The Local Paper. Lilydale and Yarra Valley Edition. Wed., May 10, 2023

Page 1

SES DEPUTY TAKES WHACK AT COUNCIL

■ Andrew Derwent, Deputy Controller of the Kinglake Unit of the State Emergency Service, has hit out at Murrindindi Shire Council’s level of support for the volunteer group.

Publishing on the Kinglake Ranges Community Group page on social media, Mr Derwent said he wrote as “a Deputy Controller of the Kinglake SES”.

“One of our members was explaining to a fellow Kinglake resident that the council charge us to empty our rubbish and recycyling bins,” Mr Derwent said.

“The resident received a reply from Peter Bain, the Murrindindi Shire Council's Manager of Sustainability and Assets.

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https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2023/03/from-cpac-dc-why-we-need-new-federal-state-of-china/

From CPAC 2023: Why We Need a New Federal State of China

Anyone who attended February’s CPAC event in Washington, D.C. could tell you that one exhibitor was impossible to ignore: The New Federal State of China (NFSC). Who are these people, and what do they seek to achieve?

NFSC is perhaps America’s greatest anti-CCP ally in the Cold War against the CCP

On June 4, 2020, the New Federal State of China launched in New York City with one overarching goal: “Take down the CCP (Chinese Communist Party).” Yet, these freedom-seeking people encountered an America that has been infiltrated by the evil communist regime they came here to escape. America is not the beacon of freedom it once was…but a base of 500 million supporters desperately want to see our country resume the mantle of World Leader and Champion of Liberty. As American lawmakers are increasingly realizing, America cannot do that until it decouples from the CCP.

Tough times make tough people, and the New Federal State of China is made up of graduates from the school of hard knocks. Some have been arrested, others have been tortured; many worry that the CCP is targeting family members back in China in attempts to intimidate them. One young man shared that his mother sits in a CCP prison back in China. Nevertheless, the NFSC’s people are brave enough to face down a regime arguably worse than any of the 20th-Century’s most insidious regimes, including Nazi Germany, the Soviet Union, and the Japanese Empire.

“Take down the CCP” needs to be a defining slogan of our times.

The New Federal State of China is perhaps America’s greatest antiCCP ally in the Cold War against the CCP, and their rallying cry of “take down the CCP” needs to be a defining slogan of our times.

The group brought their energy, enthusiasm, and tech savvy to CPAC at three booths buzzing with non-stop activity, reportedly doing about 90 interviews per day, livestreamed to NFSC Speaks onto their GETTR account: https:/ /gettr.com/user/NFSCSpeaks.

These NFCS efforts are a key component of the Information War against the CCP

Guests included congressmen, heads of state, NGO leaders, independent news organizations, journalists, prominent dissidents from all over the world, and more.

“You can count on Congress to take back America from the CCP’s manipulation and weaponization of U.S. federal government agencies.” -Congressman Keith Self

Pennsylvania Representative Scott Perry discussed his bill, which would “label the Communist party of China a transnational criminal organization.” He also pointed out the importance of separating the CCP from the Chinese people, who want to be free.

“The Communist Party is not the friend of the United States of America,” he added.

Texas Representative Keith Self shared his conviction that “you can

count on Congress to take back America from the CCP’s manipulation and weaponization of U.S. federal government agencies. I think we will do that through the select committee on the CCP. We’ve got to find the facts, we’ve got to lay out the case, and then we’ve got to move forward!”

My Pillow Founder, Mike Lindell said during his interview that he will share NFSC’s call for an investigation into the CCP’s lawsuits against Mr. Miles Guo using America’s top law firms and proxies within the DOJ and FBI: “I’ll take what I’m hearing from you…I’ll get it before…Jim Jordan and Kevin McCarthy…we’re behind everything you’re doing.”

“We’re not going to deny any righteous people that are speaking the truth like the NFSC,” said Washington Times Holdings Chairman, Michael Jenkins. “We’re happy to meet your leader and founder to discuss what are the facts, and I’m sure you’ll help enlighten the public!”

While in D.C., NFSC representatives visited a D.C. studio for a live interview with Grant Stinchfiel d on Real America’s Voice. “Th e CCP is so scared right now,” said NFSC co-host, Prince Li after the interview. “Grant Stinchfield i s amplifying our voice to expos e their corruption to the world!”

The weapons of NFCS’s warfare are not rifles and grenades, but information.

In the war against the Chines e communist regime, NFSC is th e modern-day equivalent of th e French Resistance that oppose d Nazi aggression and the occupation of Europe. With over 500 million followers, NFSC operates all over the world, including in China . Some are even providing intelligence from within the government and military. Unlike the freedom fighters of the past, however, the weapons of NFCS’s warfare ar e not rifles and grenades, but information.

China took an early lead over the U.S. in the information and political warfare arenas. If we are t o avoid a “hot war” with China, the U.S. must take back control of the narrative, win back hearts an d minds, and—perhaps most importantly—heal the division the CCP has purposely exacerbated within our society and between our political parties.

We cannot free China until w e first free America.

The NFSC organization is young and filled with optimism and energy to take down the CCP, bu t their momentum isn’t just abou t their own struggles. As NFSC representatives will tell you, we cannot free China until we first free America. The testimonies and information these people have t o share are key to restoring th e greatness and independence of the People of the U.S. and the governance we all deserve.

As the Chinese Whistleblower s who escaped the oppressive regime back in China can attest, if communism wins, we all lose.

Kelly John Walker is an American statesman, writer, branding professional, and entrepreneur. He is the founder of FreedomTalk, host o f FreedomTalk TV, and a freelanc e writer.

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Grant Stinchfield of Real America’s Voice discusses the CCP threat with Arizona radio show host, Kathleen Winn.

Ex-DOJ Attorney George Higginbotham Testifies in Pras Michel Trial About Guo Wengui/Miles Guo: Everything You Need to Know

Disgraced ex-employee of the Dep artment of Justice, George Higginbotham, who was instrumental to a $100 million conspiracy financed by CCP-linked Jho Low, i s expected to testify in Pras Michel’s ongoing criminal trial in Washington D.C. on April 6th, 2023. H igginbotham was reportedly paid $41 million after visiting the D.C. Chinese Embassy in 2017 to conspire with Ambassador Cui Tiankai to send Guo Wengui/Miles Guo, a prominent CCP dissident, back to China. Michel’s attorneys have also requested Mr. Guo’s testimony but were rejected by the DOJ. Notably, While Michel stands t rial facing decades in prison, Higginbotham not only walks free after the DOJ cut him an apologetically lenient plea deal, but he also appears to currently work at the heavily CCP-linked Citadel. Others including Leonardo DiCaprio have previously testified at the highlypublicized Michel trial.

George Higginbotham worked as Senior Congressional Affairs Specialist at the DOJ from 2016 to 2018. He had been friends with Michel for a long time, going back to when Higginbotham operated a law firm and Michel was reportedly his client. The two reconnected around 2017 when Michel, on beh alf of Jho Low and the CCP, reached out to Higginbotham soliciting his help in removing Mr. Guo from the United States. Ironically, Mr. Guo currently is held without bail by the DOJ on bogus fraud charges, because the Justice Department reportedly wants to prevent Mr. Guo from testifying at Michel’s trial.

a foreign agent for China with the help of the CCP-linked law firm Paul Hastings, whose partner Luc Despins has been relentlessly persecuting Mr. Guo as DOJ-appointed bankruptcy trustee. Broidy has pleaded guilty to violating FARA and acting as an agent of the CCP to remove Mr. Guo, but was issued a Presidential pardon.

The public’s fascination with George Higginbotham centers not only around his role as a DOJ official, but also the extent and extravagance with which he carried out his crimes. Higginbotham walked in broad daylight right into the Chinese Embassy in D.C., where he reportedly told the Chinese Ambassador that the DOJ was “working” on Mr. Guo’s removal.

Higginbotham also traveled to Hong Kong with Michel, Broidy, and Davis in 2017 to meet with Sun Lijun, Vice Minister of Public Security of China. According to sources familiar with the trip, once the group arrived in Hong Kong, they were told that Minister Sun wanted to meet in Shen Zhen instead. The group had initially expressed concerns that they lacked the Chinese Visa necessary to cross the Chinese border. Minister Sun had reportedly replied that “Only two men run everything in China, President Xi runs Beijing, and outside of Beijing, I run everything.” The group was then secretly brought over the border to Shenzhen without ever showing

passports, where they met with Minister Sun and Jho Low to discuss how to force Mr. Guo’s return to China.

Together, the group would illegally lobby then-President Trump, Attorney General Jeff Session, the DOJ itself, and the NSA in an attempt to force Mr. Guo’s return to China – all for hundreds of millions of dollars of personal financial gain. In Steve Wynn’s court filing, it was revealed that when President Xi visits President Trump in 2017, Xi personally requested Mr. Guo’s return to China, offering even new assistance packages for North Korea in return.

Mr. Guo has made himself the arch nemesis of the CCP by exposing three highly classified CCP documents he had obtained in 2017: the BGY Plan (which exposed the CCP’s efforts to infiltrate all aspects of American society), the 3F Plan (which exposed the CCP sending tens of thousands of spies to the U.S.), and the 13579 plan (which revealed the CCP’s plan to create and release a biological weapon – now known as Covid-19 – within three years).

Mr. Guo’s recent arrest, on March 15th, and the prosecutor’s argument that Mr. Guo might face deportation to China, makes one wonder if Higginbotham’s involvement in 2017 had anything to do with Mr. Guo’s current criminal fraud charges, which many experts have commented as bogus

B ut Michel and Higginbotham didn’t operate alone, their long list of notable co-conspirators includes Casino Mogul Steve Wynn, RNC Finance Chairman Elliot Broidy, and now convicted-felon Nickie Lum Davis. Steve Wynn defeated his DOJ lawsuit alleging him to be Authorised by Melbourne ROLF

and lacking substance. Specifically, of the 5,500+ alleged “harmed” investors, the prosecution has identified exactly zero of them as victims. In fact, according to independent research, there are only 4 GTV investors who have ever publicly filed complaints against Guo, one of whom recently came out and admitted that he was forced to file such accusations by Chinese Authorities and was given step-by-step filing instructions by policemen. This amounts to 0.05% of the investor base – practically a rounding error.

If the DOJ does not make an effort to sugar coat Higginbotham’s testimony at Michel’s trial, which many has suspected the Department might do in the interest of protecting “one of their own”, then we can expect to hear from Higginbotham the details of his peculiar trips to China and Chinese Embassy in 2017.

The Higginbothams of America are the reason why our nation is in extreme peril. A conspiracy is in plain view, involving high-ranking DOJ officials, a sitting U.S. President, and an Attorney General, executed by American traitors who have the best interest of Beijing at heart, and financed by a CCP billionaire who stole from the Malaysian people, all to return one man, Guo Wengui, back to China. As Attorney Adam Waldman points out, “It’s all one overlapping case.”

Mr. Guo, the center of this BIG overlapping case, currently sits in federal prison without bail while his testimony at Michel’s trial had long been requested. It’s about damn time: FREE MILES GUO and LET HIM TESIFY.

About the author: Matt Palumbo is the author of The Man Behind the Curtain: Inside the Secret Network of George Soros (2021), Dumb and Dumber: How Cuomo and de Blasio Ruined New York (2020), Debunk This!: Shattering Liberal Lies (2019), and Spygate (2018).

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SES DEPUTY WHACKS COUNCIL

Local Briefs

Dinner for Toolangi

■ Toolangi residents are invited to attend a free community dinner at 6pm this Friday (May 12) to connect with others and share thoughts and ideas on emergency preparedness.

The dinner is being held at the C.J. Dennis Hall, 1721 Healesville-Kinglake Rd,. During the evening, attendees will hear from guest presenters on a range of topics and enjoy a complimentary meal.

They will also get the opportunity to share their perspective and ideas to help shape the Toolangi Local Emergency Action Plan.

The meeting is part of the LEAPing into Resilience Project, a joint initiative between Murrindindi, Mansfield and Strathbogie Shire Councils, and is fully-funded by the Federal Government.

Special thanks have been extended to the Toolangi Primary School, CFA, Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action, Toolangi Community House and other local community groups and volunteers who have worked alongside Murrindindi Council to plan for this dinner.

Pines to be retained

■ Mansfield Council has received community feedback on priority projects for streetscape upgrades in Bonnie Doon

Based on the community feedback received Mansfield Shire Council will deliver upgrades in the following priority order as funding becomes available:

■ Lawn irrigation system

■ Shade sail

■ Signage at well

■ Mural walls

■ Lighting and sculptures

■ Fitness station

■ Kids bike track

Lawn irrigation works near the Bonnie Doon War Memorial are planned to take place in the coming months. Other popular options identified during the consultation will be considered in future capital works planning.

