Conmmonwealth of Australia ASIC Gazette A34A/05 Dated 1
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Woollahra Library Local History Centre
Information Sheet Woollahra Library Local History 5 Centre Shipwrecks of the South Head region Port Jackson has been known as a safe haven for sailors since 1788, when Captain Arthur Phillip declared it ‘the finest harbour in the world’. Even so, Sydney has not been free of maritime accidents - ranging from mishaps to tragedies. A few of the more notable incidents are described below. Negotiating the Heads The coastline outside the Port Jackson Heads can be treacherous in bad weather, and finding the entrance to the Harbour may be surprisingly difficult. The tragedy of the Edward Lombe – and other early accidents at The Heads On 25th August 1834, Captain Stroyan of the Edward Lombe battled big seas and gale- force winds off Sydney’s Heads for a full day, unable to locate the Harbour’s entrance in the murky conditions. After dark, Stroyan navigated the Edward Lombe through the Heads, guided by the faintly visible beam from the Macquarie Lighthouse – but without the benefit of a harbour pilot’s local knowledge. In the continuing gale, the barque was driven onto Middle Head, quickly breaking up on the rocky shore. Seven of the crew drowned, including the Captain, as did five of her passengers. After daybreak, local mariner Captain Swan, assisted by several Watsons Bay pilots, rescued seventeen survivors from the craft’s remains. The Edward Lombe was not the first vessel to be wrecked near the harbour’s entrance, but it was Sydney’s first major shipping disaster, and had various consequences. The Signal Station was re-built and equipped for night signalling, pilots were made available 24 hours per day, and Sydney residents were greatly moved by the tragedy – especially by the plight of one of the survivors who had lost both husband and brother, as well as all her possessions. -
Ocean Hauling EIA Report (2001)
OCEAN HAULING EIA REPORT Prepared for: NSW Fisheries October 2001 Prepared by: SMEC Australia Pty Ltd ACN 065 475 149 Project Number: 31229.001 PREPARATION, REVIEW AND AUTHORISATION Project Name: Ocean Hauling EIA Report Project No.: 31229.001 Prepared by: Ros Taplin Signature: Position: Senior Consultant Date: 16th October 2001 Reviewed by: Michael Wiener Signature: Position Environmental Scientist Date: 16th October 2001 This report was prepared in accordance with the scope of services set out in the contract between SMEC Australia Pty Ltd (SMEC) and the Client. To the best of SMEC’s knowledge the proposal presented herein reflects the Client’s intentions when the report was printed. In preparing this report, SMEC relied upon data, surveys, analyses, designs, plans and other information provided by the Client and other individuals and organisations referenced herein. Except as otherwise stated in this report, SMEC has not undertaken further verification regarding the accuracy or completeness of these information sources. TABLE OF CONTENTS 1 INTRODUCTION ....................................................................... 1-2 1.1 BACKGROUND................................................................................1-2 1.2 METHODOLOGY .............................................................................1-2 1.3 CONSULTATION .............................................................................1-3 2 OCEAN HAULING FISHERY.................................................... 2-1 2.1 FISHERY WATERS..........................................................................2-1 -
January 2009 Mag.Indd
Stretton FJanuary 209OCUSCommunity Voice of the Strettons £1.00 The Old Tractor & Farm Yard January 2009 mag.indd 1 12/12/08 15:29:18 Stretton Focus 2 (founded 1967) In Focus Average monthly sales 1,500 copies (About 65% of households in Church Stretton) News What’s On in the Strettons in January Chairman 4 Free Garden Courses If you wish to know the times of regular meetings of societies and groups, please consult the list of societies and their contacts in the yellow pages. Mike Edmunds 723961 Editors 4 C S Christmas Celebrations 2008 Barbara Vickery 724179 7 Amnesty International 1 THURSDAY Gay Walker 722257 8 Army Cadets Come to C S Morning-After Walk/Run Nigel and Liz Strachan 724442 Hilary Jones 781459 17 Church Stretton Bag Competition For more information contact CS Social Club Cover Editor 18 Prayers For Peace 01694 771674 Yvonne Beaumont 722533 21 United Nations Associations - AGM www.merciafellrunners.co.uk Computer Production Barrie Raynor 723928 22 Mayfair News Rowland Jackson 722390 23 CS Community History Group 4 SUNDAY Paul Miller 724596 23 Rail Users’ Association South Shropshire Ramblers Distribution Richard Carter 724106 29 Electric Bikes Come to The Strettons Two walks, one long, one shorter Advertising 34 Dorrington Players Review See Page 21 Graham Young 724647 35 Birdwatching For Beginners Treasurer Robert Woodier 720016 37 Poppy Day Appeal 5 MONDAY Secretary 37 Arts Festival News Flicks in the Sticks Gloria Carter 724106 37 Methodist Church Refurbishment ‘The Kite Runner’ Directors Mike Edmunds (Chmn), Gloria Carter -
The Life and Work of William Redfern
