The Bullsheet 2021 - Issue 3

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THE BULLSHEET A JAMES COOK UNIVERSITY STUDENT ASSOCIATION PUBLICATION

STUDY TIPS

STUDENT CLUBS Pride Updates p.2

Have a Break, Have a Kit Kat p.13

Ultimate Ultimate Disc (Frisbee) p.11 and many more!

SEPTEMBER 2021

STUDENT ART Bunny Kimono p.6 The Gentleness of Decay p.10



Contents

Best of Study Period One

2 7 9

From the Editor Karla Destéfani

JCU Pharmacy Student Association Renee Buckland

3 8 11

A Snapshot of Lara’s Life Karla Destéfani

13 17 23

Have a Break, Have a Kit Kat D.H.

Meet Sina Strahl: A scientific driver on the Great Barrier Reef Tiffany Dun

Meet the Counsilors JCUSA

JCU Medical Student Association Sachin Joshi

Townsville Ultimate Disc Tim Saunders

15 19

JCU Meditation and Yoga Club Alex Massey

Christian Students at JCU Noah Gray

6 10 12 16 22

Bunny Kimono Erika Wiltshire

The Gentleness of Decay Paris Morgan

JCU Nursing & Midwifery Society Lucy Laverack

Ross River FC Football Club Ryan Ramasamy

Prima Spada has arrived in Townsville Karla Destéfani

O’Week SP2, 2021 Recap JCUSA

Publisher

Emily Mulroy

Editor & Design Karla Destéfani

Cairns Townsville P (07) 4232 1160 P (07) 4781 4400 E studentassociation@jcu.edu.au E studentassociation@jcu.edu.au Freecall 1800 330 021 Freecall 1800 330 021 PO BOX 6811 PO BOX 1 James Cook University James Cook University Cairns QLD 4870 Townsville QLD 4811



From the Editor Welcome new and returning students! For those who don’t know me yet, my name is Karla. I am the editor of your student magazine. I am just about to complete my degree in the Bachelor of Arts majoring in English Literature, and Design and Creative Arts. I have a deep interest in immersive experiences, and it’s not rare to find me taking part in DnD or LARP. Our last edition was themed by Pride month, and I asked students to tell me about how they celebrate pride. Through this, I became aware of three LGBTQIA+ developments occurring on the Townsville campus. A LGBTQIA+ safe space will start in week 2 SP2 2021 on Wednesdays 12-2pm at the Chaplaincy building. For more information on this, contact JCUSA’s Equity and Diversity officer Aaminah Khan via jcusa.equityanddiversity@jcu.edu.au A Pride Alliance club is in the works. Inspired by a JCUloveletters post, a group of initiative students are forming a club. They currently have a discord server for those who are interested in supporting the club in any way. Join them here: https://linktr.ee/LGBTAlliance.JCU The Society of Manga, Anime and Gaming’s Pride Month made a return. They are known by many on the Townsville campus as a club that supports its LGBTQIA+ members and visitors. 2021 marked their second year running pride celebrations on their discord server. They screened weekly movies and provided a variety of information and support. You can join their server here: https://discordapp.com/invite/yvsseZc If you know of any other developments, email me as I’d love to hear about them. Moreover, submissions are still open so continue sending your work through. Our prices vary depending on length and medium. Fiction: $0.04 per word, paid up to maximum 1000 words = $40 Non fiction: $0.04 per word, paid to a maximum of 1000 words = $40 Poetry: $1.00 per line up to a maximum of 20 lines = $20 Photography: $5.00 low resolution / $10.00 high resolution Meme: $5.00 Drawing: $30.00 Comic: $30.00 You can find more information on our website: thebullsheet.com.au.

Without further ado, this edition of The Bullsheet is filled with study tips, updates from our clubs, artworks, and fiction pieces to get your creativity flowing. So get your favourite beverage, take a small study break, and enjoy. Best,

Karla Ana-Lía Destéfani Editor E: karla.destefani@my.jcu.edu.au


Get to Know Your Councilors

1. What would you do with a million dollars? 2. What are you most excited for in SP2?

Emily Mulroy President 1. I’d save it until I’d decide to purchase something big like a home. 2. I’m excited to meet new students this semester and be involved in more JCUSA campaigns. 3. I’m the happiest when I’m following a schedule so I love how organised I can be when determined. 4. I’ve always been fascinated by the Victorian Era and how different the treatment of women were during those times, so to get first-hand experience would be such an eye-opener.