Library to close

■ Eltham Library and the Eltham Library Community Gallery will close for four weeks from Monday, June 5, to undergo a minor refurbishment.

Yarra Plenty Regional Library is undertaking the works which will include:

■ An update to the floorplan to create an expanded young person’s area

■ Consolidation of the staff service desks into a single service point

■ Sections of the library will be painted

■ More book shelving, particularly in the junior and young adult areas

■ An increase in the number of powered study booths in the quiet study area in the mezzanine from five to 16.

■ More power and charging outlets in study booths and reading seats.

Due to the refurbishment, the Eltham Library Community Gallery will also be closed, and the exhibition Flight by Nina Kelabora postponed until 2024. The way of Japanese Ink by Junko Azukawa will be on display from Thursday July. 13.

■ Andrew Derwent, Deputy Controller of the Kinglake Unit of the State Emergency Service, has hit out at Murrindindi Shire Council’s level of support for the volunteer group.

Publishing on the Kinglake Ranges Community Group page on social media, Mr Derwent said he wrote as “a Deputy Controller of the Kinglake SES”.

“One of our members was explaining to a fellow Kinglake resident that the council charge us to empty our rubbish and recycyling bins,” Mr Derwent said.

“This prompted the resident to write to Council expressing their dismay that a volunteer group that serves the community in such a vital role was being penalised like this.

“The resident received a reply from Peter Bain, the Murrindindi Shire Council's Manager of Sustainability and Assets.

“Mr Bain claimed that the "Council provides a lot of support to the (Kinglake) SES including land, equipment and materials at no cost as well as direct monetary support".

“For the record, the land that the Kinglake SES sits on is actually owned by the CFA

“The Council provide us with absolutely nothing as far as equipment and materials and give us zero monetary support.

“I believe the inaccuracies in Peter Bain’s explanation reflects poorly on the integrity of the Council as in his role he would have known that the Council do not provide any support to the Kinglake SES.

“He also claimed that "VICSES is a State Authority and has a budget for permanent staff, vehicles and costs associated with their facilities and that the volunteers do not fund waste collection services".

“SES unit funding is provided by State Government by way of a 'unit subsidy'. For 2022223 our subsidy was $26593.

“From this we pay unit-owned vehicle registration, insurance, fuel and maintenance, power, building maintenance, equipment maintenance, equipment purchases, member welfare including meals during operations AND garbage and recycle collection.

“VICSES does not fund our garbage collection separately. I doubt that the Council could run a toilet for that amount.

“I wrote a letter to all councillors and received a reply from only one, and he was not the councillor for Kinglake

“Last year we attended to more than 100 trees on council roads, and that was a lean year.

“Some years this figure exceeds 200. We respond to these calls as we know that we can provide a far more timely response than council.

“What a miserable Council we have that even with the substantial saving we afford them, they still charge us to empty our rubbish bins.

“Perhaps we should be sending them bills for the times we clear trees off Council roads.

“As far as I am aware, most councils absorb the cost of rubbish collection for the SES units. Councils are no longer obliged to provide funding for SES units in their patch and not charging for rubbish collection is payment in kind,” Mr Derwent said.

Compost sessions

■ City of Whittlesea Waste Officers will be on hand to answer waste related questions at composting workshops being held at Lalor Library, 2A May Rd (6.30pm-8pm, Wed., May 10), and Whittlesea Community Activity Centre, 57-61 Laurel St (10am-12 Noon, Thu., May 11.)

Flag raising

■ To celebrate International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia, Intersex Discrimination and Transphobia (IDAHOBIT Day), Murrindindi Council is hosting its inaugural Pride Flag Raising Ceremony from 10am–11am on Wednesady next week (May 17) outside the Council offices at 28 Perkins St, Alexandra.

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Paper WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 2023 Phone: 5797 2656, 1800 231 311. www.LocalPaper.com.au or www.AdvertiseFree.com.au FREE ‘The Local Paper’ is published by Local Media Pty Ltd Local and Independent. Not associated with any other publication in this area. LARGEST READERSHIP OF ANY LOCAL NEWSPAPER IN MURRINDINDI SHIRE Yea Newsagency 74 High St, Yea Phone: 5797 2196 Tattslotto, Oz Lotto, Powerball and more Buy yo ur ticket at Yea Newsagency ● ● Toys ● ● Inkjet ● Greeting Cards ● ● Stationery ● ● Office Needs ● Magazines ● ● Newspapers ● ● Lotto $4 MIL. POWERBALL THU., MAY 11
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Rotary knockback

■ Some 13 car owners have been issued with defect notices during an operation targeting hoon drivers in Thomastown last Thursday evening (May 4).

Police officers from the North West Metro Achilles Taskforce were supported by the Environment Protection Authority and the Sheriff’s Office in conducting a series of defect inspections.

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OUR TEAM

Some 50 people allegedly associated with recent hoon activity in the area were instructed to present their vehicle for roadworthy inspection, with 30 cars attending.

Police issued 13 defect notices for mechanical faults, engine modifications, window tinting and tyre issues.

Eight of those who received defect notices also received infringement notices for more serious defects and other traffic related offences.

A suspended driver who attended the defect inspection will also be charged on summons to appear at court at a later date. His car was also impounded by Police.

The EPA issued five fines to people for cars that exceeded noise limits, and the Sheriff’s Office seized a car as a result of over $20,000 in outstanding fines.

Every defect notice issued will require owners to have these defects in their vehicles either repaired or replaced.

Once they have fixed the defect, the drivers need to present their vehicles to VicRoads for clearance. If the owner fails to obtain a clearance within four weeks, the

Long Shots

registration of the vehicle may be suspended.

The remaining car owners who did not attend have either arranged to meet with police at another time or will have their registrations suspended.

In the first two years of Operation Achilles, Police charged 363 hoon drivers with 2931 offences. 375 vehicles connected to hooning were also seized, while almost 791 unroadworthy notices were issued.

Since Operation Achilles was formed, hoon driving events have declined by more than 75 per cent across the state - improving safety on our roads and in the wider community.

Achilles Taskforce Acting Senior Sergeant Sean Foley said:

“Defect inspection operations such as these are an integral tool available to police to take dangerous vehicles off our roads as part of Operation Achilles.”

“The margin for error at a hoon event is minute, let alone if dangerous burnouts and skids are being performed in a car with defects.

“Our focus on stamping out these events will not stop –the minute you cross the line and engage in hoon activity, you won’t be able to hide from police,” Acting Sen. Sgt Sean Foley said.

Anyone with information about illegal hoon activity is urged to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

the wrongs that need resistance For the future in the distance, And the good that we can do”

■ The Rotary Club of Yea has been refused a planning permit for a for the construction of a shelter over an existing table and chairs on land within the road reserve (median strip) at High St, Yea

Crs Karine Haslam and Sandice McAulay succesfully moved that the development is not consistent with the purpose of a heritage overlay.

Councillors agreed that the development will adversely affect the significance, character and appearance of the heritage place.

“The development will contribute to the visual clutter of the heritage place, which already contains street furniture, infrastructure, traffic signs, and public artwork,” said the motion.

Cr Sue Carpenter absented herself from the discussion and vote on the matter, noting that she was a board member of the Rotary Club of Yea.

Leckie Park trial

■ Murrindindi Council last week agreed to etain the current wetlands site at Leckie Park, Alexandra, until June 30, 2023.

In the period prior to November 30 this tear, Murrindindi Council will survey the wider Alexandra community to determine the preference for changes to the Leckie Park and U.T. Creek precinct.

At a meeting of the Council held on Wednesday last week (May 3), speakers on the Leckie Park Trial included Kerry Burge, Geoff Hall, Joanna Thorburn and Peter Briscoe.

Toolangi speakers

■ A number of members of the public addressed last week’s Murrindindi Shire Council meeting about a proposal at Toolangi.

The speakers - Gwen Pascoe, David Moon, George Weda, Brendan Ricci and Bernard Priestley - spoke regarding a planning application for a place of assembly for up to 80 p;eople be allowed at 287 Smiths Rd, Toolangi.

On the motion of Crs Damien Gallagher and Eric Lording, Councillors agreed to refuse a planning permit, noting that “yhe scale and intensity of the proposed use do not contribute to the character of the area and sought after agricultural uses”.

Councillors agreed that “the frequency of the use is intensive considering the surrounding agricultural uses and character of the area.”

Ghin Ghin approval

■ Murrindindi Shire Councillors last week voted to allow a gravel extraction operation at 181 Switzerland Road, Ghin Ghin.

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Columnists: Len Baker, Matt Bissett-Johnson, Rob Foenander, Mike McColl Jones, Peter Kemp, Aaron Rourke, Jim Sherlock, Ted Ryan, Cheryl Threadgold, Julie Houghton, Kevin Trask, Gavin Wood, John O’Keefe

Honorary Reviewers: Juliet Charles, Sherryn Danaher, Peter Green, Lyn Hurst, Kathryn Keeble, Beth Klein, David McLean, Graeme McCoubrie, Maggie Morrison, Peter Murphy, Jill Page, Elizabeth Semmel.

Logistics: Graeme Hawke, Susan Karolyi, Gary McQuade

Credit Manager: Michael Conway OAM, Fast Action Debt Recovery, 0402 142 866

If you witness hooning activity, call Triple Zero (000).

Cts Damien Gallagher and Sue Carpenter moved that the Council issue a planning permit.

Earlier in last Wednesday’s meeting, members of the public addressed the topic, They were: David Kirby, Andrew Murchie and Matthew Bailey

Strath Creek query

■ An open forum at last week’s meeting of Murrindindi Shire Council saw a number of residents address Councillors on a planning permit application at Strath Creek.

Strath Creek Pty Ltd applied to vary conditions in the permit relating to 26 Hannas Rd, Strath Creek.

The company sought to amend the permit to update preamble and conditions and to include construction of new swimming pool and gym, multi-use courts, golf nets, solar array, path works, accommodation for additional 36 guests and alterations to the existing pavilion.

Speakers were Jeanette Tilley, Suzi Fratric, Jan Newton, Bernadette Thorpe and Peter Doy.

Councillors agreed to allow an amended planning permit, subject to conditions. The development is described as a tourist establishment including a minor sports and recreation facility, accommodation, a function centre and camping/caravan use, including and on premises liquor licence.

Ash on Wednesday Defect blitz in the North ● ● ● ●
From left: Thomas 'Ollie O'Connor and his sister Connie O'Connor with Fred Tull. All from Murrindindi. Circa 1960s.
Local Photo Flashback Council Briefs Page 10 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, May 10, 2023 www.LocalPaper.com.au The Local Paper In association with the Established September 14, 1969 Online weekly. Print copies fortnightly. Published in localised editions in 40 areas across Melbourne, Mornington Peninsula and some country areas. ABOUT US Incorporating the traditions of the Evelyn Observer (Est. 1873), Seymour Express (Est. 1872), Yea Advertiser (Est. 1995), Yarra Valley Advertiser (Est. 1995), Whittlesea Advertiser (Est. 1995). The Local Paper is published weekly online and printed fortnightly and circulates in local editions: • Regional/’Dindi Local’ Edition: Murrindindi, Mansfield, Strathbogie, rural sections of Nillumbik and Whittlesea • ‘Lilydale and Yarra Valley Express’ Edition: Yarra Ranges Shire • Mitchell Shire Edition: Mitchell Shire Read online editions at: www.LocalPaper.com.au www.MelbourneObserver.com.au Have a free copy of the online edition sent to your email address each week: www.FreePaper.com.au
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● ● ● ● Wendy Lovell, MLC

✔A motion moved by Northern Victoria MLC Wendy Lovell has been successful in securing a regional sitting of the Legislative Council to be held in a community impacted by last year’s October flood event. Ms Lovell initiated the motion and led debate in the State Parliament last week after introducing it in March. Ms Lovell’s motion was passed unanimously in the Council.

MOVING ON AFTER TIMBER

■ A community-led project, Shaping Murrindindi’s Future, is set to launch soon, with two upcoming events planned for this month.

Two workshops will be held where community can learn more about the project and hear from Paul Ryan, Director of the Resilience Centre.

He will explain the three horizons approach to exploring pathways towards positive futures. Dinner and drinks will be provided at both events.

