Edward ‘Weary’ Dunlop overlooks the Terrace at the Memorial cafe (AWM PAIU2010/028.01) Copyright © Australian War Memorial ISSN 1441 4198 This work is copyright. Apart from any use as permitted under the Copyright Act 1968, no part may be reproduced, copied, scanned, stored in a retrieval system, recorded, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the publisher. Australian War Memorial GPO Box 345 Canberra, ACT 2601 Australia www.awm.gov.au Australian War Memorial Annual Report 2009–2010 iii Australian War Memorial Annual Report 2009–2010 iv Australian War Memorial Annual Report 2009–2010 Introduction to the Report The Annual Report of the Australian War Memorial for the year ended 30 June 2010 follows the format for an Annual Report for a Commonwealth Authority in accordance with the Commonwealth Authorities and Companies (CAC) (Report of Operations) Orders 2005 under the CAC Act 1997. -
Human Kind Transforming Identity in British and Australian Portraits 1700-1914
HUMAN KIND TRANSFORMING IDENTITY IN BRITISH AND AUSTRALIAN PORTRAITS 1700-1914 International Conference on Portraiture University of Melbourne and National Gallery of Victoria Conference Programme Thursday 8 September – Sunday 11 September 2016 Biographies of Speakers and Abstracts of their Papers [In chronological order: Speaker, title of paper, organisation, bio, abstract of paper] Speakers: Leonard Bell, University of Auckland, Who was John Rutherford? John Dempsey’s Portrait of the ‘Tattooed Englishman’ c.1829 Bio: Dr Leonard (Len) Bell is an Associate Professor in Art History, School of Humanities, The University of Auckland. His writings on cross-cultural interactions and the visual arts in New Zealand, Australia and the Pacific have been published in books and periodicals in New Zealand, Australia, Britain, USA, Germany, the Czech Republic and Japan. His books include The Maori in European Art: A Survey of the Representation of the Maori from the Time of Captain Cook to the Present Day (1980), Colonial Constructs: European Images of Maori 1840–1914 (1992), In Transit: Questions of Home and Belonging in New Zealand Art (2007), Marti Friedlander (2009 & 2010), From Prague to Auckland: The Photographs of Frank Hofmann (1916-89), (2011), and Jewish Lives in New Zealand: A History (2012: co-editor & principal writer). His essays have appeared in Julie Codell & Dianne Sachko Macleod (eds), Orientalism Transformed: The Impact of the Colonies on British Art (1998), Alex Calder, Jonathan Lamb & Bridget Orr (eds), Voyages and Beaches: Pacific Encounters 1769-1840 (1999), Nicholas Thomas & Diane Losche (eds), Double Vision: Art Histories and Colonial Histories in the Pacific (1999), Felix Driver & Luciana Martins (eds), Tropical Visions in an Age of Empire (2005), Annie Coombes (ed), Rethinking Settler Colonialism: History and Memory in Australia, Canada, Aotearoa/New Zealand and South Africa (2006) and Tim Barringer, Geoff Quilley & Douglas Fordham (eds), Art and the British Empire (2007). -
Adelaidean 9 August 99 Vol 8 No 13
ADELAIDEANVol 8 No 13 N EWS F ROM T HE U NIVERSITY O F A DELAIDE AUGUST 9, 1999 Exchange student AF Jenish on The Vice-Chancellor on the University Profile: Professor Jason White and INSIDE 2 Coping with Goethe 3 and the community 6 addiction research University on show for a successful Open Day ABOUT 12,000 people took advantage of Open Day on Sunday 1 August, with crowds flocking to the North Terrace Campus to get a glimpse of university life. The Career & Course Expo held in Bonython Hall was again a big drawcard, and attendances at course information talks were up by about 30% on last year. Other events and displays, such as the Science Trail, Anatomical Sciences, Engineering and the Humanities & Social Sciences were all busy for most of the day. Muffin Mania had the visitors enthralled in Economics, while a taste of a different kind was on hand at the The Bonython Lions got into the spirit of things by wearing gold and blue History of Food & Drink stall, in the lame bows. form of 19th Century-style pies. The Food Technology & Management group also had mouths watering with their tastings of fresh bread. Music delights of all kinds were on offer, from CASM’s mix of traditional and contemporary, to rock band Revolvar, to rehearsals of Elder Con students. With the smell of food and the sound of music in the air, there was plenty to see, do, taste and listen to at Open Day. This robot was a big attraction in Bonython Hall. -
1 Curating Photography in Australia Dr Daniel