Thomas Sherrington Vice President Probably buy myself a nice new car and save the rest. 1. I’m most excited to continue to work in this role 2. to continue to make students’ lives better! Never really thought about it before. 3. Perhaps it’s being able to think of ideas outside the box. The 80’s. Was a time where society changed enormously. 4. .

Cherie Lai International Officer 1. Start my own public transport business in Townsville - one that actually is safe and convenient for people 2. SP2 is my final semester for the Social Work Program - I am having my second placement! Last one in Townsville Hospital was so rewarding and I can’t wait what this one will bring me :) 3. Like other international/inter-state students - An openness to change and adapt. Cheers on you guys who are doing the same! 4. 3 decades later - say 2050s? Just want to check in with Hong Kong that’s all.


PAGE 04 3. What do you think your best quality is?

Want the counsilors to answer your question?

4. What decade would you want to time travel to?

Scan me!

Garrett Swearingen Cairns Campus Officer 1. Save some, donate some and use the rest to build a self- sufficient house. 2. I’m excited to focus on sustainability in SP2. 3. I have strong attention to detail which is great to pull off assignments well but I can spend too long trying to make things perfect. 4. Probably the 1960’s – they were a pretty pivotal period in Australia and abroad.

Aaminah Khan Equity and Diversity After all the boring stuff, like paying off debts, I’d like to see 1. every country in the world. I’m excited to meet some new people at our weekly 2. LGBT drop-in session, which is starting this semester! I like learning new things. 3. I’m pretty happy in this decade. It’s easy to forget at times, but we 4. really have made a lot of progress just in the last century. But it it were just a visit and I didn’t have to stay, I’d want to see the Jazz Age. .

Emily Gamze Townsville Campus Officer 1. Invest and go on a shopping spree! 2. Getting back into the routine of work and study. 3. My emotional intelligence. 4. The 80’s



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Bunny Kimono Erika Wiltshire, 1st Year Pharmacy Student ‘Bunny Kimono’ was an incredibly fun, yet challenging piece to draw. I thoroughly enjoyed experimenting with the bright and vibrant colours used for the kimono, although it was a struggle to avoid muddying or oversaturating the hues. Attempting to create a rounder, cuter, and more humanoid face of the rabbit proved difficult, along with making a furry texture without defining it too harshly. Overall, I think this artwork is one of my few cute and colourful ones, and I remain very fond of it.

Clip Studio Paint Pro | Medium 3700px x 4300px | Dimensions


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Pharmacy Student’s Association JCUPSA Renee Buckland President of JCUPSA

James Cook University Pharmacy Students’ Association (JCUPSA) is the student-led organisation for Pharmacy students at JCU Townsville, Cairns, and Mackay.

We aim to provide our pharmily with fun events, educational sessions, representative opportunities, and support throughout their degree. We hold many amazing events all throughout the year including Pharm Ball, Pharmazing Race, Trivia Nights, Pub Crawls, and Year Level Mixers. We always welcome anyone to attend these events! You can find us on facebook or instagram by searching our handle @jcupsa. We are gearing up to hold our annual Pharmacy Ball in October which will be the first to bring all three campuses together for a night of mingling and partying.

We are also very excited to be holding the annual NAPSA Congress in January in Cairns. We will be hosting Pharmacy Students from every university for a week long conference with our sponsors and other key industry figures. We also ensure to balance out the education with fun and are looking forward to showing the rest of the students the great lifestyle of North Queensland! Feel free to reach out to us with any questions or membership enquiries! One of our future goals is to increase collaboration with other associations through events and awareness.


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Medical Student’s Association JCUMSA Sachin Joshi President of JCUMSA

The James Cook University Medical Students’ Association (JCUMSA) is the peak representative organisation for medical students at James Cook University.

Currently, the Society represents over 1200 fulltime medical students from all six year levels of the undergraduate course across Townsville, Cairns, and Mackay. It is one of the newer Medical student societies, after being founded in 2000. In 2021, JCUMSA enters its 21st year of operation and continues to evolve in our representation of all JCU medical students. We do this through advocacy at local, state-wide, and national levels. We have a fantastic committee comprising over fifty members elected by the medical student body to support students of all demographics, each with their own needs, concerns, and goals. Students can reach us via a plethora of avenues, including our website, social media and email. While COVID has made things difficult, we still encourage students to stop and have a chat if we are face to face! Throughout the pandemic, we are continuously thinking of all our students, some of whom have family across the globe and have not seen them for quite a long time. In addition to our advocacy work, we run a jam-packed calendar of incredibly exciting events, catering to all interests of our students. So whether you’re more academically inclined, a social butterfly or a lover of the arts, JCUMSA has got you covered all year long.