■ Friday, May 19, at Marysville Golf Club at 6pm

■ Saturday, May 20, at Bonfire Station, Taggerty at 3.30 pm

Project Manager Allisha Milestone says the project will assist communities who are directly affected by the transition away from native timber harvesting, particularly the areas of Marysville, Buxton, Taggerty and Alexandra, to identify and develop opportunities for economic diversification.

Allisha is experienced in working closely with local communities, bringing vision and life to valuable community projects.

“This community-led project will support the future economic growth of the area,” Ms Milestone said.

Options for Thornton

■ Top projects listed for inclusion in the draft ThorntonRubicon Community Plan are:

■ Supporting children with 'Learn to Ride' pathways painted onto the old Thornton netball courts

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PAIN

neck pain, shoulder pain. Leg, knee, ankle and foot conditions. Shoulder, elbow, wrist and hand conditions Headaches including migraines. Cranial conditions including whiplash.

Mansfield Mayor Cr James Tehan has been named in an Age newspaper report on the 15 councils have reported disruption of their meetings by members of the My Place network. Cr Tehan advised that he was present at a private event hosted by his wife at their property. This event was described as family-orientated, where guest speakers discussed home schooling, bio-dynamic farming, health and wellness, and lawful processes. “This was not a council event or a My Place event and did not showcase the views intimated in The Age article,” said a Mansfield Council media release. Mayor Tehan reiterated that he is not a member of My Place nor does he support them or their views. “As an elected member of Mansfield Shire Council, Mayor Tehan will continue to actively engage with and listen to his community while adhering to Council’s values, as part of a consultative Council who represents, listens to, and empowers our community,” said the statement.

✔The Healesville Trader Group has officially formed after a meeting saw the election of a new committee, and a unanimous vote to become an incorporated association. The Group’s purpose is to connect and support members to work together to strengthen Healesville’s township and business community. Newly elected president of the Trader Group, Nina Sturgess from Verso Books, said the group would represent and advocate for the business and community interests of Healesville. "We are thrilled to have a traders’ group in Healesville. Yarra Ranges Council has been instrumental in helping us get the group up and running. It will make us a more resilient business community in the future,” she said.

Dr Will and Margie Twycross have generously donated a bronze sculpture featuring a horse and foal for installation in the High St median strip in Mansfield . Mansfield Shire Council is seeking feedback from the community on three potential locations in High St for the sculpture.

■ History markers around Thornton and Rubicon, sharing the rich history of the area Christmas decorations for the Thornton township

■ Advocacy to Murrindindi Shire Council and other authorities regarding Thornton streetscape improvements, as well as more tracks and trails around the area

■ Establishment of a Recreation Reserve Advisory Group, working with Council to identify priority improvements.

Action Teams have now been formed to get these projects moving.

Contact Murrindindi Council by calling 5772 0333.

Housing crisis in North-East

■ The housing crisis is being felt across the North-East region, where 40.6 per cent of renters are experiencing housing stress, according to Indi MHR Helen Haines.

“Housing is an issue across Australia, but here in our region we know that the dire lack of housing supply is a major factor contributing to the crisis,” Dr Haines said.

“What we need is a dedicated Regional Housing Infrastructure Fund, which would provide funding for enabling infrastructure that would help open new housing developments, like sewerage, drainage, parks and other amenity.

“It would also provide local government assistance to fast-track planning approvals and reduce red tape.”

“We have projects ready to go in Indi to kickstart building more houses, and we need the Government to play its part.”

“Our roads need tens of millions of dollars of investment to be made safer but also to help our local economies thrive.

Cost of living relief is at front of mind for Dr Haines, who has altrady campaigned to raise the rate of JobSeeker and measures to reduce energy bills.

www.LocalPaper.com.au The Local Paper - Wednesday, May 10, 2023 - Page 11 Local News Ticks & Crosses
LOVELL MLC Member
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RELIEF MAGIC FROM EUROPE
● ● Paul Ryan, Resilience Centre ● ● ●
Back pain,
Robyn
Hill
Executive Officer
of Foundation
Murrindindi, and Anna Paix, Murrindindi Council’s Community Planning Officer. ● ● ● ● Dr Helen Haines, Indi MHR
?
● Cr James Tehan, Mansfield Mayor
www.LocalPaper.com.au The Local Paper - Wednesday, May 10, 2023 - Page 13

Local Sport Your Stars with

Kerry Kulkens

ARIES: (March 21- April 20)

Lucky Colour: Yellow

Lucky Day: Wednesday

Racing Numbers: 1.3.6.9.

Lotto Numbers: 1.12.23.36.35.40.

Many will be thinking in terms of buying property, moving interstate. People you meet during social activities could become a permanent fixture. Many will become engaged, married or reconciling past differences with present lovers.

TAURUS: (April 21- May 20)

Lucky Colour: Peach

Lucky Day: Monday

Racing Numbers: 2.3.5.6.

Lotto Numbers: 2.15.26.34.40.22.

Stay out of family fights or arguments among friends, most will be in the grip of wander lust and could be travelling longer distances than usual it very hard to balance the budget however keep trying.

GEMINI: (May 21- June 21)

Lucky Colour: Green

Lucky Day: Monday

Racing Numbers: 1.6.8.5.

Lotto Numbers: 1.15.26.36.39.8.

A very favorable period however its a period of ends and beginnings and as one door closes a better one opens so look ahead not back. Many will be luckier in lotteries or a punt or a wise investment.

CANCER: (June 22- July 22)

Lucky Colour: Red

Lucky Day: Friday

Racing Numbers: 2.3.6.2.

Lotto Numbers: 2.15.24.40.33.3.

Most will be in a happier financial situation, however not the time to lend money or possessions. The singles could find the lover they have been seeking.

LEO: (July 23- August 22)

Lucky Colour: Cream

Lucky Day: Thursday

Racing Numbers: 2.3.6.9.

Lotto Numbers: 2.15.26.34.40.22.

There could be a tendency to be accident prone so watch your step. Most will be making plans for major changes to take place later this year. For most an increase in salary.

VIRGO: (August 23- September 23)

Lucky Colour: Lilac

Lucky Day: Thursday

Racing Numbers: 2.3.5.8.

Lotto Numbers: 2.15.24.40.33.39.

Take nothing and no one at face value as your judgment may not be up to scratch. Making progress in your love life could be most important. Social life is about to become hectic.

LIBRA: (September 24- October 23)

Lucky Colour: Blue

Lucky Day: Tuesday

Racing Numbers: 2.6.8.5.

Lotto Numbers: 2.15.21.24.10.22.

A very pleasant period ahead and take advantage of any invitations forthcoming. Many could be could be travelling and many could be in for money and or better career prospects.

SCORPIO: (October 24- November 22)

Lucky Colour: Orange

Lucky Day: Wednesday

Racing Numbers: 2.3.5.6.

Lotto Numbers: 2.15.26.34.40.33.

Avoid confrontations with authority a very impatient period so be extra careful out on the roads. Many could be in for major changes on their relationships.

SAGITTARIUS: (November 23- December 20)

Lucky Colour: Dark Blue

Lucky Day: Tuesday

Racing Numbers: 4.6.8.5.

Lotto Numbers: 4.12.26.35.5.33.

Personal relationships will be prominent during this period and is a happy time for family gatherings. Make sure you allow plenty of time to enjoy social activities rather than getting involved in all the hard work behind the scene.

CAPRICORN: (December 21- January 19)

Lucky Colour: Silver

Lucky Day: Thursday

Racing Numbers: 2.9.5.3.

Lotto Numbers: 5.12.26.34.40.33.

A happier and more relaxed period and for many luck through lotteries legacies or wise investments. Unexpected opportunities in a career venture for some a traveler returns.

AQUARIUS: (January 20- February 19)

Lucky Colour: Cream

Lucky Day: Monday

Racing Numbers: 2.3.6.5.

Lotto Numbers: 1.12.15.26.36.39.

Most will be in for a happy and relaxed period. People you meet during the holiday period is destined to have a big impact on your future plans some who cant travel should be happy with friends and social activities

PISCES: (February 20- March 20)

Lucky Colour: Violet

Lucky Day: Sunday

Racing Numbers: 2.6.9.5.

Lotto Numbers: 5.12.26.34.40.33.

Contacts from old friends or past flames, most will have to be very diplomatic to keep their personal relationships stable. Career activities are set to bring increasing earnings and opportunities.

PH/FAX 9754 4587

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SCORES FROM WEEKEND MATCHES

■ Victorian Amateur Football Association. Premier Men’s. Old brighton 11.12 (78) d Caulfield Grammarians 2.10 (22). Old Scotch 13.13 (91) d Old Melburnians 7.14 (56). Old Xavierians 11.8 (74) d University

Blues 4.13 (37). Collegians 20.12 (132) d

Old Haileybury 2.10 (22). St Kevins 13.16 (94) d University Blacks 4.5 (29).

Premier Men’s Reserves. Old Brighton 15.17 (107) d Caulfield Grammarians 0.2 (2).

Old Melburnians 6.15 (51) d Old Scotch 5.7 (37). Old Xavierians 15.10 (100) d University

Blues 4.5 (29). Collegians 14.8 (92) d Old Haileybury 4.8 (32). St Kevins 12.8 (80) d University Blacks 2.8 (20).

Premier B Men’s. Beaumaris 17.15 (117) d Williamstown CYNMS 10.8 (68). Old Geelong 16.13 (109) d St Bedes/Mentone Tigers 8.13 (61). Fitzroy 12.6 (78) d Old Trinity 7.3 (45).

De La Salle 14.11 (95) d Monash Blues 12.4 (76). St Bernards 13.12 (90) d AJAX 5.11 (41).

Premier B Men’s Reserves. Beaumaris

10.10 (70) d Williamstown CYMS 3.6 (24).

Old Geelong 8.14 (62) d St Bedes/Mentone Tigers 5.10 (40). Fitzroy 16.20 (116) d Old Tribity 4.9 (33). De La Salle 14.16 (100) d

Monash Blues 4.4 (28). St Bernards 13.19 (97) d AJAX 4.5 (29).

Premier C Men’s. Old Carey 15.15 (105)

d Mazenod OC 5.7 (37). Old Ivanhoe Grammarians 12.11 (83) drew with Ormond 12.11 (87). Parkdale Vultures 11.19 (95) d Hampton Rovers 11.9 (75). PEGS 8.8 (56) d

Marcellin OC 3.8 (26).

Premier C Men’s Reserves. Mazenod OC

15.8 (98) d Old Carey 8.7 (55). Old Ivanhoe

Grammarians 10.7 (67) d Ormond 7.4 (46).

Parkdale Vultures 14.8 (92) d Hampton Rovers 7.8 (50). Marcellin OC 12.8 (80) d PEGS

6.2 (38).

Division 1 Men’s. Prahran 7.8 (50) d

Therry Penola 7.14 (56). UHS-VU 8.21 (69) d

Old Peninsula 7.9 (51). West Brunswick 7.11 (53) d Oakleigh 4.6 (30). Kew 10.16 (76) d

Ivanhoe 2.10 (22). Glen Eira 17.12 (114) d

Preston Bullants 8.11 (59).

Division 1 Men’s Reserves. Prahran

13.10 (88) d Therry Penola 0.4 (44). UHS-VU

9.12 (66) d Old Peninsula 8.9 (57). West Brunswick 6.6 (42) d Oakleigh 1.4 (10). Kew

v Ivanhoe. Glen Eira 13.18 (96) d Preston

Bullants 3.6 (24).

Division 2 Men’s. Parkside 9.14 (68) d Brunswick 3.4 (22). Aquinas 14.15 (99) d Old Paradians 12.17 (89). Old Yarra Cobras 14.14 (98) d Bulleen Templestowe 4.11 (35). Whitefriars 16.14 (110) d St Mary’s Salesian 12.9 (81). MHSOB 16.11 (107) d South Melbourne Districts 12.11 (83).

Division 2 Men’s Reserves. Parkside 5.6 (36) d Brunswick 4.5 (25). Aquinas 7.4 (46) drew with Old Paradians 7.4 (46). Old Yarra Cobras 16.10 (106) d Bulleen Temple-stowe

3.3 (21). Whitefriars 17.20 (122) d St Mary’s Salesian 2.5 (17). South Melbourne Districts

11.11 (77) d MHSOB 9.9 (63).

Division 3 Men’s. Hawthorn 16.17 (107) d Richmond Central 7.8 (50). Canterbury 12.10 (82) d Wattle Park 8.10 (58). Elstern-wick

8.22 (70) d Swinburne University 3.8 (26).

Power House 10.12 (72) d La Trobe University

6.6 (42).

