New Zealand Gazette EXTRAORDINAR Y

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

New Zealand Gazette EXTRAORDINAR Y No. 75 1953 NEW ZEALAND THE New Zealand Gazette EXTRAORDINAR Y Published by Authori~ WELLINGTON, MONDAY, 29 NOVEMBER 1954 Resignation of Members of the Executive Council and of THE HONOURABLE RONALD MACMILLAN ALGIE, of the office Ministers of Minister of Education; THE HONOURABLE ERNEST BOWYER CORBETT, of the offices of IS Excellency the Governor-General has been pleased to Minister of Lands, Minister of Forests, and Minister of Maori Affairs; accept the resignations oi- H THE HONOURABLE WILLIAM STANLEY GOOSMAN, of the offices THE HONOURABLE THOMAS CLIFTON WEBB, Q.C., of Minister of Works, Minister of Railways, Minister of holding a seat in the Executive Council, and the offices of Transport, and Minister of Marine; Attorney-General, Minister of Justice, Minister of External THE HONOURABLE THOMAS LACHLAN MACDONALD, of the office Affairs, and Minister of Island Territories; of Minister of Defence; THE HONOURABLE SIR WILLIAM ALEXANDER BODKIN, K.C.V.O., THE HONOURABLE JACK THOMAS WATTS, of the office of Minister of Industries and Commerce; and holding a seat in the Executive Council, and the offices of Minister of Internal Affairs and Minister of Social Security; THE HONOURABLE JOHN Ross MARSHALL, of the office of Minister of Health. THE HONOURABLE CHARLES MOORE BOWDEN, holding a seat in the Executive Council, and the office of Dated at Wellington this 26th day of November 1954. Minister of Customs; By command, THE HONOURABLE WALTER JAMES BROADFOOT, D. E. FOUHY, Official Secretary. holding a seat in the Executive Council, and the office of Postmaster-General and Minister of Telegraphs; and THE HONOURABLE WILFRED HENRY FORTUNE, holding a seat in the Executive Council. Members of the Executive Council Appointed Dated at Wellington this 26th day of November 1954. By command, D. E. FOUHY, Official Secretary. IS Excellency the Governor-General has this day been H pleased to appoint Resignation of Ministers THE HONOURABLE SIDNEY WALTER SMITH, THE HONOURABLE DEAN JACK EYRE, THE HONOURABLE ERIC HENRY HALSTEAD, IS Excellency the Governor-General has been pleased to THE HONOURABLE JOSIAH RALPH HANAN, accept the resignations of- H THE HONOURABLE JOHN KENNETH McALPINE, and 'rHE RIGHT HONOURABLE SIDNEY GEOR.GE HOLLAND, C.H., of THE HONOURABLE THOMAS PHILIP SHAND, the office of Minister of Finance; THE RIGHT HONOURABLE KEI't'H JACKA HOLYOAKE, of the to be members of the Executive Council of New Zealand; office of Minister of Agriculture; and the above named have taken the oath of office accordingly. THE HONOURABLE WILLIAM SULLIVAN, of the offices of Dated at Wellington this 26th day of November 1954. Minister of Labour, Minister of Mines, and Minister of Immigration; T. J. SHERRARD, Clerk of the Executive Council. 1954 THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE [No. 75 Ministers .A. ppointed THE HONOURABLE .JOSIAH RALPH HANAN, to be Minister of Health and Minister of Immigration; THE HONOURABLE .JOHN KENNETH McALPINE, to be Minister IS Excellency the Governor-General has been pleased to of Railways and Minister of Marine; and appoint- THE HONOURABLE THOMAS PHILIP SHAND, to be Postmaster­ H General and Minister of Telegraphs. THE RIGHT HONOURABLE KEITH .JACKA HOLYOAKE, to be Minister of Agriculture; Dated at Wellington this 26th day of November 1954. THE HONOURABLE WILLIAM SULLIVAN, to be Minister of By command, Labour and Minister of Mines; D. E. FOUHY, Official Secretary. THE HONOURABLE RONALD MACMILLAN ALGIE, to be Minister of Education; . THE HONOURABLE ERNEST BOWYER CORBETT, to be Minister Resignation of Parliamentary Under-Secretaries of Lands and Minister of Maori Affairs; THE HONOURABLE WILLIAM STANLEY GoOSMAN, to be Minis­ ter of Works and Minister of Transport; IS Excellency the