Tabled Papers Index
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Golden Yearbook
Golden Yearbook Golden Yearbook Stories from graduates of the 1930s to the 1960s Foreword from the Vice-Chancellor and Principal ���������������������������������������������������������5 Message from the Chancellor ��������������������������������7 — Timeline of significant events at the University of Sydney �������������������������������������8 — The 1930s The Great Depression ������������������������������������������ 13 Graduates of the 1930s ���������������������������������������� 14 — The 1940s Australia at war ��������������������������������������������������� 21 Graduates of the 1940s ����������������������������������������22 — The 1950s Populate or perish ���������������������������������������������� 47 Graduates of the 1950s ����������������������������������������48 — The 1960s Activism and protest ������������������������������������������155 Graduates of the 1960s ���������������������������������������156 — What will tomorrow bring? ��������������������������������� 247 The University of Sydney today ���������������������������248 — Index ����������������������������������������������������������������250 Glossary ����������������������������������������������������������� 252 Produced by Marketing and Communications, the University of Sydney, December 2016. Disclaimer: The content of this publication includes edited versions of original contributions by University of Sydney alumni and relevant associated content produced by the University. The views and opinions expressed are those of the alumni contributors and do -
Legislative Assembly Results Summary of Legislative Assembly Election
2001 NORTHERN TERRITORY ELECTION 18 August 2001 CONTENTS Page Introduction ................................................................................................................ 1 Legislative Assembly Results Summary of Legislative Assembly Election ..................................................... 3 Legislative Assembly Results by Electoral Division ......................................... 6 Summary of Two-Party Preferred Results ..................................................... 11 Regional Summaries ..................................................................................... 12 By-elections 1997-2001 ............................................................................................ 14 Antony Green ABC Election Unit Symbols .. Nil or rounded to zero * Sitting MPs .… „Ghost‟ candidate, where a party contesting the previous election did not nominate for the current election Party Abbreviations (blank) Non-affiliated candidates CLP Country Liberal Party DEM Australian Democrats GRN Green IND Independent LAB Territory Labor ONP One Nation SAP Socialist Alliance Party TAP Territory Alliance Party 2001 Northern Territory Election INTRODUCTION This paper contains a summary of the 2001 Northern Territory election. For each Legislative Assembly electorate, details of the total primary and two-candidate preferred vote are provided. Where appropriate, a two-party preferred count is also included. The format for the results is as follows: First Count: For each candidate, the total primary vote received is shown. -
2018 ANNUAL REPORT Is the Second Oldest of the Endeavours of the Most Venerable Order of St John
THE ST JOHN OF JERUSALEM EYE HOSPITAL GROUP ST JOHN AMBULANCE AUSTRALIA AUSTRALIA AMBULANCE JOHN ST After first aid training, the St John of Jerusalem Eye Hospital Group 2018 ANNUAL REPORT is the second oldest of the endeavours of the Most Venerable Order of St John. ST JOHN AMBULANCE Founded in 1882, the Order’s ophthalmic enterprise in Jerusalem has continued for 136 years. The work done by the Eye Hospital Group remains as vital and as AUSTRALIA critical as at any time in the Hospital’s history. The mission of the Eye Hospital Group will continue with the enthusiasm and generosity of the Priories of the Order which, like the Australian Priory, have been the mainstay of its support. ANNUAL 2018 REPORT ANNUAL THE HUMANITARIAN MISSION OF THE ORDER Our Mission is to prevent and relieve sickness and injury and to act to enhance the health and well being of people of all races and creeds. The Royal Australian NEW SOUTH WALES OVER 14,000 KM AWAY IN AUSTRALIA, THE HISTORICAL $44,000.00 in continuing support of an Ophthalmic Nurse and New Zealand with the SJEHG College of Ophthalmologists ORIGINS OF THE ORDER OF ST JOHN CAN APPEAR Bequest from the estate of the late Mrs Pauline Clark RANZCO ABSTRACT AND DISCONNECTED FROM THE DAILY for ophthalmic support 50th Congress | 5-day event | 1300 delegates OPERWATIONS OF ST JOHN IN AUSTRALIA. $16,000.00 raised at NSW Government House reception SOUTH AUSTRALIA of all delegates visited Jerusalem is a vibrant and celebrated historical city but fails to make the list of top holiday destinations for most Australian travellers. -
CHANCELLOR, I Have the Honour to Present to You for the Award of The