Division 3 Men’s Reserves. Richmond

Central 12.15 (87) d Hawthorn 5.5 (35).

Wattle Park 20.8 (128) d Canterbury 5.4 (34).

Elsternwick 6.7 (43) d Swinburne University

4.8 (32). Power House 15.12 (102) d La Trobe University 2.8 (20).

Division 4 Men’s. Masala 16.12 (108) d Box Hill North 14.12 (96). North Brunswick

7.16 (58) d St John’s 2.3 (15). Albert Park 22.17 (140) d Eley Park 7.5 (47).

Division 4 Men’s Reserves. Box Hill North 23.25 (163) d Msala 4.2 (26). North Brunswick 5.3 (33) d St Johns 2.5 (17). Albert Park 13.23 (101) d Eley Park 4.6 (30).

■ Esatern Football Netball League. Premier Division. Blackburn 12.14 (86) d Berwick

(59) d Balwyn 4.10 (34).

Division 1. South Belgrave 10.8 (68) d

Bayswater 9.9 (63). North Ringwood 9.4 (58)

d Croydon 8.7 (55). Beaconsfield 6.17 (51) d

Mooroolbark 6.8 (44). Mitcham 13.14 (92) d

Lilydale 11.6 (72). Wantirna South 10.5 (66)

d Montrose 7.11 (53).

Division 2. Ringwood 7.15 (57) d The Basin

7.3 (45). Heathmont 8.18 (66) d East Burwood

3.9 (27). Waverley Blues 19.12 (126) d Upper Ferntree Gully 7.6 (48). Templestowe 8.14 (62) d Mulgrave 6.11 (47). Boronia 20.22

-142) d Knox 6.9 (45).

Division 3. Silvan 7.3 (55) d Coldstream

4.6 (30). Donvale 9.10 (64) d Whitehorse

Pioneers 8.10 (58). Ferntree Gully 11.10 (76)

d Oakleigh District 9.7 (61). Warrandyte 10.8 (68) d Fairpark 9.8 (62).

Division 4. Surrey Park 16.13 (109) d Forest Hill 4.8 (32). Chirnside Park 18.14 (122)

d Croydon North MLOC 4.8 (32). Kilsyth 16.5 (101) d Scoresby 9.14 (68). Nunawading; Bye.

■ Essendon District Football League. Premier Division. Greenvale 17.16 (118) d

Avondale Heights 14.6 (80). Keilor 14.17 (101) d Aberfeldie 7.9 (51). Strathmore 11.12 (78) d Airport West 10.5 (65). East Keilor

11.10 (76) d Essendon Doutta Stars 6.8 (44). Pascoe Vale 16.16 (112) d Maribyrnong Park

6.10 (46).

Division 1. Craigieburn 218.11 (119) d Moonee Valley 4.14 (38). Roxburgh Park 210.8 (68) d Hillside 7.10 (52). Deer Park 22.17 (149) d Tullamarine 2.6 (18). Keilor Park 11.9 (75) d Rupertswood 10.5 (65). West Coburh

12.9 (81) d St Albans 8.16 (64). Glenroy

10.16 (76) d Westmeadows 10.6 (66).

Division 2. Northern Saints 14.13 (97) d

Sunbury Kangaroos 11.8 (74). Hadfield 11.5 (71) d East Sunbury 3.6 (27). Burnside Heights

v Taylors Lakes. Coburg Districts v Oak Park.

■ Mornington Peninsula Nepean Football League. Division 1 Seniors. Dromana

11.13 (79) d Mt Eliza 8.11 (59). Pines 14.5 (89) d Frankston YCW 9.7 (61). Langwarrin v Frankston Bombers. Rosebud 11.12 (78) d

Bonbeach 8.8 (56). Red Hill v Sorrento.

Division 1 Reserves. Dromana 9.4 (58)

d Mt Eliza 5.12 (42). Pines 9.9 (63) d Frankston YCW 4.2 (26). Langwarrin 10.12 (72) d

Frankston Bombers 4.10 (34). Bonbeach 6.11 (47) d Rosebud 5.5 (35). Red Hill 11.15 (81)

d Sorrento 0.1 (1).

Division 1 Under 19. Mt Eliza 13.16 (94)

d Dromana 5.5 (35). Langwarrin 11.8 (74) d

Frankston Bombers 4.4 (28). Bonbeach 15.7 (97) d Rosebud 7.4 (46).

Division 2 Seniors. Karingal 10.8 (68) d

Devon Meadows 7.13 (55). Hastings 16.13 (109) d Mornington 11.12 (78). Pearcedale

8.11 (59) d Edithvale-Aspendale 7.15 (57). Crib Point 14.18 (102) d Seaford 9.12 (66).

Chelsea 12.12 (84) d Rye 7.9 (51). Somerville 12.20 (92) d Tyabb 9.6 (60).

Division 2 Reserves. Karingal 10.7 (67)

d Devon Meadows 2.11 (23). Mornington 12.9 (81) d Hastings 4.6 (30). Pearcedale 9.7 (61)

d Edithvale-Aspendale 6.9 (45). Crib Point 8.7 (55) d Seaford 3.10 (28). Chelsea 16.15 (111)

d Rye 1.4 (10).Somerville 11.9 (75) d Tyabb

8.7 (55).

Division 2 Under 19. Karingal 16.17 (113) d Devon Meadows 2.2 (14). Hastings

7.8 (50) d Mornington 6.11 (47). EdithvaleAspendale 10.15 (75) d Pearcedale 8.3 (51). Somerville 16.14 (110) d Mt Eliza 1.5 (11).

■ Northern Football Netball League. Division 1 Seniors. Banyule 12.9 (81) d West

Preston-Lakeside 8.9 (57). Heidelberg 8.15 (63) d Greensborough 6.5 (41). Montmorency

11.11 (77) d Bundoora 10.5 (55). North Heidelberg 15.10 (100) d Macleod 7.10 (52). Hurstbridge 6.6 (42) d Whittlesea 5.4 (34).

Division 1 Reserves. Banyule 12.7 (79)

d West Preston-Lakeside 6.10 (46). Heidelberg 9.17 (71) d Greensborough 8.8 (56).

Montmorency 33.28 (226) d Bundoora 2.4 (16). North Heidelberg 8.7 (55) d Macleod 8.5 (53). Hurstbridge 18.7 (115) d Whittlesea 8.7 (55).

Division 1 Under 19.5. Eltham 8.11 (59)

d Banyule 6.5 (41). Greensborough 1 11.10 (76) d Heidelberg 5.5 (35). Bundoora 9.8 (62) d Montmorency 9.6 (60). West Preston-Lake-

side 6.4 (40).

Division 2 Seniors. Panton Hill 11.11 (77) d Lower Plenty 11.11 (77). Lower Plenty 8.7 (55) d Epping 4.4 (28). Eltham 23.9 (147) d Thomastown 15.16 (106). St Mary’s 15.14 (104) d Northcote Park 9.9 (63). Diamond Creek 10.109 (70) d South Morang 2.4 (16).

Division 2 Reserves. Panton Hill 10.9 (69) d Lower Plenty 7.5 (47). Eltham 16.15 (111) d Epping 4.6 (30). Thomastown

Division 3 Seniors. Heidelberg West 14.8 (92) d Old Eltham Collegians 11.8 (74). Kilmore 20.17 (137) d Reservoir 2.9 (21).

Kinglake 26.21 (177) d Lalor 1.1 (7). Laurimar 8.17 (65) d Fitzroy Stars 2.8 (20). Mernda: Bye.

Division 3 Reserves. old Eltham Collegians 12.8 (80) d Heidelberg West 8.6 (54). Kilmore 23.20 (158) d Reservoir 0.2 (2).

Kinglake 11.11 (77) d Lalor 5.13 (43).

Laurimar 16.7 (103) d Fitzroy Stars 1.5 (11). Mernda: Bye.

Division 3 Under 19.5. Thomastown 14.16 (100) d Panton Hill 12.6 (78). Banyule/ Heidelberg West 6.12 (48) d Macleod 2.10 (22). Heidelberg 12.12 (84) d Mernda 8.10 (58).

■ Outer East. Premier Division Seniors. Woori Yallock v Upwey-Tecoma. Narre Warren 15.11 (101) d Monbulk 4.7 (31). Gemnrook Cockatoo 12.10 (82) d Mt Evelyn 8.11 (59). Wandin 11.12 (78) d Olinda Ferny Creek 7.9 (51). Pakenham: Bye.

Premier Division Reserves. Woori Yallock v Upwey-Tecoma. Narre Warren 10.12 (72) d Monbulk 8.6 (42). Gembrook-Cockatoo 13.6 (84) d My Evelyn 5.10 (40). Gembrook-Cockatoo 13.6 (84) d Mt Evelyn 5.10 (40). Olinda-Ferny Creek 6.4 (40) d Wandin 5.4 (34). Pakenham: Bye.

Division 1 Seniors. Seville 14.18 (102) d Belgrave 8.11 (59). Emerald 16.15 (111) d Hallam 2.12 (24). Healesville 8.11 (59) d Berwick Springs 3.11 (29). Officer: Bye.

Division 1 Reserves. Seville 17.6 (108) d Belgrave 3.3 (21). Emerald 18.22 (130) d Hallam 3.1 (19). Berwick Springs 14.8 (92) d Healesville 1.7 (13). Officer: Bye.

Division 2 Seniors. Powelltown 18.18 (126) d Broadfored 1.7 (13). WarburtonMillgrove 12.12 (84) d Yarra Glen 7.7 (49). Alexandra 18.14 (122) d Yarra Junction 7.7 (49).

Division 2 Reserves. Powelltown 9.11 (65) d Broadford 7.2 (44). Warburton-Millgrove 24.15 (159) d Yarra Glen 1.1 (7). Alexandra 10.12 (72) d Yarra Junction 1.7 (13).

Under 19 Boys. Upwey-Tecoma 9.10 (64) d Seville 5.8 (38). Emerald 14.18 (102) d Woori Yallock 3.3 (21). Narre Warren 9.8 (62) d Monbulk 2.4 (16).

■ Southern Football Netball League. Division 1 Seniors. Mordialloc 10.9 (69) d Chelsea Heights 7.9 (51). Port Melbourne Colts 15.14 (104) d Bentleigh 3.15 (33). St Paul’s McKinnon 17.17 (119) d St Kilda City 8.14 (62). Dingley 12.8 (80) d Springvale Districts 4.10 (34).

Division 2 Seniors. Caulfield Bears 14.9 (93) d Black Rock 7.5 (47). Hampton Park

8.10 (52) d Doveton Doves 7.8 (50). Skye

8.10 (58) d East Malvern 5.9 (39). Murrumbeena 15.7 (97) d Keysborough 7.11 (53). East Brighton 17.15 (117) d Highett 3.6 (24).

Division 3 Seniors. Endeavour Hills 20.14 (134) d Narre South Saints 5.2 (32). Lyndhusrt

16.10 (106) d Ashwood 14.15 (99). Heatherton 9.12 (66) d Clayton 10.5 (65). Frankston Dolphins 11.5 (71) d Carrum Patterson Lakes 9.13 (67).

Division 4 Seniors. South Mornington 13.7 (85) d Hampton 9.11 (65). Moorabbin Kangaroos 41.19 (265) d South Yarra 2.3 (15). Dandenong 22.18 (150) d Doveton Eagles 2.6 (18).

7.6
7.5
Noble Park 8.14
(92) d Doncaster 5.5 (35). Rowville 13.16 (94) d South Croydon 8.7 (55). Vermont 8.11
(48). Norwood 13.12 (90) d Park Orchards
(47). Doncaster East 12.14 (86) d
(62). East Ringwood 13.14
6.6 (42) d Watsonia 5.9 (39). St Mary’s 24.24 (168) d Northcote Park 0.4 (4). Diamond Creek 6.8 (44) d South Morang 3.5 (23). Division 2 Under 19.5. Laurimar 14.21 (105) d Greensborough 2 7.2 (44). Lower Plenty v Kilmore. St Mary’s 4.15 (39) d Watsonia 3.7 (25). South Morang 10.9 (69) d Diamond Creek 7.5 (47).
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Page 14 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, May 10, 2023 www.LocalPaper.com.au

REBELS SECOND ON DIV. 2 LADDER

Scoreboard

Women’s Football

■ Northern Football Netball League.

Division 1. Darebin 6.4 (40) d West Preston Lakeside 1.8 (14). Diamond Creek 4.4 (28) d Montmorency 1 3.8 (26). Eltham 8.13 (61) d Greensborough 4.3 (27).