Governor-General has been pleased, in THE HONOURABLE THOMAS LACHLAN MACDONALD, to be Minis­ H terms of the Civil List Act 1950, to accept as from 25 ter of Defence, Minister of External Affairs, and Minister November 1954 the resignations of- of Island Territories; SIDNEY WALTER SMITH, Esquire, THE HONOURABLE .JACK THOMAS WATTS, to be Minister of of the office of Parliamentary Under-Secretary in relation to Finance; the office of the Minister of Agriculture; and THE HONOURABLE .JOHN Ross MARSHALL, to be Attorney­ EDGAR ROLLO NEALE, Esquire, O.B.E., General and Minister of .Justice; THE HONOURABLE SIDNEY WALTER SMITH, to be Minister of of the office of Parliamentary Under-Secretary in relation to Internal Affairs and Minister of Forests; the offices of the Minister of Customs, Minister of Industries and Commerce, and Minister in Charge of the Inland Revenue THE HONOURABLE DEAN .JACK EYRE, to be Minister of Department. Industries and Commerce and Minister of Customs; THE HONOURABLE ERIC HENRY HALSTEAD, to be Minister of Dated at Wellington this 26th day of November 1954. Social Security; S. G. HOLLAND, Prime Minister. Price 6d. BY AUTHORITY: R. E. OWEN. GOVERNMENT PRINTER. WELLINGTON.-1954 .
Recommended publications
  • Human Rights in New Zealand
    Acknowledgements: The New Zealand Law Foundation funded the three year research project and we are enormously grateful for their financial and moral support. We would like to thank the stakeholders who contributed to the research and to those experts who read individual chapters and provided feedback. We appreciate the work of Kyle Stutter of the New Zealand Human Rights Commission and Kirsty Whitby in the School of Social Sciences and Public Policy at AUT for money matters. Millie Wall patiently formatted the report and designed the cover. Heidi Jones and Anne-Marie Laure provided valuable research in the early stages of the project. Sir Geoffrey Palmer undertook the overall peer review and John Harvey proof read the report several times. Any errors of fact or grammatical imperfections are ours alone and will be corrected in web-based versions of the report. Contact details: [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] 1 Contents Summary of recommendations ............................................................................................. 9 Chapter One Human Rights ........................................................................................ 11 1 Introduction to human rights .................................................................................................. 11 1.1 A short history of the evolution and development of human rights in New Zealand. ... 12 1.1.1 1948 to 1968 – Period of inaction .................................................................................. 13 1.1.2 1968
    [Show full text]
  • New Zealand Gazette Extraordinary
    No. 82 1943 THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE EXTRAORDINARY Published by Authority WELLINGTON, MONDAY, 12 DECEMBER 1960 Resignation of M embers of the Executive Council and of The Honourable Mabel Bowden Howard, holding a seat Ministers in the Executive Council and the office of Minister of Social Security; The Honourable John Mathison, holding a seat in the Executive Council and the offices of Minister of Trans­ His Excellency the Governor-General has been pleased to port and Minister of Island Territories; accept the resignation of : The Honourable Raymond Boord, holding a seat in the The Right Honourable Walter Nash, C.H., holding a seat in Executive Council and the office of Minister of Customs; the Executive Council and the offi ce of Prime Minister, and Minister of External Affairs, and Minister of Maori The Honourable William Theophilus Anderton, holding Affairs; a seat in the Executive Council and the office of Minister The Honourable Clarence Farringdon