Our most popular events include our annual JCUMSA Med Ball & MedRevue events, both of which serve over 400 patrons each. Both events will occur in SP2, and our Society is looking forward to providing an entertaining, COVID-safe break from the rigours of studying medicine. We are delighted to have achieved some wonderful things as a team in 2021. This includes successfully lobbying the Division of Tropical Health and Medicine to allocate funding towards the renovation of a very commonly used computer lab at the medical school in Townsville. We were also able to obtain access to Fitness Passport for our Townsville 5th & 6th Year students, which means that students across all our sites now have access. We have placed a focus on the physical, mental and emotional wellbeing of all our students in 2021. The community and wellbeing budget was increased by 100% this year, which has allowed our team to increase the number of wellbeing events held throughout the year. For the first time, we will be holding our Blue Week wellbeing event across all three sites, with activities that all students can engage in. If you have any questions about our Society or would like to reach out to the committee, please visit our website at jcumsa.org.au for more details.


A Snapshot of Lara’s Life Karla Destéfani, Final Year Bachelor of Arts English Literature/Design and Creative Arts I know JCU has a large gaming community, and 2021 is a year of celebrations for many fandoms including Diablo, Pokemon and Tomb Raider. To celebrate twenty-five years of Tomb Raider and ten years of Tomb Raider in my life, I created “A Snapshot of Lara’s Life” for my creative art class in SP1 2021. This artwork is an interactive desktop website ( https://bit.ly/3ya8B82 ) with six pages that viewers can explore. Viewers can access four animated scenes from the load screen, which capture personally impactful or nostalgic Tomb Raider moments. These scenes correlate to specific games and are animations with audio aiming to capture the moment’s atmosphere. To the right is the home screen. Users can click on the floating artefacts that surround my personified save point, and go forth on an adventure. This was the first time I ever created anything like this and given my time constraints I think it was incredibly succesful. ‘A Snapshot of Lara’s Life’ aims to allow the viewer to better understand, or reminisce, on Lara Croft’s global impact on the many who grew up with her during the 1990s and 2000s, myself included.

Medium

| Photoshop, Webflow, Elfsight


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The Gentleness of Decay Paris Morgan, First Year Bachelor of Education

My work “The Gentleness of Decay” concerns the idea that the physical concept of decay exists as an extant form of life (fungi, bacteria, animals – without certain species of them, nothing would decay and we would simply remain, the same as some ancient plants did for thousands of years), and it had always terrified me a little. That decay was not a passive process but an active one of being consumed. However, through my own spirituality and the path that I follow, I came to quite a sudden realization – decay itself only scares me, and most people, because it is a consumptive and painful-looking process. In truth it isn’t painful at all, as by then we’ve usually moved beyond that. Rather than being consumed, we are being laid to rest in a permanent fashion. Decay is the current natural progression, and through decay we bring life to other things. Thus this piece was born. A bird skull now inhabited by grasses, fungi and even a little worm. While at first it seems a little horrifying, the longer you look at it, the gentler it feels – soft colours, watercolour textures, and a simpleness in the background that seems to evoke a sense of peace and belonging rather than fear and consumption. The bird is at rest. While it no longer flies, it is because of its sustenance that something, somewhere a long way down the line, gets to fly instead. ‘The Gentleness of Decay’ comments on how we as humans fear death and decay, attempting to run from it despite how it gives us so much purpose, even after we aren’t aware of it anymore. Blender EEVEE Engine | Medium 1920px x 1080 px | Dimensions


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Townsville Ultimate Disc Tim Saunders President of Townsville Ultimate Disc

We run Ultimate disc (frisbee) leagues and tournaments in the Townsville area, based out of JCU.

We run FREE, so come to our try nights on Wednesday, July 28th and August 4th (Weeks 1 and 2 of Sem 2). JCU Social league will then kickoff and is only $20 for JCU students! That’ll get you ten games and is one of the most affordable and welcoming sports on campus! Ultimate is a fast-paced, easy-to-learn sport that is perfect for everyone! We have a great community with plenty of teams enjoying dinners before and after games, and meeting up on weekends for social events. We held our end of year social event last year at Otherwise Bar in Flinders st, where everyone had a great time, and a range of awards were given out.