THE LIFE AND WORK OF WILLIAM REDFERN The Annual Post-Graduate Oration, delivered on April 29, 1953, in the Great Hall of the University of Sydney. This oration is delivered to commemorate those who have advanced the art and science of medicine in New South Wales. By EDWARD FORD, Dean of the Faculty of Medicine and Professor of Preventive Medicine in the University of Sydney. THE LIFE AND WORK OF WILLIAM REDFERN THE LIFE AND WORK OF WILLIAM REDFERN By EDWARD FORD, Dean of the Faculty of Medicine and Professor of Preventive Medicine, University of Sydney. WILLIAM REDFERN, one of our most distinguished Australian medical forebears, arrived on these shores, in trial and despair, over a century and a half ago. He came as a convict who suffered in turn the horror of a sentence of death, the misery of life imprisonment and exile, and a bitter residue of disdain and persecution. Yet William Redfern rose from the depths to an honoured place in our history. He was a pioneer of Australian medicine, agriculture and husbandry, and a citizen who contributed greatly to the welfare of the early colony. He was the first medical practitioner to receive an Australian qualification, and our first teacher of medical students. It is an honour to recall, in this Sixth Post-Graduate Oration, the work of William Redfern and the debt we owe to him. This is made possible by the records of his day, stored richly in the Mitchell Library, and by the biographical work of the late Dr. Norman Dunlop (1928a, b) and other historians. -
From Manufacturing Industries to a Services Economy: the Emergence of a 'New Manchester' in the Nineteen Sixties
Introductory essay, Making Post-war Manchester: Visions of an Unmade City, May 2016 From Manufacturing Industries to a Services Economy: The Emergence of a ‘New Manchester’ in the Nineteen Sixties Martin Dodge, Department of Geography, University of Manchester Richard Brook, Manchester School of Architecture ‘Manchester is primarily an industrial city; it relies for its prosperity - more perhaps than any other town in the country - on full employment in local industries manufacturing for national and international markets.’ (Rowland Nicholas, 1945, City of Manchester Plan, p.97) ‘Between 1966 and 1972, one in three manual jobs in manufacturing were lost and one quarter of all factories and workshops closed. … Losses in manufacturing employment, however, were accompanied (although not replaced in the same numbers) by a growth in service occupations.’ (Alan Kidd, 2006, Manchester: A History, p.192) Economic Decline, Social Change, Demographic Shifts During the post-war decades Manchester went through the socially painful process of economic restructuring, switching from a labour market based primarily on manufacturing and engineering to one in which services sector employment dominated. While parts of Manchester’s economy were thriving from the late 1950s, having recovered from the deep austerity period after the War, with shipping trade into the docks at Salford buoyant and Trafford Park still a hive of activity, the ineluctable contraction of the cotton industry was a serious threat to the Manchester and regional textile economy. Despite efforts to stem the tide, the textile mills in 1 Manchester and especially in the surrounding satellite towns were closing with knock on effects on associated warehousing and distribution functions. -
Healthy Waterways-2015 Social Science Research Report
This may be the author’s version of a work that was submitted/accepted for publication in the following source: Johnston, Kim& Beatson, Amanda (2015) Healthy waterways - 2015 Social Science Research Report. Queensland University of Technology, Business School, Australia. This file was downloaded from: https://eprints.qut.edu.au/93606/ c Consult author(s) regarding copyright matters This work is covered by copyright. Unless the document is being made available under a Creative Commons Licence, you must assume that re-use is limited to personal use and that permission from the copyright owner must be obtained for all other uses. If the docu- ment is available under a Creative Commons License (or other specified license) then refer to the Licence for details of permitted re-use. It is a condition of access that users recog- nise and abide by the legal requirements associated with these rights. If you believe that this work infringes copyright please provide details by email to [email protected] License: Creative Commons: Attribution-Noncommercial 2.5 Notice: Please note that this document may not be the Version of Record (i.e. published version) of the work. Author manuscript versions (as Sub- mitted for peer review or as Accepted for publication after peer review) can be identified by an absence of publisher branding and/or typeset appear- ance. If there is any doubt, please refer to the published source. https://doi.org/10.5204/rep.eprints.93606 1 SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH FINAL REPORT AUGUST 2015 Prepared by Dr Kim Johnston and Dr Amanda Beatson QUT Business School Queensland University of Technology doi: 10.5204/rep.eprints.93606 © The Author(s). -
A Concise Dictionary of Middle English