Skinner, M.C., hold­ of Internal Affairs. ing a seat in the Executive Council and the offices of Minister of Agriculture and Minister of Lands; Dated at Wellington this 12th day of December 1960. The Honourable Arnold Henry N ordmeyer, holding a seat By Command- in the Executive Council and the office of Minister of D. C. WILLIAMS, Official Secretary. Finance; The Honourable Henry Greathead Rex Mason, Q.C., hold­ ing a seat in the Executive Council and the offices of Members of the Executive Council Appointed Attorney-General, Minister of Justice, and Minister of Health; The Honourable Frederick
    [Show full text]
  • Public Sector, Vol. 30, (4) 2008
    PUBLIC SECTOR Public Sector, Vol. 30, (4) 2008 Articles The changing nature of parliamentary practice Politics and administration Reflections on the partnership between the School of Government and the State services State-owned Enterprise governance News Fellowship and Distinguished Service Awards Submission IPANZ’s submission to the investigation into the Public Service recruitment and employment of Madeleine Setchell Publisher Institute of Public Administration New Zealand. P O Box 5032, Wellington, New Zealand. Phone +64 4 463 6940 Fax: +64 4 463 6939 PUBLIC Email: [email protected] The whole of the literary matter of Public Sector is copyright ©2007 – IPANZ Editor Allen Petrey SECTOR Layout Hettie Barnard Volume 30 Number 4 2008 ISSN 0110-5191 Editorial Office c/- The Publisher as above Contents Editorial Committee Articles Tom Berthold Ralph Chapman The changing nature of parliamentary practice Chris Eichbaum by David McGee .................................................................................................................... 2 Geoff Lewis Allen Petrey Politics and administration: some reflections on the ‘Setchell Affair’ (or Michael Reid boundary riding in the purple zone) Carol Stigley by Chris Eichbaum and Richard Shaw ................................................................................... 8 Advertising Reflections on the partnership between the School of Government and Jay Matthes the State services: where to from here? Phone: +64 4 463 6940 by Gary Hawke ....................................................................................................................15
    [Show full text]
  • The Case Against an Australian Bill of Rights
    Don’t Leave Us with the Bill: The Case Against an Australian Bill of Rights Edited by Julian Leeser and Ryan Haddrick Don’t Leave Us with the Bill The Case Against an Australian Bill of Rights Edited by Julian Leeser and Ryan Haddrick Published by The Menzies Research Centre Limited RG Menzies House Cnr Blackall and Macquarie Streets BARTON, ACT 2600 ISBN 978-0-9806383-0-1 The Menzies Research Centre Limited is a company limited by guarantee ACN 067 379 684. The Menzies Research Centre is supported by a grant from the Commonwealth Department of Finance and Deregulation The views expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Directors or staff of The Menzies Research Centre. © 2009 The Menzies Research Centre Project management and production: QOTE Canberra (02) 6162 1258 iii Foreword THE RT HON SIR NINIAN ST EPHEN , KG, AK, GCMG, GCVO, KBE, QC he expression ‘a bill of rights’ has an immediate attraction to it; to be subject to such a measure seems at first sight inherently desirable, just the kind of legislative measure a freedom loving nation would Taspire to. Only with experience of the operation of such measures do doubts arise. The true measure of those doubts lies in the assumption, inherent in any such measure, that at a given moment in time it is possible once and for all to identify and declare, both for now and for the future, all those rights which citizens should desirably possess, secure in the knowledge that such a declaration will serve all future needs of the community.