We are also planning for a pub crawl in September! Many of us love to travel, including for national tournaments, and we love to help new players learn to play the game. We always make sure that teams have experienced players so that everyone has a shot at winning, regardless of how much experience they have! If you’d like to get in touch with us, you can hit us up on Facebook, Instagram, via email or on our website! E: townsvilleultimate@gmail.com

Townsville Ultimate Facebook Townsville Ultimate Instagram


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Nursing and Midwifery Society JCUNMS Lucy Laverack

The JCU Nursing & Midwifery Society [JCUNMS] is a university club that was founded in 2016 and is a student-led society, welcoming students across all year levels of Nursing & Midwifery degrees at JCU Townsville to join!

Our society aims to meet monthly to plan and promote social as well as educational events throughout the year for undergraduate nursing and midwifery students in Townsville. These include the annual Nursing & Midwifery Gala Ball, themed trivia nights, pub crawls and bake sales. Our society also produces and sells branded merchandise to interested students. E: jcutnms@outlook.com

During study period 2, we aim to fundraise for our annual Gala Ball through raffles and bake sales while promoting relevant health care topics. In addition, we often team up with JCU Engineering Undergraduate Society to run social events that allow students to experience all aspects that university life has to offer!


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Have a Break, Have a Kit Kat D.H., JCU Undergraduate Student

Breaks between learning content should let you recuperate and give you a boost to power through the next session. Many of us, myself included, have made the mistake of turning to Instagram, Youtube or Facebook between online classes or during study breaks. No harm, no foul-- as long as you can tear yourself away to get ready for the next interval. Here are a few helpful break ideas to help prevent the unfortunate student condition of ‘accidentally’ binge watching an hour’s worth of unhelpful content. I find they work best if you don’t multitask and just focus on the activity, allowing your subconscious to mull over the recently covered content. Food. If you’re bored at home and waiting for an excuse to snack on something, dedicate your next break to some quick meal preparation. Here are some easy-to-make snack suggestions: Fruit Salad - A staple for a sweet tooth. Platters - Cheese, crackers, tomato, avocado. Sprinkle some pepper on the top and you’re ready to go! Toast - Can just be switched out for a sandwich, but why not cook some bread to take up a few minutes for your break. Smoothie - A great reward to have while you continue studying… if you have the ingredients ready beforehand. Mug Cake - Health is overrated sometimes. Instead of just grabbing out the ice cream or chocolate, use your break to ‘bake’ something! Scan the code to the right for one of my favourite recipies! Tea or Hot chocolate - Since it’s becoming as wintery as we ever get in NQ, why not boil some water and flavour it. Productive Activities. These breaks double as an excuse to practice some self care during this month of stress: Clean a Small Area - Your desk. Sweep and vacuum a room. Fold some of your laundry. Care for Your Non-Human Housemates - Hang out with your pets. Check their food and water bowls. Clean out their litter tray or cage. Play for 10 minutes or try and get your bird to learn a new song. Talk to your fish. Care for Your Non-Animalia Housemates - Water your garden for a few minutes. Check on your house plants. If you’re like me and forget they exist, give them a drink and some time in the sun. Care for Yourself - If you are like me and forget that you exist, fill up your water bottle and spend some time outside during this break. You need some sun too. Exercise - Do a 5 or 10 minute workout. Heaps can be found on Youtube.


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Brain Check-out Breaks. Not the most productive or effective, but for those times you need to distract yourself and just… chill. Power Nap - Set an alarm, close your eyes and face plant onto your desk. It could just be the thing you need to keep pushing through the next class. Just make sure it doesn’t turn into an actual nap. Craft - Learn how to make an origami crane or butterfly. Follow a drawing tutorial. Succeeding in the craft is not the point. The point is distracting yourself with some shiny creative skill you could learn. Expand Your Playlist - You have time to listen to a few songs. Why not see if you like what spotify has picked out for you? Bullsheet Articles - Conveniently labeled with read time online so you can make sure you’re finished before the break ends.