A Concise Dictionary of Middle English A. L. Mayhew and Walter W. Skeat A Concise Dictionary of Middle English Table of Contents A Concise Dictionary of Middle English...........................................................................................................1 A. L. Mayhew and Walter W. Skeat........................................................................................................1 PREFACE................................................................................................................................................3 NOTE ON THE PHONOLOGY OF MIDDLE−ENGLISH...................................................................5 ABBREVIATIONS (LANGUAGES),..................................................................................................11 A CONCISE DICTIONARY OF MIDDLE−ENGLISH....................................................................................12 A.............................................................................................................................................................12 B.............................................................................................................................................................48 C.............................................................................................................................................................82 D...........................................................................................................................................................122 -
Securing Our Dance Heritage: Issues in the Documentation and Preservation of Dance by Catherine J
Securing Our Dance Heritage: Issues in the Documentation and Preservation of Dance by Catherine J. Johnson and Allegra Fuller Snyder July 1999 Council on Library and Information Resources Washington, D.C. ii About the Contributors Catherine Johnson served as director for the Dance Heritage Coalition’s Access to Resources for the History of Dance in Seven Repositories Project. She holds an M.S. in library science from Columbia University with a specialization in rare books and manuscripts and a B.A. from Bethany College with a major in English literature and theater. Ms. Johnson served as the founding director of the Dance Heritage Coalition from 1992 to 1997. Before that, she was assistant curator at the Harvard Theatre Collection, where she was responsible for access, processing, and exhibitions, among other duties. She has held positions at The New York Public Library and the Folger Shakespeare Library. Allegra Fuller Snyder, the American Dance Guild’s 1992 Honoree of the Year, is professor emeritus of dance and former director of the Graduate Program in Dance Ethnology at the University of California, Los Angeles. She has also served as chair of the faculty, School of the Arts, and chair of the Department of Dance at UCLA. She was visiting professor of performance studies at New York University and honorary visiting professor at the University of Surrey, Guildford, England. She has written extensively and directed several films about dance and has received grants from NEA and NEH in addition to numerous honors. Since 1993, she has served as executive director, president, and chairwoman of the board of directors of the Buckminster Fuller Institute. -
Capital & Regional Plc Annual Report 2000 Creating Places That Live
Capital & Regional plc Capital & Regional plc 10 Lower Grosvenor Place, London SW1W 0EN T: 020 7932 8000 F: 020 7802 5600 www.capreg.com Annual Report 2000 Capital & Regional plc Annual Report 2000 Creating places that live Our retail and leis expertise is focus Centres, Retail Pa Capital & Regional is a specialist property company, owning and developing some of the most exciting and distinctive retail and leisure properties throughout the UK. The current portfolio value is over £800m of which 90% is retail and leisure, totalling over seven million sq ft. Capital & Regional’s objective is to use its in-house expertise to create value for tenants and shareholders through the innovative and dynamic management of property assets. Contents 39 Auditors’ Report 01 Highlights 40 Consolidated Profit and Loss Account 02 Chairman and Chief Executive’s Review 41 Note of Historical Cost Profits and Losses 06 Operating Review 41 Statement of Total Recognised Gains and Losses 08 Shopping Centres 41 Reconciliation of Movements in 14 Retail Parks Shareholders’ Funds 20 Xscape 42 Consolidated Balance Sheet 26 Principal Properties 43 Consolidated Cash Flow Statement 28 Board of Directors 44 Company Balance Sheet 30 Financial Review 45 Notes to the Financial Statements 34 Five Year Record 58 Directors’ Report 35 Report on Directors’ Remuneration 60 Notice of the Annual General Meeting 67 and Interests 67 Advisers and Corporate Information 38 Corporate Governance Statement 68 2001 Financial Calendar 01 Capital & Regional plc ure property ed on Shopping rks and Xscape Highlights Pre-tax profit up 5% to £13.4m (1999: £12.8m) Net rental income up 25% to £57m (1999: £45.5m) Earnings per share increased by 10% to 13.4p (1999: 12.2p) Fully diluted net assets per share decreased by 4% to 360p (1999: 376p) Dividends per share up 10% to 5.5p (1999: 5.0p) Disposals to date of £246m – £62m of trading and investment assets during year. -