    [Show full text]
  • The New Zealand Gazette 2251
    21 DECEMBER THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE 2251 Industrial Conciliation and Arbitration Act 1954-Cancellation Wellington Central: Daniel Johnston Riddiford. of Registration of Industrial Union Westland: Patrick Blanchfield. Eastern Maori: Puti Tipene Watene. Northern Maori: Matiu Rata. PURSUANT to section 85 of the Industrial Conciliation and Southern Maori: Eruera Tihema Tirikatene. Arbitration Act 1954, it is hereby notified that the registration Western Maori: Iriaka Ratana. of the New Zealand Radio Officers Industrial Union of Workers, Registered No. 1922, situated at C.T.A. Building, Dated art Wellington this 20th day of December 1966. 109 Customhouse Qvay, Wellington, is hereby cancelled as J. V. MEECH, Clerk of the Writs. from the date of the publication of this notice in the (I.A. 72/2/3) Gazette. Dated at Wellington this 8th day of December 1966. H. G. DUNCAN, The Standards Act 1965-Amendment of Standard Specificatz'on Registrar of Industrial Unions, Department of Labour. ___;__, PURSUANT to the provisions of the Standards Act 1965, the Standards Council, on 14 December 1966, amended the under­ Members of the House of Representatives Elected-General mentioned standard specification by the incorporation of the Election amendment shown hereunder: Number and Title of Standard Specification Amendment PURSUANT to the Electoral Act 1956, I have received returns NZSS 1818: 1963 Small fusion-welded air reser- to the Writs issued on 26 October 1966 for the election of voirs for road and railway vehicles; being BS members of Parliament to serve in the House of Representa­ 3256: 1960 ...... ...... ...... ...... No. 4 (PD tives for the electoral districts hereinafter specified, and by 5326) the endorsement on those writs it appears that the under­ Application for copies of the standard specification so mentioned persons have been duly elected members for the amended should be made to the Standards Association of said districts, viz: New Zealand, Private Bag, Wellington C.
    [Show full text]
  • Talk for Waikanae U3A Kaleidoscope, 19Th October 2020 Te
    1 Talk for Waikanae U3A Kaleidoscope, 19th October 2020 Te Oka - Pākehā Kaumātua The Life of Jock McEwen Book cover 2 How did I come to be part of Jock McEwen’s family? In the late 1950s my mother, Peg Fleming, and another friend in the Federation of University Women, Marie Head, decided they would like to get to know some of the Maori women who had moved to Wellington to find work. So they started a group they called the Maori-Pakeha Group, together with members of the local Maori Women’s Welfare League, many of whom also belonged to the Ngati Poneke Maori club. In 1963 they held a joint meeting in the Ngati Poneke hall and Mum asked me to write out some posters to advertise it. That was when I first heard the name ‘Jock McEwen’, who was to be the speaker. The next year I met his son Andrew at university. Andrew’s mother invited me to dinner with my parents, after which both our mothers encouraged our relationship which might be why we have been happily married for fifty-four years. In his old age Jock told me he enjoyed the biography I wrote about my own father, Charles Fleming but I had not thought of writing about Jock until his tangi at Upper Hutt’s Orongomai Marae. That was when I really appreciated that this man was no ordinary human being. So how did I go about the task? 3 As well as interviewing people who had known Jock, I had access to four wonderful sources of written and tape-recorded information.
    [Show full text]
  • The New Zealand Gazette 1413
    SEPT. 20] THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE 1413 Declaration of Result of Poll for the S01ithern 11! aori Electoral Disll'ict Patea : William Alfred Sheat. Petone : Michael Moohan. JOHN ROYDEN SANSOM, Returning Officer for the Southern Piako : William Stanley Goosman. I , Maori Electoral District, do hereby declare the result of the Ponsonby: Ritchie Macdonald. poll taken on the 1st day of September 1951 for the eleotion of a Raglan : Hallyburton Johns_tone. Member of Parliament for the said district to be as follows :- Rangitikei : Edward Brice Killen Gordon. Candidates. Votes Polled. Remuera : Ronald Macmillan Algie. Riccarton : Angus MoLagan. Eruera Tihema Tirikatene 979 William Kelly Beaton Rodney: Thomas Clifton Webb. 320 Roskill: John Rae. Total number of valid votes polled . I, 299 St Albans: Jack Thomas Watts. St. Kilda : James George Barnes. Number of votes rejeoted as informal 13 Selwyn: John Kenneth McAlpine. I therefore declare the said Eruera Tihema Tirikatene to be Sydenham: Mabel Bowden Howard. elected. Tamaki : Eric Henry Halstead. Tauranga: George Augustus Walsh. Dated at Christchurch, this 11th day of September 1951. Timaru: Clyde Leonard Carr. J. R. SANSOM, Returning Officer. Waikato: Geoffrey Fantham Sim. Waimarino : Patrick Kearins. Waimate: David Campbell Kidd. Wairarapa: Bertie Victor Cooksley. Dedaration of Result of Poll for the Western Maori Electoral, Dietrict Waitakere: Henry Greathead Rex Mason. Waitomo: Walter James Broadfoot. I JAMES ALEXANDER MILLS, Returning Officer for the Wallace : Thomas Lachlan Macdonald. 9 Western Maori Electoral District, do hereby declare the Wanganui: Joseph Bernard Francis Cotterill. result of the poll taken on the 1st day of September 1951" for the Wellington Central: Charles Henry Chapman.
