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NEWSLETTER ISSN 1443-4962 No
AUSTRALIAN NEWSPAPER HISTORY GROUP NEWSLETTER ISSN 1443-4962 No. 37 May 2006 Compiled for the ANHG by Rod Kirkpatrick, 13 Sumac Street, Middle Park, Qld, 4074. Ph. 07-3279 2279. E-mail: [email protected] 37.1 COPY DEADLINE AND WEBSITE ADDRESS Deadline for next Newsletter: 15 July 2006. Subscription details appear at end of Newsletter. [Number 1 appeared October 1999.] The Newsletter is online through the “Publications” link of the University of Queensland’s School of Journalism & Communication Website at www.uq.edu.au/journ-comm/ and through the ePrint Archives at the University of Queensland at http://eprint.uq.edu.au/) CURRENT DEVELOPMENTS: METROPOLITAN 37.2 MEDIA REFORM PROPOSALS Communications Minister Helen Coonan issued on 14 March an outline of proposals to reform Australia’s media laws. She wanted feedback from stakeholders by 18 April. Under the proposals, newspaper groups and radio groups could be acquired by free-to-air TV networks and vice-versa – and so, Nine, for instance, could buy John Fairfax Holdings, and News Ltd could buy Channel 10. Free-to-air channels would face competition from emerging digital TV players. Senator Coonan said the cross-media and foreign ownership restrictions would be removed by 2007 or 2012, but the Government would require at least five “commercial media groups” to remain in metropolitan markets and four in regional markets. Extensive coverage of the Coonan proposals was provided in, for example, the Australian of 15 March (pp.1, 6, 7, 13, 31, 34) and 16 March (pp.2, 14, 17, 19, 22 and 25) and the Australian Financial Review of 15 March (pp.1, 11, 14, 28, 47, 48, 49, 57, 59 and 60). -
Quercus ×Coutinhoi Samp. Discovered in Australia Charlie Buttigieg
XXX International Oaks The Journal of the International Oak Society …the hybrid oak that time forgot, oak-rod baskets, pros and cons of grafting… Issue No. 25/ 2014 / ISSN 1941-2061 1 International Oaks The Journal of the International Oak Society … the hybrid oak that time forgot, oak-rod baskets, pros and cons of grafting… Issue No. 25/ 2014 / ISSN 1941-2061 International Oak Society Officers and Board of Directors 2012-2015 Officers President Béatrice Chassé (France) Vice-President Charles Snyers d’Attenhoven (Belgium) Secretary Gert Fortgens (The Netherlands) Treasurer James E. Hitz (USA) Board of Directors Editorial Committee Membership Director Chairman Emily Griswold (USA) Béatrice Chassé Tour Director Members Shaun Haddock (France) Roderick Cameron International Oaks Allen Coombes Editor Béatrice Chassé Shaun Haddock Co-Editor Allen Coombes (Mexico) Eike Jablonski (Luxemburg) Oak News & Notes Ryan Russell Editor Ryan Russell (USA) Charles Snyers d’Attenhoven International Editor Roderick Cameron (Uruguay) Website Administrator Charles Snyers d’Attenhoven For contributions to International Oaks contact Béatrice Chassé [email protected] or [email protected] 0033553621353 Les Pouyouleix 24800 St.-Jory-de-Chalais France Author’s guidelines for submissions can be found at http://www.internationaloaksociety.org/content/author-guidelines-journal-ios © 2014 International Oak Society Text, figures, and photographs © of individual authors and photographers. Graphic design: Marie-Paule Thuaud / www.lecentrecreatifducoin.com Photos. Cover: Charles Snyers d’Attenhoven (Quercus macrocalyx Hickel & A. Camus); p. 6: Charles Snyers d’Attenhoven (Q. oxyodon Miq.); p. 7: Béatrice Chassé (Q. acerifolia (E.J. Palmer) Stoynoff & W. J. Hess); p. 9: Eike Jablonski (Q. ithaburensis subsp. -
Inside Today 2021 Edition
Friday, 22 January, 2021 WEATHER PAGE 20 TV GUIDE PAGES 23-24, 49-50 PUZZLES PAGE 21 CLASSIFIEDS PAGES 53-57 borderwatch.com.au | $3.00 BEEF FOCUS INSIDE TODAY 2021 EDITION 12479388-SN05-21 Summer surge THE Penola district hopes to ride the wave of domestic tourists travelling around Aus- tralia, with a new tourism strategy urging travellers to swap California for Coonawar- ra. The Coonawarra Vignerons Association initiative coincides with an influx of visitors to the premier wine region, with some cel- lar doors reporting a busier than ever sum- mer holiday boom. Story page 6 FROM CALI TO COONAWARRA: Balnaves of Coonawarra cellar door sales Georgie Mag- gie in full a with the recent introduction of the Swap California for Coonawarra tourism strategy. Picture: MOLLY TAYLOR Culture bombshell RAQUEL MUSTILLO code of conduct issues has been publicly re- media and its coverage of the internal issues, “This review left staff feeling disillusioned councillors supported engaging an indepen- [email protected] leased. and dissatisfied knowing that their input was The two-hour meeting was called partly in dent mediator and consultant to undertake a not fully documented, taken on board or AN explosive recording of a Grant District response to claims staff members were “ha- cultural review. therefore actioned,” Mr Whicker wrote. Council meeting has revealed a number of rassed and in some cased bullied, disrespect- However, staff received notice a second cul- “As chief executive officer, I am genuinely allegations relating to Mayor Richard Sage’s tural review will be undertaken by council after ed and unsupported” in interactions with Mr sorry for what happened and wish to make a behaviour towards the organisation’s staff, the initial investigation was not fully actioned. -