Division 2. Whittlesea 3.2 (20) d Hurstbridge 1.4 (10). Fitzroy Stars 5.9 (45) d Darebin 0.2 (2). Banyule 8.4 (52) d St Mary’s 0.1 (1).

Division 3. Montmorency 2 1.3 (9) d

Diamond Creek 2 1.1 (7). North Heidelberg v West Preston Lakeisde 2. Wallan 12.11 (83) d Laurimar 0.0 (0). Mernda

5.12 (42) d Heidelberg West 0.1 (1).

Country Leagues

■ Goulburn Valley Football League.

Seniors. Benalla 10.14 (74) d Shepparton United 10.12 (72). Echuca 12.12 (84) d

Shepparton 4.5 (29). Seymour 14.11 (89)

d Mansfield 9.8 (62). Kyabram 10.16 (76)

d Mooroopna 9.11 (65). Rochester 9.10 (64) d Tatura 7.11 (53). Euroa 11.10 (76)

d Shepparton Swans 9.2 (56).

Reserves. Shepparton United 26.17 (173) d Benalla 0.2 (2). Echuca 13.11 (89)

d Shepparton 2.5 (17). Seymour 19.11 (125) d Mansfield 2.1 (13). Kyabram 26.15 (171) d Mooroopna 3.5 (23). Rochester

7.6 (48) d Tatura 6.3 (39). Euroa 9.11 (65)

d Shepparton Swans 3.7 (25).

Under 18. Shepparton United 12.13 (85) d Benalla 9.5 (59). Echuca 9.7 (61) d

Shepparton 7.10 (52). Mansfield 7.14 (56)

d Seymour 5.2 (32). Kyabram 12.14 (77)

d Mooroopna 7.7 (49).Rochester v Tatura.

Shepparton Swans 22.16 (148) d Euroa 1.3 (9).

■ Kyabram District Football League.

Seniors. Stanhope v Rushworth. Murchison-

Toolamba 12.6 (78) d Lancaster 11.11 (77).

Merrigum 11.15 (81) d Girgarre 12.8 (80).

Tallygaroopna 22.8 (140) d Violet Town 9.9 (63). Upcoming: Shepparton East v Undera.

Longwood v Avenel. Dookie United v Nagambie.

Reserves. Stanhope 19.9 (123) d

Rushworth 1.2 (8). Lancaster 18.16 (124)

d Murchison Toolamba 0.0 (0). Giraggre

10.12 (72) d Merrigum 4.6 (30). Tally-

garoopna 14.19 (97) d Violet Town 0.1 (1).

Upcoming: Shepparton East v Undera. Longwood v Avenel. Dookie United v Nagambie.

Under 18. Violet Town 24.22 (166) d

Stanhope 0.1 (1). Lancaster 11.20 (86) d

Murchison-Toolamba 2.4 (16). Upcoming:

Undera v Nagambie. Longwood v Girgarre. Byes: Avenel, Dookie United, Merrigum, Rushworth, Shepparton East, Tallygaroopna. ■ Riddell District Football League. Seniors. Woodend-Hesket 12.16 (88) d Western Rams 1.1 (7). Lancefield 6.9 (45) d

Melton Centrals 5.5 (35). Wallan 9.12 (66) d Macedon 3.5 (23). Romsey 10.5 (65) d

Riddell 6.6 (42).

Reserves. Woodend-Hesket 15.12 (120) d Western Rams 0.1 (1). Lancefield

8.5 (53) d Melton Centrals 7.5 (47).

Macedon 7.3 (45) d Wallan 6.7 (43).

Romsey 7.5 (47) d Riddell 3.6 (24). Diggers Rest: Bye.

Under 19.5. Woodend-Hesket 9.9 (61) d Gisborne Giants 5.5 (35). Lancefield v Melton Centrals. Macedon 12.9 (81) d Wallan 1.5 (11). Romsey 8.11 (59) d Riddell 5.3 (33).

This Saturday

■ NFNL Division 1. Huirstbridge v Montmorency. Macleod v Whittlesea. Greensborough v Bayule. West Preston Lakeside v North Heidelberg. Bundoora v Heidelberg. Division 2. Northcote Park v Thomastown. Diamond Creek v Panton Hill. Eltham v South Morang. Lower Plenty v St Mary’s. Watsonia v Epping. Division 3. Reservoir v Mernda. Heidelberg West v Kilmore. Kinglake v Fitzroy Stars. Laurimar v Old Eltham Collegians.

WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 2023

Free in The Local Paper

■ Alexandra Seniors and Reserves enjoyed healthy wins over Powelltown last Saturday (May 6), as Ray Steyger reports:

The Outer East League 2023 season Round 3 saw the Rebels host Yarra Junction for twogames of football and four games of netball. A good crowd came along to enjoy the Club Sponsors Day, Past Players Day and Life Members Day

The Reserves had a number of changes but worked well together to move the ball efficiently and kick a couple of goals each quarter whilst the defence kept Junction under pressure, Alexandra taking the win 10.12 (72) to Yarra Junction 1.7 (13).

Awards: Shepparton Volkswagen – Mitchell Coutts, Ampol fuel card – Angus Smith, Alex Sportspower – Dylan Jack, Buxton Hotel – Beau Scott.

The Seniors also had a couple of changes but kicked into gear with eight goals to one in the first quarter, the game then tightening up into a tough contest but the Rebels were more efficient in front of goal, Alexandra 18.14 (122) to Yarra Junction 7.7 (49).

Awards: Incentives – Ben Cooper, Will Stewart and Harry Aikman, Buxton Hotel –Lachlan Nankervis. Yarck Hotel / Endeavour Petroleum volunteer award – Daniel and Melissa Crane. Raffle winners after the games, meat tray – Elizabeth Kidd, wine – Roger Welch, points margin – Ben Broadway, gate raffle –Paul Renouf. After the awards, officials from both Clubs spoke on the involvement of George Steiner at the respective Clubs and the George Steiner Cup was presented to Alexandra.

During the seniors half time break, Steve Mitchell interviewed Club stalwarts Sue Haggis and George Steiner on their sporting history, a large crowed listening intently to their respective stories. Well done to everyone. Netball Awards.

A-Grade won 49 – 46: Incentive – Caitlan Haggis, Corner Hotel / Grant St Grocer –LouiseHurrey B-Grade won 31 – 25: Incentive

Bethany Cairns, Corner Hotel / Grant St Grocer – Sarah Moone. C-Grade lost 12 – 28: Incentive – Kylie Cairns, Corner Hotel / Grant St Grocer – Tamika Poustie. Under 17 won 22 –11: Incentive – Ruby Russell, Corner Hotel / Grant St Grocer – FelicityConway.

Thursday’s Rebel Raffles continued last Thursday and we thank our sponsors Swenrick Constructions, Yarck Hotel, Reddrops Foodworks / Houseboat Sales Lake Eildon, Eildon Bakery / Yarck Meat and Produce, Alexandra Quality Meats / AFNC canteen, Yea Chinese Restaurant / Bailey Funerals with the winners Ray Steyger, Dawn Jack, Dawn Jack, Julie Steyger, Daniel Crane and Dawn Jack

The Swenrick Constructions Joker Jackpot will be worth $600 next week so come along and buy some tickets at $1 each but you need to be at the Club rooms at 8pm for the draw. Meals will also be available.

This coming Thursday (May 11), the Club rooms will be closed, no bar and no meals. This coming Saturday (May 13), the senior Club football and netball teams all have a bye as part of the split round, the following week travelling to Warburton Millgrove. 2023 Club memberships are available: $200 – Patron, $150 – Family and $100 – Members. $600 Rebel Raiser Sponsor together with Business, Corporate, Executive and Major Sponsor packages available, so if you would like to support the Club, please contact Ray Steyger on 5772 2627.

Juniors

NFNL Sunday

■ Under 12 Girls Blue. Eltham 3.8 (26) d Mernda 0.1 (1). Montmorency Black 0.2 (2) d South Morang 0.0 (0). Yarrambat 2.9 (21)_ d Diamond Creek 1.0 (6). Under 12 Blue. Diamond Creek 8.4 (52) d Mernda Blue 2.3 (15). Greensborough v Whittlesea. Yarrambat v Eltham Black. Under 12 Girls Red. Wallan 3.3 (21) d Darebin 0.0 (0). Laurimar 12.1 (73) d Kilmore 2.2 (15). Research 6.10 (46) d Whittlesea 0.0 (0). Under 12 Red. Research 9.7 (61) d West Preston Lakeside 4.4 (28). Eltham Red 5.8 (38) d South Morang 1.2 (8). Montmorency Black 9.9 (63) d Wallan 2.4 (16). Under 12 Green. Kilmore 7.8 (50) d Epping 4.2 (26). Laurimar Black v Montmorency White. Mernda Red 2.5 (17) drew with Mill Park 2.5 (17).

Under 12 Silver. Kinglake 12.11 (83) d Laurimar Teal 1.0 (6). Thomastown v Hurstbridge. West Ivanhoe v Keon Park.

Under 13 Blue. Montmorency 6.13 (49) d Greensborough Green 0.2 (2). Greensborough White v Yarrambat. Marnda 4.5 (29) d Eltham Black 3.7 (25).

OE DIV. 2 SCOREBOARD

SENIORS

POWELLTOWN ... 7.3, 11.8, 14.12, 18.18 (126)

BROADFORD ............... 0.3, 0.4, 1.7, 1.6 (13)

Best. Powelltown: Christopher Moreland, Russell Cowan, Jarrod Bayliss, Austin Bizzotto, Sam Meadows, Jimmy Messis. Broadford: Liam Lucas, Dean Tydell, Rhys Carman, Braydon Hardstaff, Jayme Ruedin, Benjamin Keyzer.

WARB.-MILL. .......... 6.1, 6.4, 11.9, 12.12 (84)

YARRA GLEN ................ 1.0, 5.2, 5.4, 7.7 (49)

Best. Warburton-Millgrove: Ben Pretty, Dylan Walker, Tom Barr, josh sharp, Brayden Woolridge, Trent Elliott. Yarra Glen: Ryan Smith, Jayden Schille, Marcus Kikidopoulos, Sam Wood, Richard Gurney, Thomas Sullivan.

ALEXANDRA ... 8.6, 11.8, 15.11, 18.13 (122)

YARRA JUNC. ............... 1.1, 4.3, 5.3, 7.7 (49)

Best. Alexandra: Ben Cooper, William Stewart, Harry Aikman, Lachlan Nankervis, D’Arcy Kennedy, Ryan Lucas. Yarra Junction: Dylan Cawsey, Dean Maunder, Josh Jones, Samuel Cannon, Hori Jury, Mackenzie Bail.

RESERVES

POWELLTOWN ............ 2.3, 5.5, 8.6, 9.11 (65)

BROADFORD ................ 3.1, 4.1, 6.2, 7.2 (44)

Best. Powelltown: Trent Baseden, Lochie Winter-Annette, Matthew Pote, Mitchell Wood, Jacob Neale, Chris Betka. Broadford: Jack Connell, Tylah Long, Kane Toohey, Rhys Mortlock, Brodie Stray, James Simpson. WARB.-MILL. ... 5.4, 13.8, 18.12, 24.15 (159)

YARRA GLEN .................. 1.0, 1.1, 1.1, 1.1 (7)

Best. Warburton-Millgrove. Damien Egan, Kobi Gay, Daniel Schlueter, Marcel Kocher, Hudson Semple, Ben Gray. Yarra Glen: Dayne Downward, Joshua Dick, Stirling TwiteMoore, Callum Tucker, Jarrod Hull, William Goodwin.

ALEXANDRA ............. 3.3, 5.7, 7.9, 10.12 (72)

YARRA JUNC. .............. 0.1, 0.3, 1.6, 2.13 (25)

Best. Alexandra: Mitchell Coutts, Angus Smith, Dylan Jack, Beau Scott, Jonathan Noy, Riley Frankcombe. Yarra Junction: Brent Van der vlugt, Timothy Ganson, Andre Dos santos, Aaron Stewart, Alex Ganson, Kyle Ousley.

LADDERS

DIVISION 2. SENIORS. 1. WarburtonMillgrove, 292.36, 16. 2. Alexandra, 218.08, 12. 3. Powelltown, 15.271, 12. 4. Yarra Glen, 79.52, 8. 5. Yarra Junction, 45.51, 0. 6. Broadford, 26.54, 0. RESERVES. 1. Warburton-Millgrove, 732.84, 16. 2. Alexandra, 324.75, 16. 3. Powelltown, 99.53, 8. 4. Yarra Junction, 47.06, 4. 5. Yarra Glen, 28.09, 4. 6. Broadford, 35.49, 0.