CHANCELLOR, I have the honour to present to you for the award of the degree of Doctor of Economics, Honoris Causa, Dr Neil Raymond Conn, Officer of the Order of Australia. Dr. Conn was born in Sydney in 1936. He attended several schools in northern and western New South Wales before studying at the University of Sydney, from which he received, firstly, a Bachelor of Economics degree, with first class Honours in Economic Statistics, and then the degree of Master of Economics. Between 1961 and 1975 he lectured in Economics at the University of Sydney. During this period his talents were recognised and sought by external organisations, and he was seconded for a total of two years’ service in the Commonwealth Treasury and the Commonwealth Department of Secondary Industry. He also spent one year as the James B. Duke Fellow at Duke University in the United States, where he won his Doctorate in Economics, and gained membership of the elite academic society Phi Beta Kappa. Dr. Conn left academia in 1975, to work for two years as Principal Administrator, Growth Studies Division, at the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development in Paris. In this role he significantly increased the profile of Australia and Australians in the context of discussions and decisions about international economic affairs. He returned to Sydney to become Deputy Secretary of the New South Wales Treasury for several years. In 1981 he came to the Northern Territory to become our Under Treasurer. He held that position until 1983, when he went back to Sydney to work for a Canadian owned merchant bank. -
Sixth Assembly
LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF THE NORTHERN TERRITORY SIXTH ASSEMBLY 4 December 1990 to 17 May 1994 CONSOLIDATED INDEX OF MINUTES OF PROCEEDINGS AND PAPERS TABLED Sixth Legislative Assembly CONTENTS ADDRESS IN REPLY 1 ADMINISTRATIVE ARRANGEMENTS 1 – 2 ADMINISTRATOR’S ADDRESS 2 ADMINISTRATOR’S SPEECH 2 APPRECIATION OF SERVICE 2 APPOINTMENT OF CLERK 2 ATTENDANCE BEFORE BAR 2 ATTENDANCE OF ADMINISTRATOR 2 ATTENDANCE OF DEPUTY 2 BILLS 2 – 11 BUDGET SPEECH 11 CENSURE 11 CHAIRMAN OF COMMITTEE 12 COMMISSION TO ADMINISTER OATHS AND AFFIRMATIONS 12 COMMISSION OF DEPUTY TO DECLARE OPEN SIXTH ASSEMBLY 12 COMMONWEALTH DAY MESSAGE 12 CONDOLENCES 12 DEATH OF FORMER DEPUTY CLERK 12 DEATH OF FORMER MEMBER 12 DISALLOWANCE OF REGULATIONS 12 DISCHARGE OF BUSINESS 12 – 13 DISCHARGE OF WITNESS 13 DISPLAY OF MAORI REGALIA 13 DISSENT FROM SPEAKER’S RULING 13 DISTINGUISHED VISITORS 13 – 15 ELECTION OF SPEAKER 15 EXPLANATION OF SPEECHES 15 GENERAL BUSINESS DAY 15 GOVERNMENT WHIP 15 LEAVE OF ABSENCE 15 – 16 Sixth Legislative Assembly CONTENTS MATTERS OF PUBLIC IMPORTANCE 16 MEMBER SWORN 16 MEMBER SUSPENDED 16 MESSAGES FROM THE ADMINISTRATOR 16 – 17 MOTIONS NEGATIVED 17 – 18 MOTIONS (Procedural) 18 – 24 MOTIONS (Substantive) 24 – 36 OATHS 36 PAPERS AND REPORTS TABLED 36 – 105 PERSONAL EXPLANATION 106 PETITIONS 106 – 108 PRESENTATION OF THE SPEAKER TO ADMINISTRATOR 108 PRIVILEGE 108 RETURN TO WRITS 108 SPEAKER’S RULING 108 SPEAKER’S STATEMENT 109 STATEMENTS 109 – 112 SUMMONS 112 WANT OF CONFIDENCE 112 WARRANT – DEPUTY CHAIRMAN OF COMMITTEES 112 ⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯ LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY -
Independents in Australian Parliaments
The Age of Independence? Independents in Australian Parliaments Mark Rodrigues and Scott Brenton* Abstract Over the past 30 years, independent candidates have improved their share of the vote in Australian elections. The number of independents elected to sit in Australian parliaments is still small, but it is growing. In 2004 Brian Costar and Jennifer Curtin examined the rise of independents and noted that independents ‘hold an allure for an increasing number of electors disenchanted with the ageing party system’ (p. 8). This paper provides an overview of the current representation of independents in Australia’s parliaments taking into account the most recent election results. The second part of the paper examines trends and makes observations concerning the influence of former party affiliations to the success of independents, the representa- tion of independents in rural and regional areas, and the extent to which independ- ents, rather than minor parties, are threats to the major parities. There have been 14 Australian elections at the federal, state and territory level since Costar and Curtain observed the allure of independents. But do independents still hold such an allure? Introduction The year 2009 marks the centenary of the two-party system of parliamentary democracy in Australia. It was in May 1909 that the Protectionist and Anti-Socialist parties joined forces to create the Commonwealth Liberal Party and form a united opposition against the Australian Labor Party (ALP) Government at the federal level.1 Most states had seen the creation of Liberal and Labor parties by 1910. Following the 1910 federal election the number of parties represented in the House * Dr Mark Rodrigues (Senior Researcher) and Dr Scott Brenton (2009 Australian Parliamentary Fellow), Politics and Public Administration Section, Australian Parliamentary Library. -
Political Chronicles Commonwealth of Australia