Curating Photography in Australia Dr Daniel Palmer (Monash University) & Dr Martyn Jolly (ANU) This paper derives from some early research into the various forces currently influencing photography curating in Australian art galleries. We are especially interested in new technologies such as the internet, but more generally the protean nature of the medium itself. Naturally, to better understand the present, we start with a few glimpses of the past. The Pre-History Although the institutional collecting and curating of photography didn’t begin in earnest until the 1970s, in the five or so decades before then the powerful idea of collecting photographs was intermittently discussed, at various levels of institutional authority, with various degrees of vigour. At the end of the First World War, the amateur photographic magazine the Australasian Photo Review called for a ‘national collection of Australian photographic records’. The Mitchell Library was one of several who responded positively to this idea, even suggesting a list of twelve different categories of photographs which amateurs could take for a future repository. However the librarians didn’t follow through on their initial positive noises and collections failed to materialise. Thirty years later, at the end of the Second World War, the idea of a national collection was raised again. Contemporary Photography devoted an entire issue to the new sharp bromide enlargements Harold Cazneaux had made of his Pictorialist negatives of Old Sydney, and declared that they ‘would be a valuable acquisition for the Mitchell Library or Australian Historical Societies.’ However, once more the library failed to follow through, and Cazneaux’s photographs remained uncollected. -
White Australia’ in the Darkroom: 1915–41
2 ‘WHITE AUSTRALIA’ IN THE DARKROOM: 1915–41 In his review of the 1922 Photographic Society of New South Wales (NSW) exhibition for the Australasian Photo Review, critic Alek Sass alluded to some of the incongruities associated with Australian–Japanese photographic relations in the interwar period. While praising the two Japanese exhibitors, Sass commented wryly that their participation in the local photography scene ran counter to the racially exclusionary aims of Australian immigration policy: By way of diversion, the White Australia policy in the dark-room seems to be in danger; I refer to the work of Messrs. K. Ishida and K. Yama. They have eyes to see and things to say, those men … Very thoughtful work, gentlemen.1 Kiichiro Ishida and Ichiro Kagiyama were among the approximately 300 Japanese living in NSW during this period.2 These two men were active members of the Photographic Society of NSW and regularly exhibited and published their work alongside leading Australian photographers at a time when the ‘White Australia’ policy was testing diplomatic relations with Japan. Sass’s review and the exhibition itself highlight how the political and personal photographic relations between Australia and Japan tell quite 1 Alek Sass, ‘Old Friends and New: A Ramble through the Exhibition of Camera Pictures by the Photographic Society of New South Wales’, Australasian Photo Review 29, no. 11 (1922): 356. 2 There was an increase in Japanese residents in NSW from 126 (118 male and seven female) in 1911 to 308 (289 male and 19 female) in 1921, largely due to the growth of Japanese merchants in Sydney (H.A. -
Experimental Infection of Culex Annulirostris, Culex Gelidus, and Aedes Vigilax with a Yellow Fever/Japanese Encephalitis Virus Vaccine Chimera (Chimerivax™-Je)
Am. J. Trop. Med. Hyg., 75(4), 2006, pp. 659–663 Copyright © 2006 by The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene EXPERIMENTAL INFECTION OF CULEX ANNULIROSTRIS, CULEX GELIDUS, AND AEDES VIGILAX WITH A YELLOW FEVER/JAPANESE ENCEPHALITIS VIRUS VACCINE CHIMERA (CHIMERIVAX™-JE) MARK REID,* DONNA MACKENZIE, ANDREW BARON, NATALIE LEHMANN, KYM LOWRY, JOHN AASKOV, FARSHAD GUIRAKHOO, AND THOMAS P. MONATH Australian Army Malaria Institute, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia; School of Life Sciences, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia; Acambis Inc., Cambridge, Massachusetts Abstract. Australian mosquitoes from which Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) has been recovered (Culex annu- lirostris, Culex gelidus, and Aedes vigilax) were assessed for their ability to be infected with the ChimeriVax™-JE vaccine, with yellow fever vaccine virus 17D (YF 17D) from which the backbone of ChimeriVax™-JE vaccine is derived and with JEV-Nakayama. None of the mosquitoes became infected after being fed orally with 6.1 log10 plaque-forming units (PFU)/mL of ChimeriVax™-JE vaccine, which is greater than the peak viremia in vaccinees (mean peak vire- days). Some members of all three 11–0 ס PFU/mL of 0.9 days mean duration, range 30–0 ס PFU/mL, range 4.8 ס mia species of mosquito became infected when fed on JEV-Nakayama, but only Ae. vigilax was infected when fed on YF 17D. The results suggest that none of these three species of mosquito are likely to set up secondary cycles of transmission of ChimeriVax™-JE in Australia after feeding on a viremic vaccinee. INTRODUCTION tralia,7–9 and all three species of mosquito have been infected experimentally by membrane feeding with JEV isolates ob- Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) is a member of the fam- tained from the Torres Strait of Australia.10 ily Flaviviridae and is a leading cause of viral encephalitis in Asia.