Under 13 Red. Laurimar Black 11.9 (75) d Diamond Creek 1.4 (10). South Morang Blue 9.14 (68) d Diamond Creek Demons 1.4 (10). West Preston Lakeside 10.13 (73) d Wallan Black 0.0 (0). Research 10.10 (70) d Kilmore 3.1 (19).

Under 13 Green. Whittlesea 6.9 (45) d Laurimar Teal 4.0 (24). Epping 8.11 (59) d Eltham Red 2.2 (14). Panton Hill 12.10 (82) d South Morang Gold 0.1 (1).

Under 14 Girls Blue. Kilmore 4.4 (28) d Wallan 2.1 (13). Yarrambat 11.12 (78) d Research 1.2 (8). Diamond Creek Women’s 2.7 (19) d Montmorency 2.2 (14).

Under 14 Blue. Eltham Black 14.9 (93) d Whittlesea 5.3 (33). Laurimar Black 8.3 (51) d Yarrambat 6.8 (44). Mernda Blue 3.6 (24) d Kilmore 0.0 (0).

Under 14 Girls Red. Mernda 8.4 (52) d South Morang 1.0 (6). Darebin v Lauirmar. Whittlesea 5.7 (37) d Eltham 1.0 (6).

Under 14 Red. Montmorency 7.12 (54) d Greensborough 4.7 (31). South Morang 9.8 (62) d Epping 3.3 (21). Diamond Creek 11.10 (76) d Research 7.5 (47).

Under 14 Green. Wallan v Mernda Red. West Ivanhoe 4.5 (29) d West Preston Lakeside 2.2 (14). Eltham Red 4.9 (33) d Laurimar Teal 4.7 (33).

Under 15 Blue. Mill Park Blue 9.15 (69) d Yarrambat 8.10 (58). Montmorency Black 17.18 (120) d Wallan 6.5 (41). Diamond Creek 8.20 (68) d Greensborough 7.1 (43).

Under 15 Red. Mernda 7.9 (51) d Montmorency White 7.4 (46). South Morang 26.24 (180) d Keon Park 1.4 (10). Whittlesea 9.8 (62) d Mill Park White 3.1 (19). Laurimar Teal 10.5 (65) d Eltham Red 5.14 (44).

Under 15 Girls Blue. Research 5.6 (36) d Whittlesea 1.1 (7). Yarrambat 8.9 (57) d Montmorency Black 0.0 (0).

Under 16 Blue. Whittlesea 5.7 (37) drew with Eltham Black 5.7 (37). Kilmore Blue v Yarrambat. South Morang Blue4 8.10 (58) d Montmorency 7.10 (52).

Under 16 Girls Red. Diamond Creek Womens 2 4.9 (33) d Mernda 4.3 (27). Darebin 6.3 (39) d Wallan 1.5 (11). Epping v Montmorency White. Laurimar 0.10 (10) d Eltham 0.3 (3).

Under 16 Red. Epping 5.14 (44) d Eltham Red 5.4 (34). Research 15.16 (106) d South Morang Gold 4.3 (27). Laurimar v Mernda. Kilmore White: Bye.

Under 17.5 Blue. Eltham 10.9 (69) d Laurimar 7.4 (46). Research v Montmorency. Diamond Creek Blue 6.12 (48) d Yarrambat 6.8 (44). West Preston Lakeside 10.10 (70) d South Morang 3.10 (28).

Under 17.5 Red. Greensborough 7.128 (60) d Wallan 3.1 (19). Whittlesea v Diamond Creek Red. Epping 10.13 (73) d Kilmore 0.0 (0).

Under 18 Girls Red. Diamond Creek Womens 7.16 (48) d South Morang 4.0 (24). Montmorency 121.8 (74) d Yarrambat 0.0 (0).

Laurimar 3.5 (23) drew with Eltham 3.5 (23). Whittlesea: Bye.

The Local Paper - Wednesday, May 10, 2023 - Page 15
www.LocalPaper.com.au
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OE Netball

Hawks send message to Turtles

■ Heidelberg West remain undefeated in the 2023 NFNL Division 3 season after finishing as 18-point winners in their clash with Old Eltham Collegians at Heidelberg Park.

A run of five straight goals either side of half time broke the game open for the hosts, giving them a five-goal buffer early in the third term. From that point onwards, they never looked like losing in a game where the forecasted rain stayed away.

The local crowd was delighted when the team’s biggest test for the 2023 season was passed with flying colours, with the 14.8 (92) to 11.8 (74) win keeping the Hawks as one of only two unbeaten sides in the competition.

They’ve now also won their last three games against Old Eltham Collegians, attributing to three of the Turtles last nine defeats.

“It’s just another step in the right direction, but there are still lots of steps to take,” Heidelberg West coach Michael Missen said.

Wandin 46 d Olinda-Ferny Creek 13. eaconsfield: Bye.

Division 1. A-Grade. Berwick Springs 35

Healesville 31. ROC 80 d Yea 12. Seville

2 d Belgrave 25. Emerald 108 d Hallam 24.

Division 1. B-Grade. ROC 82 d Yea 16. erwick Springs 36 d Healesville 23. Seville

1 d Belgrave 42. Emerald 87 d Hallam 13.

Division 1. C-Grade. Berwick Springs 31

Healesville 6. ROC 66 d Yea 11. Seville 46

Belgrave 16, Emerald: Bye.

Division 1. D-Grade. Berwick Springs 29

Healesville 12. Yea v ROC. Seville 36 d elgrave 22. Emerald: Bye.

Division 2. A-Grade. Alexandra 49 d Yarra

nction 36. Broadford 54 d Powelltown 26.

Warburton-Millgrove 62 d Yarra Glen 39.

Division 2. B-Grade. Alexandra 31 d Yarra

nction 25. Braodford 64 d Powelltwon 38. Warburton0Millgrove 24 d Yarra glen 20.

Division 2. C-Grade. Yarra Junction 238

Alexandra 12. Broadford 30 d Powelltown

8. Warburton-Millgrove 32 d Yarra Glen 19.

Division 2. D-Grade. Warburtonillgrove 30 d Yarra Glen 13. Powelltown: ye. Yarra Junction: Bye.

NFNL Netball

Grading. Montmorency 2 27 d Panton Hill

19. Bundoora 8 21 d Epping 3 19. urstbridge 3 35 d Heidelberg West 2 15. orthcote Park 1 32 d Heat 6 14. Diamond reek 3 38 d Bundoora 9 29. Fitzroy Stars 2 1 d Bundoora 11 9. Bundoora 1 38 d North eidelberg 3 50. Montm,orency 6 21 d undoora 12 15. Hurstbridge 1 39 d Thomaswn 1 17. Heat 9 39 d Watsonia 5 23. West eston Lakeside 1 41 d Kilmore 6 28. South orang 1 37 d Kinglake 1 20. Epping 2 29 d

Watsonia 3 15. La Trobe 2 30 d Greensborugh 3 25. Epping 5 27 d Whittlesea 3 20. u rstbridge 6 20 d South Morang 4 5. undoora 10 26 d Hazel Glen 3. 10. Heat 2 7 d Hurstbridge 5 17. Hazel Glen 4 19 d eat 10 16. Diamond Creek 2 29 d Fitzroy ars 1 22. Heidelberg West 1 34 d Hazel len 1 25. North Heidelberg 1 35 d North

e idelberg 2 28. Montmorency 1 41 d

Watsonia 1 28. Kilmore 5 38 d Thomastown

13, Bundoora 4 31 d Lalor 2 26. Bundoora 2 6 d Kilmore 1 9. Kinglake 2 28 d South

orang 3 20. Kilmore 4 28 d West Ivanhoe 1

0. Epping 7 24 d La Trobe 3 19. Greens-

orough 2 29 d Whittlesea 1 25. Epping 1 25

Husrtbridge 2 24. Bundoora 7 30 d Hurst-

idge 4 25. Hazel Glen 5 19 d Epping 9 18.

pping 6 26 d Hazel Glen 2 17. Heat 1 34 d

iamond Creek 1 30. Hume 2 29 d Bundoora

21. North Heidelberg 6 35 d Heat 5 19.

homastown 4 30 d Montmorency 3 25.

pping 4 38 d Thomastown 3 30. Lower

enty 1 39 d Lalor 3 11. Kilmore 3 29 d

Watsonia 4 16. Kilmore 2 28 d Bundoora 5

7. South Morang 2 17 d Montmorency 4 16.

Whittlesea 2 25 d La Trobe 1 18. Heat 2 33 d

orth Heidelberg 4 26. Heat 3 41 d Watsonia

15. Bundoora 3 29 d Greensborough 1 28.

orth Heidelberg 5 36 d Heat 4 30. Mont-

orency

The Hawks had the game played in their front half and on their terms for the majority of the contest. They won most of the contested footy with inside midfielders such as Lachie Jones and Daniel Kelly having a massive impact on the contest.

But the most influential midfield player was Marcus Hill. He won the ball at the coalface and also managed to get on the scoreboard.

Jordon Bulman won plenty of ball for the Hawks and also kicked a major, while Nick Paton had another solid game. Small forward Alex Williamson was a livewire in attack and kicked three on the day.

The local crowd loved the pressure aspect of their team and the Turtles often struggled to get players into space.

After dominant starts to the season up forward, Old Eltham Collegians duo Matthew Williamson and Nicholas Milne finished with three majors and one major respectively.

Hawks coach Missen was pleased with the work done on the dangerous pair by Zac Tranter and Ben Kennan.

With the game in danger of slipping away, Williamson was thrown into the ruck in the third term and managed to get several hit-outs to advantage. But it wasn’t enough to break the control that Heidelberg West had around the ground.

Facing a five-goal deficit at the last change, Old Eltham Collegians coach Matt Sleeman urged his players to take risks and take the game on.

His players did just that and won the final term, but it was too little too late for Turtles fans.

“We’re disappointed with the loss, but happy we fought the game out,” Sleeman said.

“We now look forward to the next two challenges before the bye.”

The coach was happy with the work of Jeremy Murphy in the midfield as well as Tim Ellis, who took numerous intercept marks in defence and used the ball well.

Sebastian Francis-Perkins was another good contributor through the middle of the ground, while Jaedyn Kearney was solid in defence.

Ben Rowe finished off with two fourth quarter goals which both came as a result of excellent passes.

The first was a deft touch kick from Benjamin Cox. The second one came from 23rd player Max Hanlon.

Hanlon marked about 45 metres out and, rather than having a long shot at goal, fired a neat pass to Rowe who marked in space and then converted the easier shot.

Heidelberg West’s next month sees them face some competitive sides as they look to keep their place in the top four, while Old Eltham Collegians will hope for a better performance when they travel to Laurimar to take on the Power.

Rebels merch.

■ Do not forget to order your Alexandra rebels Club merchandise – polo shirts, warmup shirts @ $50, hoodies, vests @ $70, casual shorts, netball top @$40, Club stubby holders @$10, travel mugs @ $15, peaked caps and beanies @ $25, visors @$20, bumper stickers aref ree. Thursday night dinners are available after training with main course and sweets – adults$15 and kids $10, everyone is welcome.

■ The Alexandra Football Netball Club junior teams returned to Rebel Park for Round 3 of the 2023 season and hosted Broadford for three games of football and three games of netball.

As well, the Rebels were at Seymour for three games of netball, the Under 16 football playing Seymour at Euroa.

The Under 9s and 10s football had a game but theirs is non-competitive and non-scoring so there is no win loss for that competition.

Under 12s Football

Alexandra 2.2 (14) defeated by Broadford 3.4 (22)

North Central Construction – Jaidyn Dimech; Essence Coffee Lounge – Eli Van Lierop; Foodworks – Max Kaiser; Alexandra Bakery and Café – Angus Clark; Coach–Levi Campbell. Under 14s Football

Alexandra 18.12 (120) defeated Broadford 3.0 (18)

North Central Construction – Heath Sutcliffe; Essence Coffee Lounge – Jamie Nash ; Foodworks – Kayden Armstrong; Alexandra Bakery and Café – Aiden Campbell; Coach– Jayd Bennett.

Under 16s Football

Alexandra 9.4 (58) defeated by Seymour 15.9 (99)

DMK Taxation – Nathan Hendricks; Essence Coffee Lounge – Josh Crane; Foodworks –Dylan Woehl; Alexandra Bakery and Café –George Sotiropoulos; Coach – Thomas Kendall

Under 11s Netball

Alexandra Black 31 defeated Broadford 1 Foodworks – Charli Stephens; Alexandra Bakery and Café – Ashleigh Francis.