Saleyards Lifeline
Friday, 12 February, 2021 WEATHER PAGE 18 TV GUIDE PAGES 21-22, 43-44 PUZZLES PAGES 12-13, 20 CLASSIFIEDS PAGES 47-49 borderwatch.com.au | $3.00 City rail history Saleyards turned to eyesore STORY PAGE 3 lifeline RAQUEL MUSTILLO [email protected] LIVESTOCK agent John Chay has wel- comed Wattle Range Council’s decision to keep the Millicent Saleyards opera- tional, but warned “we have not won the war” due to the imposition of a number of conditions for its retention. After two years of uncertainty, the council-owned cattle selling facility was saved from permanent closure after elected members backed a motion to keep the gates open conditional on the yards maintaining a yearly throughput of 8500. At Tuesday night’s council meeting, elected members resumed discussion on a motion by cattle producer and Councillor Moira Neagle to continue the operations of the facility until 2025, de- velop a management plan for the faculty and consider recurrent funding for capi- tal upgrades. But Penola-based Rick Paltridge - who has been a vocal opponent of continuing the saleyards - told the chamber he had spoken to “numerous people around the region” including stock agents, truck drivers, meat buyers and farmers who he claimed believed the saleyards should be closed down. UNSIGHTLY: National Trust South Australia Mount Gambier branch chair Nathan Woodruff has urged maintenance to occur at the old Mount Gambier STORY PAGE 5 roundhouse site, which has become an eyesore adjacent to the popular shared use path. Picture: MOLLY TAYLOR Arsenic alarm at Bay RAQUEL MUSTILLO an onsite well. -
Votes for Women ©
1 VOTES FOR WOMEN © Condensed for the Women & Politics website by Dr Helen Jones from her book In her own name: a history of women in South Australia revised edition (Adelaide, Wakefield Press, 1994). On a hot December morning in 1894, a week before Christmas, the South Australian House of Assembly voted on the third reading of the Constitution Amendment Bill: ‘The Ayes were sonorous and cheery, the Noes despondent like muffled bells’. When the result was announced, thirty-one in favour and fourteen against, the House resounded to loud cheering as South Australia’s Parliament acknowledged its decision to give votes to women. The legislation made South Australia one of the first places in the world to admit women to the parliamentary suffrage; it was alone in giving them the right to stand for Parliament. Its passage caused elation, rejoicing and relief among those who had laboured to achieve it, for the Act opened the way for women’s political equality and their fuller participation in public life. Before this Act, one level of rights and responsibilities existed for men, another for women. These were determined under the Constitution of 1855-56, which allowed eligible men over twenty-one years to vote and to stand for election for the House of Assembly. Men over thirty years with further residential and property qualifications were eligible to vote and stand for election to the Legislative Council. The masculine gender only, or the word ‘person’, assumed to be male, was used in the Constitution. Women could neither vote nor stand for Parliament. -
The Occupation of Baker's Flat: a Study of Irishness and Power In
The Occupation of Baker’s Flat: A Study of Irishness and Power in Nineteenth Century South Australia by Susan Arthure B. Social Science (Hons) Grad. Dip. Library & Information Management (with Distinction) A thesis submitted in partial requirements for the degree of Master of Archaeology, Department of Archaeology, Faculty of Education, Humanities and Law, Flinders University, October 2014 ii Declaration I certify that this thesis does not incorporate without acknowledgment any material previously submitted for a degree or diploma in any university; and that to the best of my knowledge and belief it does not contain any material previously published or written by another person except where due reference is made in the text. Name: Susan Arthure Signature: _________________________________ Date: _________________________________ iv Table of contents List of figures .............................................................................................................. iv List of tables ............................................................................................................... vii Glossary and abbreviations ........................................................................................ vii Abstract ....................................................................................................................... ix Acknowledgements ..................................................................................................... xi 1 Introduction ............................................................................................................ -