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JCU Meditation and Yoga Club Alex Massey

Yoga - NOT just a bunch of stretches

We invite you to have a life-changing experience for your Body, Mind and Spirit. So, what then is ‘mind, body and soul’? Well, it’s the three fundamental aspects to being human or, in Yoga, being Yogi on the path of bliss. Most people think Yoga means a particular exercise; well, that’s a start to the infusion or medicine that prepares the body for the next stage. Yoga means unification, unification through expansion. Yoga is a science that evolved from systematic observations and experiments over thousands of years and the guidance of elevated masters. Yogis have gained a deeper understanding of the functions of body and mind and the relationship between the two. By practising Yoga, we experience the expansive and vast potentialities of the mind and realise who we are. This is the process towards perfecting our human existence.

By applying the techniques of Yoga, we gain a better understanding of our body and being and are thus better able to strengthen, control and direct our energy towards mental and spiritual achievement and ultimately on to perfection. This process is known as the Bio-psychology of Yoga. We start with the Yoga postures’ Asanas’ (posture held comfortably) which improve the glandular, nervous and skeletal systems, learn about food and how it affects the body and mind. Socialising with like-minded people and the company of inspiring and uplifting people (the JCU Meditation andYoga Club) will lead to your University year being positive, joyful and less stressful. We’d love to see you at the JCU Meditation and Yoga Club, you can find our contact details on the JCUSA website.


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Ross River (JCU) FC Football Club Ryan Ramasamy

We are Ross River (JCU) FC. We are the resident football club at JCU for the last 21 years. Ross River (JCU) FC proudly upholds three ideals: Family, Fun and Football.

We have competed in the local competition that is held between Townsville, Ingham, Ayr and Charter Towers throughout this time. This year, we have three teams that compete in the Men’s Reserves and Thirds divisions and Women’s Reserves divisions. We train at the AFL Oval on Tuesday and Thursday night from 7 pm to 9 pm and play matches over the weekend (Men’s 3rd Division and Women’s Reserves Division on Friday night; Men’s Reserves Division on Saturday evening). Over the last three years, our men’s teams have been very successful, winning two minor premierships and four grand finals. Our women’s team has narrowly missed out on finals in the last few years, but has had players nominated for player of the year.

As a family club, Ross River (JCU) FC holds multiple social events throughout the year to allow the whole club to get to know each other. We do our best to support all our teams (including our juniors that train before us and play on Saturday mornings). As we move into SP2, we are looking forward to all three teams making the finals series and going on to win more silverware. As we move into the next few year’s we are looking to enter additional teams in the Men’s and Women’s Premier League Division.

Are you going to help us take that next step?

If you would like to join the Ross River (JCU) FC family, there are a few ways to reach us: 1)

Come down to training (Tuesday and Thursday 7-9pm at the AFL Oval)

2)

Message Ross River JCU FC on Facebook

3)

Email us at rossriverseniorfc@gmail.com

4)

Come see us at the O’week market day stall on Wednesday 28th July


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Meet Sina Strähl: A scientific diver on the Great Barrier Reef. Tiffany Dun, Master of Science (Marine Biology)

She writes: “I saw the change when I was a kid snorkeling and diving. I saw how everything slowly disappeared. Sina began underwater videography as a child, and was inspired by her dad who is also an underwater photographer. “I was driven to marine conservation, where I hope I can make an impact, she said. “I think videos say more than pictures. If you’ve never seen an animal before and you see a picture of it you might think, oh yea, it’s beautiful. But if you actually see it moving you realise, it’s life.” Sina hopes to combine marine science with videography – because we only really know a small percentage of what is actually out there. “Just because you don’t know about it doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist. People should pay more attention to what is actually out there -there’s so much that we still don’t know.” There is a lot of good underwater footage out there, but it’s hard to bring to people. And it isn’t an easy gig either -with all of the equipment, lights, and editing skills required. But most importantly, with underwater videography comes an increase in awareness of what lies within the deep blue. One of her favourite things about the deep sea are the small critters unlike any other. In particular, nudibranchs, which look like small aliens. “Picturing the underwater macro in my head [is]are like picturing the insects of land -there’s so many different kinds, and because we haven’t destroyed them yet they are still so diverse.”


Phyllodesmium iriomotense nudibranch by Sina Strähl

“Being underwater is like being on another planet. I swear all of the movies about aliens get their inspiration from underwater creatures.” After finishing her science degree Sina hopes to make a difference in the world step by step -starting with the people she knows and encouraging people to get out there and experience the ocean for themselves. “I believe that every one of us can achieve something. If you find out what you want to do and do it, you can make a change.”