Under 13s Netball

Alexandra Black 18 defeated Broadford 14 Foodworks – Hannah Weeks; Alexandra Bakery and Café – Taya Barkley.

Under 15s Netball

Alexandra Black 16 defeated by Broadford 36

Foodworks – Ashlee Collett; Alexandra Bakery and Café – Chelsea Webb

Under 11s Netball

Alexandra Red 14 defeated Seymour 4

Foodworks – Tilly Miljkovic; Alexandra Bakery and Café – Isla Friswell.

Under 13s Netball

Alexandra Red 11 defeated by Seymour 26

Foodworks – Bella Twitchett; Alexandra Bakery and Café – Indi Hoornweg

Under 15s Netball

Alexandra Red 32 defeated Seymour 12 Foodworks – Billie Bermingham; Alexandra Bakery and Café – Ashlyn Newman; Incentive –

Abby Miljkovic.

Well done to everyone last Sunday, a very big day but all worthwhile when yous ee the little people active and happy. A very big thank you to the award sponsors for their continued support of our junior footballers and netballers in 2023.

Next Saturday, the Alexandra Under 16s football travel to Deakin Reserve to play Shepparton United

Next Sunday, Alexandra junior football and Alexandra Black netball travel to Yea whilst the Alexandra Red netball has a bye.

If anyone can assist with the canteen on home games during the season please speak to Melissa Crane and Shona Miljkovic to go on the roster.

Sunday juniors at Alexandra
Premier Division. A-Grade. Beaconsfield 9 d Upwey-Tecoma 32. Narre Warren 66 d onbulk 26. Mt Evelyn 35 d Gembrookockatoo 25. Wandin 64 d Olinda-Ferny reek 36. Berwick 50 d Pakenham Lions 19. Premier Division. B-Grade. Upweyecoma 42 d Beaconsfield 35. Narre Warn 83 d Monbulk 17. Mt Evelyn 65 d embrook-Cockatoo 24. Olinda-Ferny Creek 2 d Wandin 32. Pakenham Lions 37 d erwick 34. Premier Division. C-Grade. Beaconsfield 0 d Upwey-Tecoma 23. Narre Warren 56 d onbulk 17. Mt Evelyn 23 d Gembrookockatoo 12. Wandin 32 d Olinda-Ferny reek 23. Berwick 32 d Pakenham Lions 26. Premier Division. D-Grade. Beaconsfield 3 d Upwey-Tecoma 16. Narre Warren 48 d onbulk 14. Gembrook-Cockatoo 20 d Mt velyn 16. Olinda-Ferny Creek 31 d Wandin 1. Berwick 26 d Pakenham Lions 23. Premier Division. 17 and Under Blue. eville 68 d Mt Evelyn 4. Narre Warren 33 d OC 17. Pakenham Lions 31 d Berwick 16.
5 22 d Heat 8 21. St Mary’s 1 29 d homastown 2 21. Lalor 1 34 d Hume 1 31. pping 8: Bye. Kilmore 7: Bye. Bundoora 3: Bye. Netball Local Sport
- Ray Steyger ● ● Heidelberg West 14.8 (92) defeated Old Eltham Collegians 11.8 (74). Photo: NWM Studios
ww.LocalPaper.com.au The Local Paper - Wednesday, May 10, 2023 - Page 17
● Junior netball action at Alexandra on Sunday.

Local Sport

Tigers bounce back to triumph

Scoreboard

OE Women’s Footy

■ Division 1. Healesville 4.17 (41) d Berwick Springs 1.0 (6). Upwey-Tecoma 10.9 (69) d Pakenham 3.1 (19). Olinda-Ferny Creek v Monbulk.

Division 2. Wandin 5.0 (30) d Yarra Junction 3.9 (27). Hallam 5.8 (38) d ThorntonEildon 1.5 (11). Belgreave 8.11 (59) d Seville 3.4 (22).

Goulburn Murray Junior Football

■ Under 16 2. Moama v Shepp United. Tatura 12.19 (91) d Leitchville-Gunbower. Seymour v Alexandra.

Under 14 Seymour. Alexandra 18.13 (121) d Broadford 3.0 (18). Seymour Lions 11.12 (78) d Wandong Warriors 0.3 (3). Tabilk Blues 12.11 (83) d Yea Tigers 1.0 (6). St Mary’s Saints: Bye.

Under 12 Seymour. Broadford Roos 3.4 (22) d Alexandra Rebels 2.2 (14). Wandong Warriors 11.11 (77) d Seymour Lions 1.2 (8). Tabilk Blues 12.7 (79) d Yea Tigers 0.3 (3). St Mary’s Saints: Bye.

Outer East Junior Football

■ Under 18 Girls. EFNL Girls 1 v Emerald-Monbulk. EFNL Girls 2 v Mt Evelyn.

Under 17 Boys. Woori Yallock v Gembrook-Cockatoo. Seville 6.7 (43) d Monbulk 6.4 (40). Upwey-Tecoma 16.12 -108) d Wandin/Yarra Glen 5.3 (33). OlindaFerny Creek 9.2 (56) d Healesville 7.9 (51). Mt Evelyn: Bye.

Under 16 Girls. Healesville 6.8 (38) d

Belgrave 1.5 (11). Wesburn 3.1 (19) d Monbulk 1.6 (12). Mt Evelyn 10.12 (72) d Yarra Glen 1.0 (6).

Under 15 Boys Yarra. Wandin 10.12 (72)

d Mt Evelyn 6.4 (40). Woori Yallock 18.22 (130) d Healesville 0.0 (0). Wesburn 7.8 (50)

d Mon-bulk 1.6 (12). Upwey-Tecoma 9.6 (60)

d Olinda-Ferny Creek 5.8 (38). Emerald Black

9.11 (65) d Gembrook-Cockatoo 7.8 (50).

Under 15 Boys Ranges. Yarra Glen 11.12 (78) d Emerald 1.7 (13). Wandin 8.7 (55) d

Upwey-Tecoma 8.5 (53). Healesville 10.5 (65) d Mt Evelyn 0.1 (1).

Under 14 Girls. Mt Evelyn Maroon 5.6 (36) d Mt Evelyn White 2.2 (14). Em erald

3.6 (24) d Wesburn 1.2 (8). Belgrave 3.6 (24)

d Seville 2.3 (15). Healesville 13.16 (94) d

Olinda-Ferny Creek 1.1 (7). Upwey-Tecoma:

Bye.

Under 13 Miced Yarra. Mt Evelyn 16.11 (107) d Yarra Glen 4.2 (26). Emerald 5.8 (38)

d Upwey-Tecoma 2.9 (21). Olinda-Ferny Creek 14.13 (97) d Healesville 0.0 (0). Monbulk 3.10 (28) d Woori Yallock 3.6 (24).

Under 13 Mixed Ranges. GembrookCockatoo 13.7 (85) d Woori Yallock Yellow 0.0 (0). Seville 3.1 (19) d Belgrave 0.12 (12). Wandin 10.10 (70) d Upwey-Tecoma 7.2 (44). Healesville 4.4 (28) d Wesburn 3.4 (22). Mt Evelyn White 5.5 (35) d Olinda-Ferny Creek 0.1 (1).

Under 12 Girls. Upwey-Tecoma 4.3 (27) d Wesburn 1.0 (6). Olinda-Ferny Creek v Healesville. Wandin 6.4 (40) d Mt Evelyn 1.1 (7). Monbulk: Bye.

Yea golfers miss out

■ Yea Mens Pennant Team, after going through a four game season undefeated, lost the Pennant Final at Euroa GC on Sunday, 2-3 matches. Playing Eildon who they defeated in last year’s final, only Rick Wills and Tom White could secure wins on the day. Tom went through the whole season undefeated at number 5. It was a great effort by the boys to make the final again and all at the Club are all proud of them. Many thanks to Greg for Captaining the team and organising the boys. - Alan Pell

victory as Harvey signs off

■ North Heidelberg have snapped their three-game losing streak to produce their first win of the NFNL Division 1 season, with a brilliant 48-point victory over Macleod at Shelly Street Reserve.

In what marked an historic day for retiree Shane Harvey, the excitement in the atmosphere made for a match of second efforts and team collaboration, with the Bulldogs having all the motivation to complete a statement 15.10 (100) to 7.10 (52) victory. Harvey couldn’t have made his send off from football any better, leading all scorers with a five-goal game that cemented his legacy as an all-time great.

■ It didn’t take long for Heidelberg to return to the winners list in the NFFL Division 1 competition, getting past Greensborough at War Memorial Park to triumph by 22 points.

The Tigers had more scoring shots in all four quarters, with only inaccuracy preventing the reigning premiers from producing a greater result than the 8.15 (63) to 6.5 (41) final scoreline.

Sam Gilmore was brilliant once again in the ruck, the captain had many hit outs to advantage, giving his midfielders first use more often than not.

Jed Rule proved to be an arial threat for Heidelberg whenever the ball entered their forward 50, and was rewarded with two goals, while Sean Martin was a commanding presence in defence.

He was vocal and took multiple intercept marks for his side, vanquishing many of the attacking opportunities coming from Greensborough’s midfield.

The Boro’s Angus Sievers and Jack Johnston made life difficult for the Tigers. Their intercept marking and pressure heavily impacted Heidelberg’s efficiency on goal.

The first 30 seconds of the match was a clear indicator of how the game would unfold.

Gilmore would get a clean tap to advantage before the Tigers streamed forward, only to kick a behind. Benjamin Nikolovski scored the first goal of the game shortly after with a snap from 45 metres out in front.

The damp conditions made open play tricky, with a lot of contested ball and plenty of stoppages.

Heidelberg were winning possession, but Greensborough’s Austin Dillion kicked the next major of the game with a nice finish from 40 metres out.

The home side’s defensive efforts were especially highlighted in the opening term, with their pressure forcing Heidelberg’s forwards out into the pockets.

As a result, Greensborough built some mo-

mentum and were able to kick the next three goals to quickly establish a 13-point lead. Accuracy was a telling factor with the Boro converting more of their opportunities in the 4.1 to 1.6 quarter time scoreline.

The Tigers dominated in the second term. Again, they struggled early to convert their chances until Luke Bunker was hit up on the lead on the way to converting truly.

His goal ignited the visitors as a major soon after from James Amalfi put Heidelberg back in front.

Finding the goals was still a difficult task, as they kicked 2.5 for the term, but they were able to keep the Boro scoreless, ensuring they held the advantage at the main break.

The second half started off with some Luke Bunker brilliance, kicking a goal out of the contest for Heidelberg to push their four-point half time lead out further.

Jack Johnston was again prolific in defence but much of this was due to the sheer volume of ball coming inside his defensive 50.

Heidelberg then scored quick back-to-back goals, courtesy of Jed Rule and Kai Kearns, to bolster their lead. It was a telling period of the game where Greensborough’s defence looked vulnerable.

It was evident that the reigning premiers were handling the conditions better than their opponents and a 20-point lead at three quarter time looked to have the game very much in Heidelberg’s grasp.

The hosts tried to manufacture a comeback in the final term and thanks to excellent pressure by the Greensborough forwards, Thomas Phelan scored a terrific goal which brought the margin down to less than three straight kicks.

But that hope and optimism was extinguished by two more majors from the Tigers, all but putting the game out of reach for Greensborough.

The Boro found a sixth major late in the afternoon, but Heidelberg would finish 22-point victors. - Hamish Phillips, NFNL

The rest of the Bulldogs outfit followed in excellent form, with standout performances from Jesse Tardio, Hamish Murphy and Joshua Hamilton, while Nicholas Matthews set the tone of the match early in defence.

Macleod were steered by skipper Lucas Hobbs, leading the charge for his side through pivotal clearance work that opened up many chances to hit the scoreboard.

Kurt Manuel and Reid Brandt proved to be a dangerous presence around the ball all day, with Darcy Barden helping to stop a plethora of inside 50’s that kept the Roos in the fight.

The day would start with the man of the hour himself, as Harvey lined up to boot the first two majors with Liam Nunan following suite by kicking his own goal to give the hosts an early three-goal lead.

Craig Hayes’ side would respond quickly with Haydon Manuel kicking true for a major, as Lucas Hobbs followed in similar fashion for a goal to reduce the lead to eight points.

The Bulldogs chemistry continued to be reflected on the scoreboard through the first half, highlighted by Tardio breaking through two tackles into a handball toward a running Mitchell Dillon for a major.