Historic Earthquake Studies-Safinal
Historical earthquakes in South Australia Kevin McCue CQU Rockhampton, Queensland Abstract Three earthquakes have etched themselves into the collective memories of South Australians, the damaging 1897 Kingston-Beachport, 1902 (so-called) Warooka and 1954 Adelaide earthquakes but thousands more earthquakes in SA have been recorded since 1954, or were reported before the first seismograph was installed in Adelaide on 26 June 1909. The 1902 and 1954 earthquakes damaged buildings in Adelaide as did an earthquake in 1840 just after the city was born. Chimneys in Burra were knocked down in an earthquake in 1896. On average, between one and two earthquakes per month are reported felt in South Australia today (Alison Wallace – pers. comm.), but only half of these would be reported by the media which is a useful yardstick for historical studies such as this report. Several hundred earthquakes felt in Australia have been documented in three volumes of the Isoseismal Atlas of Australia and by Malpas (1993) and others but sources have not yet been exhausted as is demonstrated with new information on 51 felt earthquakes, many of which have not had a magnitude and location tabulated before. An earthquake in 1911 previously assigned to the Eyre Peninsula has been relocated to Gulf St Vincent, an example of an interesting feature of SA seismicity; the occasional almost simultaneous occurrence of earthquakes in different parts of the state. The combined Modified Mercalli intensity dataset has been used to make an earthquake hazard assessment for Adelaide, the result is in the same ballpark as that of Christchurch New Zealand, of the order of a thousand years return period for a destructive earthquake. -
2015 Journal
Journal of the Australian Catholic Historical Society Volume 36 2015 1 Bob Reece, The Invincibles: New Norcia’s aboriginal cricketers 1879-1906, reviewed by Rosa MacGinley, p 287 Odhran O’Brien, Martin Griver Unearthed reviewed by Clement Mulcahy, p 285 Wanda Skowronska, Catholic Converts Roy Williams, Post-God Nation?, from Down Under … And All Over, reviewed by James Franklin, p 308 reviewed by Robert Stove, p 301 2 Journal Editor: James Franklin ISSN: 0084-7259 Contact General Correspondence, including membership applications and renewals, should be addressed to The Secretary ACHS PO Box A621 Sydney South, NSW, 1235 Enquiries may also be directed to: [email protected] Executive members of the Society President: Dr John Carmody Vice Presidents: Prof James Franklin Mr Geoffrey Hogan Secretary: Dr Lesley Hughes Treasurer: Ms Helen Scanlon ACHS Chaplain: Fr George Connolly Cover image: Archbishop Mannix makes a regular visit to the Little Sisters of the Poor hostel for the aged, 1940s. Original image supplied by Michael Gilchrist. See book reviews, p 289 3 Journal of the Australian Catholic Historical Society Volume 36 2015 Contents Julia Horne, Political machinations and sectarian intrigue in the making of Sydney University. 4 Peter Cunich, The coadjutorship of Roger Bede Vaughan, 1873-77. 16 Cherrie de Leiuen, Remembering the significant: St John’s Kapunda, South Australia .......................................................43 Lesley Hughes, The Sydney ‘House of Mercy’: The Mater Misericordiae Servants’ Home and Training School, -
NEWSLETTER ISSN 1443-4962 No
AUSTRALIAN NEWSPAPER HISTORY GROUP NEWSLETTER ISSN 1443-4962 No. 27 May 2004 Compiled for the ANHG by Rod Kirkpatrick, 13 Sumac Street, Middle Park, Qld, 4074, 07-3279 2279, [email protected] 27.1 COPY DEADLINE AND WEBSITE ADDRESS Deadline for next Newsletter: 15 July 2004. Subscription details appear at end of Newsletter. [Number 1 appeared October 1999.] The Newsletter is online through the “Publications” link from the University of Queensland’s School of Journalism & Communication Website at www.uq.edu.au/journ-comm/ and through the ePrint Archives at the University of Queensland at http://eprint.uq.edu.au/) Barry Blair, of Tamworth, NSW, and Victor Isaacs, of Canberra, are major contributors to this Newsletter. CURRENT DEVELOPMENTS: METROPOLITAN 27.2 NEWS CORP MOVES BASE TO USA The headlines made interesting reading when Rupert Murdoch announced that The News Corporation Ltd would shift its stick exchange listing from Australia to the United States – where it earns about almost 75 per cent of its revenue. “Murdoch moves to Wall St”, declared the Australian. “News Corp quits Australia”, said the Age. “US move boosts Murdoch: News Corp to buy family share in the Courier-Mail”, said the Courier-Mail; “Investor bonus as News Corp moves”, said Adelaide‟s Advertiser. Part of the announcement was that News Corp would buy out the 58 per cent share of Queensland Press Ltd that the Murdoch family has held since 1987. News Corp will retain a secondary stock-exchange listing in Australia (wide range of sources available, especially the Australian metropolitan daily newspapers of 7 April 2004: e.g. -