    [Show full text]
  • Copyright by Rhonda Leann Evans Case 2004
    Copyright by Rhonda Leann Evans Case 2004 The Dissertation Committee for Rhonda Leeann Evans Case Certifies that this is the approved version of the following dissertation: The Politics and Law of Anglo-American Antidiscrimination Regimes, 1945-1995 Committee: John C. Higley, Supervisor Gary P. Freeman H.W. Perry Sanford Levinson Jeffrey K. Tulis The Politics and Law of Anglo-American Antidiscrimination Regimes, 1945-1995 by Rhonda Leann Evans Case, B.A, J.D. Dissertation Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of The University of Texas at Austin in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy The University of Texas at Austin December, 2004 To my Mom and Reed, and in memory of my Father Acknowledgements This dissertation is the product of considerable personal sacrifice not only on my part but, more importantly, on the part of the people I love most. I, therefore, humbly dedicate it to my mother and my husband, for their abiding love and support, and to my father, who sadly did not live to see the project’s completion. I also thank Marcella Evans, who made it easier for me to be so far away from home during such trying times. In addition, I benefited from the support of a tremendous circle of friends who were always there when I needed them: Tracy McFarland, Brenna Troncoso, Rosie and Scott Truelove, Anna O. Law, Holly Hutyera, Pam Wilkins Connelly, John Hudson, Jason Pierce, Emily Werlein, Greg Brown, and Lori Dometrovich. While in Australia and New Zealand, I benefited from the kindnesses of far too many people to list here, but I extend a special thanks to Imogen, Baghurst, Kerri Weeks, Sonia Palmieri, Robyn Lui, Ling Lee, and Peter Barger.
    [Show full text]
  • Two to Tango the PARTNERSHIP BETWEEN CHARITY and the WELFARE STATE in NEW ZEALAND 1940–19701
    New Zealand Journal of History, 42, 1 (2008) Two to Tango THE PARTNERSHIP BETWEEN CHARITY AND THE WELFARE STATE IN NEW ZEALAND 1940–19701 IN 1946 MRS GLADYS MILLER, social worker for Wellington’s Smith Family Joyspreaders, seemed exceptionally busy.2 ‘Sometimes we bless the telephone, but mostly it is an instrument of torture, as it seems to ring a hundred times a day!’ she reported.3 Callers were not only ‘cases’ (who more usually turned up at her office in person — around 1500 of them each year) but other personnel from voluntary agencies, the Hospital Board, the Social Security Department, the Child Welfare Division of the Department of Education, as well as politicians and Cabinet members’ secretaries. Asked ‘What does the Smith Family do?’, Mrs Miller highlighted a variety of interactions and referrals: Our work covers so many fields in welfare activities that we cannot say concisely just what we do. In a day’s routine calls are many and varied. Perhaps we do not spend one penny and yet have expended hours of our time in directing people to the relief they require. We have arranged for their contacting the right quarters, and personally given them advice and sympathy. We find that this is the main reason why Members of Parliament and others in authority, realizing that we have so many helpful contacts, send their troublesome cases to the Smith Family. Many cases rush to the Minister’s offices when in desperate need. The Secretary who receives these applicants mentions the circumstances to his Minister, who might direct him to phone the Smith Family, saying, ‘They can fix this case better than we could, and we will give them any help they deem necessary’.