Australian Journal of Politics and History: Volume 53, Number 4, 2007, pp. 614-667. Political Chronicles Commonwealth of Australia January to June 2007 JOHN WANNA The Australian National University and Griffith University Shadow Dancing Towards the 2007 Election The election year began with Prime Minister John Howard facing the new Opposition leader, Kevin Rudd. Two developments were immediately apparent: as a younger fresher face Rudd played up his novelty value and quickly won public support; whereas Howard did not know how to handle his new “conservative” adversary. Rudd adopted the tactic of constantly calling himself the “alternative prime minister” while making national announcements and issuing invitations for summits as if he were running the government. He promised to reform federal-state relations, to work collaboratively with the states on matters such as health care, to invest in an “education revolution”, provide universal access to early childhood education, and to fast-track high-speed broadbanding at a cost of $4.7 billion. Rudd also began to stalk and shadow the prime minister around the country — a PM “Doppelgänger” — appearing in the same cities or at the same venues often on the same day (even going to the Sydney cricket test match together). Should his office receive word of the prime minister’s intended movements or scheduled policy announcements, Rudd would often appear at the location first or make upstaging announcements to take the wind from the PM’s sails. Politics was a tactical game like chess and Rudd wanted to be seen taking the initiative. He claimed he thought “it will be fun to play with his [John Howard’s] mind for a while” (Weekend Australian Magazine, 10-11 February 2007). -
Members of the Legislative Assembly 1
LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF THE NORTHERN TERRITORY MEMBERS OF THE LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY 1st Assembly 1974 to 13th Assembly Current As at 29 February 2020 1 MEMBERS OF THE 1ST ASSEMBLY Elected on 19 October 1974 to 12 August 1977 MEMBER DIVISION FROM TO PARTY REMARKS Bernard Francis Kilgariff Alice Springs 19.10.74 12.11.75 CLP Speaker George Eric Manuell Alice Springs 07.02.76 12.08.77 CLP By-election Rupert James Kentish Arnhem 19.10.74 12.08.77 CLP Ian Lindsay Tuxworth Barkly 19.10.74 12.08.77 CLP Nicholas Manuel Dondas Casuarina 19.10.74 12.08.77 CLP John Leslie Stuart Elsey 19.10.74 12.08.77 CLP Speaker MacFarlane Grant Ernest Tambling Fannie Bay 19.10.74 12.08.77 CLP James Murray Robertson Gillen 19.10.74 12.08.77 CLP Paul Anthony Edward Jingili 19.10.74 12.08.77 CLP Everingham Roger Michael Steele Ludmilla 19.10.74 12.08.77 CLP David Lloyd Pollock Macdonnell 19.10.74 12.08.77 CLP Roger Ryan Millner 19.10.74 12.08.77 CLP Alline Dawn Lawrie Nightcliff 19.10.74 12.08.77 IND Milton James Ballantyne Nhulunbuy 19.10.74 12.08.77 CLP Ronald John Withnall Port Darwin 19.10.74 12.08.77 IND Elizabeth Jean Andrew Sanderson 19.10.74 12.08.77 CLP Roger William Stanley Stuart 19.10.74 12.08.77 CLP Vale Marshall Bruce Perron Stuart Park 19.10.74 12.08.77 CLP Hyacinth Tungutalum Tiwi 19.10.74 12.08.77 CLP Godfrey (Goff) Alan Letts Victoria River 19.10.74 12.08.77 CLP Majority Leader PROROGATION The Legislative Assembly was prorogued by His Honour the Administrator as follows: I, JOHN ARMSTRONG ENGLAND, the Administrator of the Northern Territory of Australia, in pursuance of section 22(1) of the Northern Territory (Self-Government) Act 1978 of the Commonwealth, by this notice prorogue the Legislative Assembly of the Northern Territory of Australia. -
Vocational Education & Training
VOCATIONAL EDUCATION & TRAINING The Northern Territory’s history of public philanthropy VOCATIONAL EDUCATION & TRAINING The Northern Territory’s history of public philanthropy DON ZOELLNER Published by ANU Press The Australian National University Acton ACT 2601, Australia Email: [email protected] This title is also available online at press.anu.edu.au National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication entry Creator: Zoellner, Don, author. Title: Vocational education and training : the Northern Territory’s history of public philanthropy / Don Zoellner. ISBN: 9781760460990 (paperback) 9781760461003 (ebook) Subjects: Vocational education--Government policy--Northern Territory. Vocational education--Northern Territory--History. Occupational training--Government policy--Northern Territory. Occupational training--Northern Territory--History. Aboriginal Australians--Vocational education--Northern Territory. 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 and layout by ANU Press. Cover photograph: ‘Northern Territory Parliament House main entrance’ by Patrick Nelson. This edition © 2017 ANU Press Contents List of figures . vii Foreword . xi Acknowledgements . xiii 1 . Setting the scene . 1 2 . Philanthropic behaviour . 11 3 . Prior to 1911: European discovery and South Australian administration of the Northern Territory . 35 4 . Early Commonwealth control, 1911–46 . 45 5 . The post–World War Two period to 1978 . 57 6. TAFE in the era of self‑government, 1978–92 . 99 7. Vocational education and training in the era of self‑government, 1992–2014 . 161 8. Late 2015 and September 2016 postscript . 229 References . 243 List of figures Figure 1. -