Port Mcdonald: Jetty and Heritage Significance
Port McDonald: jetty and heritage significance By Purdina Guerra Supervisor: Dr. John McCarthy A thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Masters of Maritime Archaeology College of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences Flinders University South Australia, Australia Date of Submission: October 5th, 2020 Dedicated to my grandmother Rohonda Hamilton, survivor of COVID-19. AND You have not failed until you QUIT. i | P a g e Contents Chapter One: Introduction ............................................................................................................... 1 1.1 Short History of Port MacDonnell jetty .............................................................................. 2 1.2 Jetties: a key component to colonisation in Australia .................................................. 3 1.3 Research Aims ......................................................................................................................... 7 1.4 Chapter Outline ........................................................................................................................ 8 Chapter Two: Literature Review ..................................................................................................... 9 2.1 Introduction............................................................................................................................. 10 2.2 Cultural heritage and its significance .............................................................................. 10 2.3 What is a jetty versus a pier or -
Time for Play
Wakefield Press Time for Play Denis Molyneux was born in 1925 in Braunston, Northamptonshire, UK and grew up in Welwyn, Hertfordshire. He was educated at Queen Elizabeth’s School, Barnet. After service in the Fleet Air Arm he attended the University of Birmingham and later the University of Newcastle, completing an MA in history in 1957. He joined the Physical Education Department of the University of Birmingham in 1958. As well as teaching roles he has served in various central and local government positions in England and South Australia relating to recreation planning and development. He was made a Member of the Order of Australia in 2005 for sport and recreation services for disabled persons. In 2009 he completed a PhD in social history at the University of Adelaide. Denis Molyneux lives with his wife in Leabrook, South Australia. ~ Time for Play ~ Recreation and Moral Issues in Colonial South Australia DENIS MOLY NEUX Wakefield Press 16 Rose Street Mile End South Australia 5031 www.wakefieldpress.com.au First published 2015 Copyright © Denis Molyneux, 2015 All rights reserved. This book is copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of private study, research, criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright Act, no part may be reproduced without written permission. Enquiries should be addressed to the publisher. Cover designed by Michael Deves Typeset by Wakefield Press Printed in Australia by Griffin Digital, Adelaide National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication entry Creator: Molyneux, Denis, author. Title: Time for play: recreation and moral issues in colonial South Australia / Denis Molyneux. ISBN: 978 1 74305 374 4 (paperback). -
The Life and Times of Sir John Waters Kirwan (1866-1949)
‘Mightier than the Sword’: The Life and Times of Sir John Waters Kirwan (1866-1949) By Anne Partlon MA (Eng) and Grad. Dip. Ed This thesis is presented for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy of Murdoch University 2011 I declare that this thesis is my own account of my research and contains as its main content work which has not been previously submitted for a degree at any tertiary education institution. ............................................................... Anne Partlon ii Table of Contents Abstract iv Acknowledgements v Introduction: A Most Unsuitable Candidate 1 Chapter 1:The Kirwans of Woodfield 14 Chapter 2:‘Bound for South Australia’ 29 Chapter 3: ‘Westward Ho’ 56 Chapter 4: ‘How the West was Won’ 72 Chapter 5: The Honorable Member for Kalgoorlie 100 Chapter 6: The Great Train Robbery 120 Chapter 7: Changes 149 Chapter 8: War and Peace 178 Chapter 9: Epilogue: Last Post 214 Conclusion 231 Bibliography 238 iii Abstract John Waters Kirwan (1866-1949) played a pivotal role in the Australian Federal movement. At a time when the Premier of Western Australia Sir John Forrest had begun to doubt the wisdom of his resource rich but under-developed colony joining the emerging Commonwealth, Kirwan conspired with Perth Federalists, Walter James and George Leake, to force Forrest’s hand. Editor and part- owner of the influential Kalgoorlie Miner, the ‘pocket-handkerchief’ newspaper he had transformed into one of the most powerful journals in the colony, he waged a virulent press campaign against the besieged Premier, mocking and belittling him at every turn and encouraging his east coast colleagues to follow suit.