    [Show full text]
  • Men's Violence Against Wives and Partners
    Copyright is owned by the Author of the thesis. Permission is given for a copy to be downloaded by an individual for the purpose of research and private study only. The thesis may not be reproduced elsewhere without the permission of the Author. Men’s Violence Against Wives and Partners: The State and Women’s Experience, 1960-1984 A thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History Massey University, Manawatu, New Zealand. Jacqueline Marie O’Neill 2012 ABSTRACT While men’s violence against wives and partners is universal and transhistorical, the various terms used to describe it have been, and remain mutable, constructed and contested. This thesis traces how men’s violence against wives or partners was once constructed as a private or domestic matter and how and why these constructions have changed over time; and what effects, if any, the changes might have had on the way the violence was responded to, and experienced by victims. The thesis is particularly concerned with state practices and how these impacted on women’s capacity to resist a husband’s or partner’s violence. The thesis begins with marriage in the medieval period because marriage and the family have been central to the concept of “domestic” as it emerged in Western society. The principal temporal focus of the thesis is the 1960s – 1984. The 1960s were a period marked by rapid social change that provided a foundation for the construction of “domestic violence” in the 1970s. The thesis ends in 1984, two years after the Domestic Protection Act which marked a radical shift in the construction of men’s violence against wives or partners from a private matter to a public one, and one year after the state began to fund places of refuge for women trying to escape violent partners.
    [Show full text]
  • The Rise and Development of Gangs in New Zealand
    THE RISE AND DEVELOPMENT OF GANGS IN NEW ZEALAND A Thesis Submitted in Partial Fulfilment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Sociology at the University of Canterbury Jarrod Gilbert 2010 2 Table of Contents ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS .................................................................................................... 8 ABSTRACT ............................................................................................................................ 9 INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................... 11 Gang Definitions ............................................................................................................................. 15 Methodology: Building a History .................................................................................................... 19 Research Methods .......................................................................................................................... 19 Documents and the Media ............................................................................................................... 19 Ethnographic Fieldwork .................................................................................................................... 22 Formal Interviews ............................................................................................................................. 31 Issues of Ethics ..............................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Changing New Zealand's Electoral Law 1927
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by ResearchArchive at Victoria University of Wellington Consensus Gained, Consensus Maintained? Changing New Zealand’s Electoral Law 1927 – 2007 A Thesis Submitted to Victoria University of Wellington In Fulfilment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts in Political Science James Christmas 2010 To JMC 2 Acknowledgments In submitting this work, I acknowledge a substantial debt of gratitude to my supervisor, Professor Elizabeth McLeay, for her guidance, constant attention and interest. For their encouragement, I thank my parents. For his patience, this thesis is dedicated to James. James Christmas Christchurch 2010 3 Contents Abstract 5 List of Tables and 6 Figures Chapter One Introduction 7 Chapter Two The Electoral Law in Context 15 Chapter Three Milestones: Three Eras of Electoral 27 Amendment? Chapter Four Parliament and Electoral Rules 49 Chapter Five Boundaries, Franchise and Registration 70 Chapter Six Election Administration and Electioneering 92 Chapter Seven Assessing Trends and Motivations 112 Chapter Eight Conclusion 132 Appendix A Acts Affecting the Electoral Law 1927 – 2007 135 (in chronological order) Appendix B Unsuccessful Electoral Reform Bills, 1927 – 154 2007 (in chronological order) Bibliography 162 4 Abstract In the eighty years between the passage of New Zealand’s first unified Electoral Act in 1927, and the passage of the Electoral Finance Act 2007, the New Zealand Parliament passed 66 acts that altered or amended New Zealand’s electoral law. One central assumption of theories of electoral change is that those in power only change electoral rules strategically, in order to protect their self-interest.
    [Show full text]