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Christian Students at JCU Noah Gray President of JCU Christian Students

Hi everyone! The name of our club is JCU Christian Students or CS for short. We are a group of students who are convinced that what Jesus has to say for himself is incredible and believe uni is the perfect time to think about this together.

We meet at 5 pm every Wednesday in Bld 5 (Central Lecture Theatre) for The Bible Talks. Here we enjoy hanging out and thinking carefully about the Bible’s claims. Anyone and everyone is welcome! Over the break, a bunch of CSers have been working on something special. On the 4th and 5th of August (Wk2 of SP2), we are putting on a theatre-in-round presentation of the gospel of Mark, known as ‘The Mark Drama’. It’s going to be epic - we would love to see you there!!! We do many other things too! If you would like to find out more, jump onto our Facebook page ‘JCU Christian Students Townsville’ or sign up to our weekly emails at ‘csjcu.com.au’. Lastly, if you ever have any questions, please don’t hesitate to shoot me an email at christianstudentsjcu@gmail.com.

Hope to see you around this study period!


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Prima Spada Has Arrived in Townsville Karla Destéfani, Final Year Bachelor of Arts (English Literature/Design and Creative Arts)

The Prima Spada School of Fencing launched a Salle in Townsville on May the 31st. Lachlan Bailey, a Swordsman Diestro, is the head coach. The Prima Spada School of Fence was established in 1995 by the Maestro Keith Beattie. Lachlan explained the syllabus is “based on a combination of modern and ancient fencing techniques to display realistic renaissance combat for sport and enjoyment of an audience.”

Lachlan’s favourite event is the yearly Abbey Medieval Festival. The Prima Spada Salles from Ipswich, North Brisbane, South Brisbane, Deloraine, and now Townsville, gather in South Queensland to put on a three-day performance for the public.

The school specialises in historical exhibition combat, Historical European Martial Arts (HEMA), smallsword and artistic fencing (fully choreographed swordplay for stage and film). A range of weaponry is used, including rapier, side sword, two-handed sword, and small sword. The Townsville Salle is running classes each Monday at the Townsville Show Grounds. Training starts at 6.30pm, beginning with the main historical exhibition class (contact Prima Spada for information on specifics and costs). The school aims to communicate the historical context behind the swordplay.

“It is fun to be there with the entire school. Watching everyone fence together is amazing to see. Especially with the uniforms, it looks spectacular,” Lachlan said.

Lachlan said, “We aim to give students the terminology to express their actions, provide reference to ancient masters of the past, and demonstrate the anatomy of a duel.” The school accepts students aged 15 and above. Lachlan explained, “Prima Spada is run as a martial arts school and follows concepts and traditions that would be familiar to those who study Eastern Martial Arts. We have a total of 10 ranks, including ‘stripes’, which are levels you must reach before reaching our highest rank, Swordsman Diestro, which usually takes ten plus years.” Those just starting will fall under ‘Beginner’, and as they continue, they will gain titles such as ‘Novice’ and ‘Scholar’. Each rank has a coloured sash that sits around the waist. The Townsville Salle is unsure of what appearances they may make in 2021. Their community liaison is looking into the Culture Fest, Townsville Show, and visiting schools to provide demonstrations.achlan said that they are happy to go to any event and spread the joy of Prima Spada.

Lachlan was the previous head coach at the Sunshine Coast Salle. He began thinking about developing Townsville’s Salle in April 2020 after he moved. The pandemic caused a year-long wait, but in 2021 plans began moving along quickly. He explained starting up the Townsville Salle involved a lengthy conversation with the founder of the school, Maestro Keith Beattie to receive approval, and another discussing the Salle with two head coaches who manage the Salles in Brisbane and Ipswich.. Afterwards, it only took a couple months to find a venue. He has also been running small gatherings for students to spend time doing self-directed practise Sunday mornings. “We’re excited to bring Prima Spada to Townsville. People tend to become passionate quickly”


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O’Week SP 2, 2021 JCU Student Association would like to thank everyone who participated in the events for O’Week SP2! The week was a great success filled with lots of events, including Speed Friending, Movie Night, Touring Townsville & Cairns, Toga Party, Market Day and trips to The Strand and the Tablelands. Check out some photos from the week on the Townsville and Cairns campus!



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