“How Do We Live?” Housing Workshop / London 2019 11Th April — 18Th April 2019 Jocelyn Froimovich, Johanna Muszbek University of Liverpool in London
“How Do We Live?” Housing Workshop / London 2019 11th April — 18th April 2019 Jocelyn Froimovich, Johanna Muszbek University of Liverpool in London Housing design never starts afresh; housing design operates through variation, iteration, and/or mutation of prior examples. The series of workshops “How do we live?” venture into a typological investigation, with the expectation that types can provide a framework to deal with complex urban variables. By understanding the particulars in the production of a housing type, the architect can manipulate and reorganise—invent. This workshop will discuss housing types, exemplary of a particular city in its making. By looking at past exemplary projects ant today’s market offer, the goal is to observe, analyse, participate and hopefully interfere in the production system of the urban. Rather than dismissing examples of the current housing offer as “bastard” architecture, it is assumed that these housing types portray specific subjects, their living and urban conditions; the politics, policies, and socio economic factors that lead into developing a particular urban setting. Thus, the goal of the studio is to design new housing types that expand the existing housing repertoire. These new types will respond to current and future lifestyles and contribute to resolve specific urban demands. The question for this workshop is: what defines the housing crisis of London today? By forcing the notion of crisis as a methodology, each student will question a specific London housing type and propose alternative designs for each of them. For this workshop, the notion of “crisis” will be used as an operative term. “Crisis” is understood as a turning point, a time when a difficult or important decision must be made. -
The Wreck of the Dunbar N FRIDAY, August 21, 1857, the Crew of an Incoming O Vessel Noticed Masses of Wreckage and Debris Floating About Between the Sydney Heads
~Y-dneJ.:'S worst shiP-P-ing disaster saw onlY- one of 122 survive The wreck of the Dunbar N FRIDAY, August 21, 1857, the crew of an incoming O vessel noticed masses of wreckage and debris floating about between the Sydney Heads. Tnere were ship's timbers, bales of goods. children's toys. HISTORICAL even furniture - and, later in the day, more items began turning up all over the harbor. It seemed certain that a ship had been wrecked near the harbor entrance and two pilots at Watson's Bay began searching along the cliffs and around the rocks at South Head. They soon saw spars, cargo and bodies floating in the waves offshore. The identity of the ill-fated ship was not had come perilously close to learned until later in the the rocky coast. Just before midnight. there day, however, when a was a momentary wink of light mailbag was washed up at thro\l.gh the murk. Its direction Watson's Bay marked with indiCated that the ship had the name Dunbar. passed to the north of the So was discovered Sydney's lighthouse, and Captain Green worst shipping disaster and, knew he was close to the indeed, one of the most tragic entrance to Sydney harbor. shipwrecks in Australia's Later, it was suggested that history. All but one of the 122 the skipper had mistaken The passengers and crew on the Gap for the Heads and turned I Dunbar - 81 days out from to port too soon. From James Johnson, who survived by clinging to a rock ledge at London - perished when it evidence subsequently given The Gap, and told of the Dunbar's final hours. -
Ordinary Meeting No. 4416 to Be Held 13 February 2017 and Asks That Her Apologies Be Recorded for This Meeting
Hunter's Hill Council Ordinary Meeting No. 4416 13 February 2017 at 7.30 PM ORDER OF BUSINESS Acknowledgement of Country Prayer Attendance, Apologies, Declarations of Interests 1 Confirmation of Minutes 2 Mayoral Minutes & Reports Tabling of Petitions Addresses from the Public 3 Notice of Motions (including Rescission Motions) Reports from Staff 4 Our Heritage & Built Environment 5 Our Community & Lifestyle 6 Our Environment 7 Moving Around 8 Our Council 9 Committees 10 Correspondence 11 Delegates Reports 12 General Business 13 Questions With or Without Notice 14 Council in Committee of the Whole HUNTER'S HILL COUNCIL ORDINARY MEETING OF COUNCIL Meeting 4416 - 13 February 2017 INDEX 1 – CONFIRMATION OF MINUTES 1 Confirmation of Minutes of Ordinary Meeting 4415 held 12 December 2016 2 - MAYORAL MINUTES & REPORTS 2.1 Australia Day Celebrations 2017 1 3 - NOTICES OF MOTION INCLUDING RESCISSION MOTIONS Nil 4 - OUR HERITAGE & BUILT ENVIRONMENT 4.1 1 Madeline Street, Hunters Hill 6 4.2 6 Woolwich Road, Hunters Hill 20 4.3 Draft Voluntary Planning Agreement (VPA) Practice Note & Circular 33 4.4 Delegated Authority Report 97 4.5 Report of Legal Matters 107 5 - OUR COMMUNITY & LIFESTYLE 5.1 Hunters Hill Food and Wine Festival 115 6 - OUR ENVIRONMENT 6.1 Environmental Improvement Program 117 7 - MOVING AROUND Nil 8 - OUR COUNCIL 8.1 Quarterly Budget Review at at 31 December 2016 121 8.2 Summary of Council Investments as at 30 November 2016 and 31 December 2016 132 8.3 Review of Delivery & Operational Plans 137 8.4 Fairland Hall 142 8.5 Leave of