List of Figures
List of figures Figure 1. Paul Henderson, minister, second from right, and guests on the fifth-floor balcony of the Northern Territory Parliament House, 2005. 17 Figure 2. Paul AE Everingham, Member of the Legislative Assembly ..................................23 Figure 3. Charlotte Waters Telegraph Station, near the South Australian border, included a store and post office ...........37 Figure 4. Finke River Mission, September 1905 .................39 Figure 5. Tiwi people on Bathurst Island, January 1941, with Bishop Gsell. .40 Figure 6. Transfer Ceremony, 2 January 1911 ...................46 Figure 7. Catholic Mission School at Arltunga, January 1947 .......49 Figure 8. Train (Commonwealth line) with new engines, Northern South Australia, January 1920 ..................51 Figure 9. The first Legislative Council, 16 February 1948 ..........59 Figure 10. First Legislative Assembly sitting, 19 March 1975, in the cyclone-damaged chamber. Corrugated iron sheets in right foreground were used to channel rainwater away from members’ desks .................................60 Figure 11. Mission Aboriginals [sic] working in a carpentry shop, May 1968 .........................................65 Figure 12. Alice Springs High School from Anzac Hill, October 1958. This was the site of the Adult Education Centre and it became the first home of the Alice Springs Community College in 1974. 70 Figure 13. Electrical experiments at Darwin High School adult training classes, 30 June 1967 ......................71 vii VocatioNAL EducatioN ANd TRAiNiNg Figure 14. Darwin Primary School in January 1957, it later became Darwin Higher Primary and then Darwin High School. This building in Woods Street became the Adult Education Centre under principal Harold Garner ...........74 Figure 15. Apprentice training in the former World War Two railway workshops in Katherine, February 1974. -
Legislative Assembly of the Northern Territory
Legislative Assembly of the Northern Territory Tabled Papers — Seventh Assembly (1994 – 1997) INDEX This document allows users to search all papers tabled during the life of the Twelfth Assembly. To access a document, use the Tabled Paper number appearing in the first column of the Index (eg —0001 or 1257). Please note that we are working backwards to digitise our older records and they will be uploaded as they are completed for the previous Assemblies. Should you require a Tabled Paper from a previous Assembly you can contact the Table Office by email on [email protected] Tabled Papers are all documents tabled in the Assembly, including but not limited to: Messages from the Administrator Administrative Arrangements Orders Papers tabled by Members during Assembly debates Explanatory Statements accompanying bills introduced Petitions Warrants Reports on Members’ travel Committee Reports Papers tabled at Estimates Committee hearings Annual reports required by NT and some Commonwealth statutes Coroner’s reports Subordinate legislation Reports to the Assembly from Officers of the Assembly (Ombudsman, Auditor-General, Electoral Commission) Please contact the Table Office if you have any questions on 8946 1447 or 8946 1452. Seventh Assembly - Tabled Papers - page 1 No Description Tabled by Date 1 Appointing the time for the holding of the First Session of Seventh Legislative Clerk 27.06.94 Assembly 2 Commission appointing Deputy of the Administrator Clerk 27.06.94 3 Commission to administer Oaths and present Speaker Deputy 27.06.94 -
Northern Territory Statehood Steering Committee
The Parliament of the Commonwealth of Australia The long road to statehood Report of the inquiry into the federal implications of statehood for the Northern Territory House of Representatives Standing Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs May 2007 Canberra © Commonwealth of Australia 2007 ISBN 978 0 642 78896 2 (Printed version) ISBN 978 0 642 78897 9 (HTML version) Cover design by the House of Representatives Publishing Office. Contents Foreword............................................................................................................................................vii Membership of the Committee ............................................................................................................ix Terms of reference..............................................................................................................................xi List of abbreviations ...........................................................................................................................xii Recommendation ..............................................................................................................................xiii THE REPORT 1 Introduction ...........................................................................................................1 Background to the inquiry........................................................................................................ 1 The inquiry and report of the Committee...............................................................................