The scoring kept on coming from the Bulldogs as Majak Daw made his stamp on the game with two set shot goals, Kyle McDonald also kicked two second term majors that extended the lead to 43-points.

Momentum was all the Bulldogs way, with McDonald’s speed around the ground in tandem with Billy Hogan’s hard-nosed play at the ball, overwhelming the Macleod midfield.

The Roos were able to whether some of the storm from goals by Shane Doherty and Kurt Manuel, giving their side some life as they faced a 32-point deficit at the main break.

Dane Whitnall would be the one to open the second half with a goal, which would be quickly followed by an electric snap at goal from Harvey that pushed the margin out to 44-points.

The contest wasn’t out of reach yet, proven by the visitors’ Reid Brandt, who snapped the ball truly from 30-metres out.

However, Harvey had other plans. He would soon kick his fourth, while Daw would close out the quarter with his third major of the day for a 48-point North Heidelberg lead at three quarter time.

Both teams started to slow down in the final term, as Cooper Bugeja showed some speed to break the scoring drought with a runin goal to give the Bulldogs their biggest lead of the game.

Manuel would kick two majors for Macleod, but with time running down Harvey would have the last say in his final game, converting his set shot for goal number five for the afternoon and goal number 1053 for his career.

It would be a fitting end for the North Heidelberg champion, who had led his team to yet another victory, this being one that could get the Bulldogs’ 2023 season back on track.

NFNL Bulldogs
● ● Heidelberg 8.15 (63) defated Greensborough 6.5 (41). Photo: NWM Studios. - Miles Earl, NFNL
Page 18 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, May 10, 2023 www.LocalPaper.com.au
● ● ● ● Shane Harvey ● ● Yea Golf Club: Neil Peterson, John Phillips, Greg Clements (Capt), Tom White and Rick Wills.
Observer Melbourne PHONE 1800 231 311 WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 2023 54 YEARS EST. 1969 ADVERTISING THE BEST OF EVERYTHING FREE IN THE LOCAL PAPER IN 40 LOCALISED EDITIONS FREE WITH
HAPPY AND GLORIOUS
● Queen Camilla and King Charles at Buckingham Palace after Saturday’s Coronation. Photo: Royal.UK

Bugs Bunny at the Symphony

■ Warner Bros. Discovery's Bugs Bunny at the Symphony, performed by the magnificent Melbourne Symphony Orchestra under the baton of the expert George Daugherty at Arts Centre Melbourne Hamer Hall, has been another outstanding concert in the 2023 MSO Season..

This program featured much of the original score, combining live and soundtrack, accompanying the original cartoons on the screen.

Created by George Daugherty and David Ka Lik Wong as a tribute to Bugs Bunny, this delightful and pleasurable experience took us down memory lane to enjoy the unforgettable characters of Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Elmer Fudd, the Road Runner and many more, still a favourite of many children and adults. I heard a 10 year old boy exclaim to his Mum – “this was sooooo good!”

The program included much loved and well known cartoons such as Baton Bunny , The Rabbit of Seville, What’s Opera, Doc? and others.

These clever animations were always accompanied by a fabulous variety of classical music such as Johann Strauss’ The Blue Danube, Waltzes From the Vienna Woods, Rossini’s 'The Barber of Seville' and of course Wagner’s dramatic The Ride of the Valkyries, The Flying Dutchman, Gotterdammerung, Tannhauser and more, and also the famous What’s up Doc? and Merrie Melodies' "That’s All Folks", allowing us to slip back into a treasured bygone era.

This program also included some new updated works which were created during the recent years of lockdown and cleverly resonated with the younger audience members.

George Daugherty is an experienced orchestra conductor who has won many awards for his work in film and television including a Primetime Emmy Award, and has conducted more than 250 American and international orchestras.

The mum of a four year old told me her daughter learns piano and she brings her to MSO concerts.

The audience standing ovation and cheers attested to the enjoyment and popularity.

Congratulations MSO!

St Kilda Film Festival

■ The St Kilda Film Festival will open on June 1 and run until June 12, featuring more than 100 films to be shown over 18 screening sessions at venues across St Kilda and also in South Melbourne.

A red carpet opening night will be on June 1 and feature a program of comedies, drama, animation, horror and fantasy, MC'd by Claire Hooper. The screening will be followed by an after party expanding into Encore at St Kilda Sea Baths to celebrate Australian short films.

Port Phillip theatres screening the program include the Palais Theatre, the Astor Theatre and the Alex Theatre, as well as spaces throughout St Kilda and South Melbourne.

Now in its 39th year, St Kilda Film Festival is Australia’s longest-running short film festival, recognising the genre of short film, including music videos, gaming and immersive forms, celebrating some of Australia’s best local short filmmakers and screen artists.

SKFF is supported by major government partners Screen Australia and VicScreen.

Nina Simone music

■ After a knock out performance at Memo last year, Ruth Rogers-Wright returns performing ‘The Great Songs of Nina Simone’ in a concert including original music and poetry evoking the spirit of this acclaimed artist.

Date: Sunday, May 28.

Time: Doors 3pm, Show 4pm

Venue: Memo Music Hall, 88 Acland Street St Kilda

WORSTWOOD HO

■ The Victorian Theatre Company presents the Australian premiere of Samuel Beckett's Worstward Ho, May 24-June 3 at the Explosives Factory, Rear Laneway 67 Inkerman St, St Kilda

Directed by Richard Murphet and performed by Robert Meldrum, this collaborative team will present a text regarded as 'direct in impact, exuberant in energy, revolutionary in form, physical in its thought, urgent in its relevance.'

The story tells of a man beginning with nothing except the need to keep going. To survive without unnecessary baggage.

Gradually, through the care and rigour of his thinking and his use of language, he gathers in ‘the dim void’ of his imagination, a set of figures, detailed in their actions and their physicality.

Then, systematically and with equal care, he strips everything away until he is left with nothing except the empty space in which the ghosts of what he has created just barely hover.

Worstward Ho , written in 1983, was Beckett’s final extended prose text and is widely recognised as the most perfect summary of his life’s project and as ‘one of the supreme poetic texts of the 20th century’.

It is, however, little known, rarely read and even more rarely presented.

“Rob and I are fascinated by this text,” Murphet explains. “Separately, we have spent many decades attempting to find new artistic ways of responding to life, and trying to find the means (the style) for expressing what we experience.

“It is a rare gift to work together on a piece that so rigorously, vividly and wittily embarks on just such an endeavour. And that does not let up until the bitter end.”

Worstward Ho sets out to discover how little we need to survive the challenges of life. It is truly a parable for our time.

Performance Details: May 24 at7.30pm (Preview), May 25 at 7.30pm (Opening Night) May 26, 27, 30, 31, June 1, 2, 3 at 7.30pm

Venue: Explosives Factory, Explosives Factory, Rear Laneway 67 Inkerman St, St Kilda

Duration: 60 minutes

Booking: www.eventbrite.com.au/e/ worstward-ho-tickets-479671399067

Blue Caftan

■ The Blue Caftan, the Moroccan submission for Best International Feature Film, Academy Award (2022) and Un Certain Regard, Cannes Film Festival, is a beautifully produced, thoughtful film.

From the gorgeous extreme close-ups of sensuous blue fabric, dextrous hands and shimmering gold thread which introduce the film, a luxuriousness of image, music and mood seduces the senses.

Immersed in the ancient medina of Salé, Morocco, Halim (Saleh Bakri) and his wife Mina (Lubna Azabal) create gloriously embroidered caftans with only the best fabrics and impeccable workmanship.

As one of the very last remaining maalems (master tailors), Halim has a dedication to absolute quality of materials and workmanship. To achieve this faultless standard, every fabric must be perfectly draped, every thread must be laboriously hand spun, and every thread hand stitched.

Consequently, their self-important and wealthy clientele are increasingly impatient with the slow pace of traditional production.

The film's languid pace emphasises the subdued restraint and integrity of the couple, who remain stoic and considerate of each other.

The arrival of a much-needed apprentice Youssef (Ayoub Messioui) is a catalyst which injects a gentle conflict between these attentive companions.

A debilitating health issue further assaults the couple, but pain, strength, and sensitivity lead to expressions of love. This love enables accep-

tance of a moment of a hitherto unspoken truth and is strengthened by the spoken understanding.

Contrasting with the close confines of shop, apartment, and bathhouse, the raï music constantly heard in the narrow alleyways, imbues an irrepressible vitality which eventually unites the trio and allows them to escape societal restraints.

Director Maryam Touzani (who wrote the screenplay in collaboration with Nabil Ayouch), cinematographer Virginie Surdej and composer Kristian Eidnes Andersen, together create an ambience which embraces us in the glorious texture of life.

One can only say (Shukraan), which translated to English means 'thank you'.

The Blue Caftan opens in Australian cinemas on May 18. Distributed by Potential Films www.potentialfilms.com

- Review by Evelyn Cronk

Grease to return

■ Grease is set to return as a Melbourne’s summer musical at Her Majesty’s Theatre from January.

The multi-million dollar production promises that’s dazzling costumes and all those unforgettable songs from the movie, including Summer Nights, Sandy, Hopelessly Devoted to You, You’re The One That I Want, Greased Lightnin’, and Grease is the Word.

“I am thrilled that Grease, one of the world’s all-time favourite musicals, is returning to Australia in a brand-new production featuring an all-Australian creative team,” said producer John Frost.

“Grease has always been about having fun and coupled with the much-loved songs and choreography, I know that this will be the party musical that everyone is talking about for a long time to come.”

“Melbourne is internationally renowned for its musicals, theatre and live entertainment. We can’t wait to roll out the red carpet for the spectacular national premiere of Grease, which is set to draw huge crowds in 2024,” said Lord Mayor Sally Capp

Casting announcements will be made in the coming months.

Book, music an lyrics by Jim Jacobs and Warren Casey. Additional songs by Barry Gibb, John Farrar, Louis St Louis and Scott Simon. Director – Luke Joslin. Choreographer – Eric Giancola. Set and Costume Design – James Browne. Lighting Design – Trudy Dalgleish. Sound Design – Michael Waters.

Charlie Kinross.

■ Since the first curtain call in 1984, Arts Centre Melbourne’s State Theatre stage has been graced by the likes of Prince, Anthony Warlow and Kylie Minogue – entertaining hundreds of thousands of theatre goers in the nearly 40 years since it opened.

Today a significant milestone has been reached in the Victorian Government’s $1.7 billion Melbourne Arts Precinct Transformation , with the appointment of a head contactor, Lendlease as the provider of the Main Works package that will breathe new life into a treasured Melbourne icon.

As a major component of MAPT, Arts Centre Melbourne’s Theatres Building (under the Spire) is undergoing significant upgrades, ensuring that it’s fit-for purpose for future generations of performers and audiences.

Works include the restoration and enhancement of the heritage State Theatre auditorium including new seating, flooring and other air conditioning improvements for audience comfort.

Technology at the theatre will be upgraded with new state-of-the-art lighting, sound system upgrades and broadcast infrastructure –bringing the creative icon into the 21st Century.

Improvements will be made to accessibility of the State Theatre, with the addition of new lifts and wheelchair positions in the Stalls, meaning that for the first-time wheelchair users will have choice from all three seating levels.

The project is also increasing the numbers of enhanced amenity seating (with more space between rows) to aid mobility impaired patrons.

Two new hospitality spaces will be built into the western and northern façades of the Theatres Building, giving more choice for pre- and post-theatre dining.

Back-of-house improvements include an expanded underground Loading Dock, effectively doubling its current size, giving the potential for more shows to be staged, with greater efficiency in bumping in (and bumping out) productions.

A new rehearsal space and studio, built to the same dimensions as the stage, will allow performers to rehearse and warm up right next to the stage for the first time.

Most of the Theatres Building is underground and elements of the specialist engineering system that protects the building’s foundation from corrosion will be replaced –safeguarding the building’s future.

Lendlease has been managing the early works on the project since July 2022, during which critical shared services were relocated to keep Arts Centre Melbourne’s shows running during construction.

A concrete and steel terrace at the rear of the building has also been removed, making way for future excavation works to expand the building’s footprint under Sturt St.

The transformation of the Melbourne Arts Precinct brings together and is spearheaded by leaders in the creative industry including the Melbourne Arts Precinct Corporation (MAP Co), Creative Victoria, National Gallery of Victoria and Arts Centre Melbourne, along with Development Victoria. Arts Centre Melbourne remains open during works which are due to be completed in 2027.

- Cheryl Threadgold

Page 20 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, May 10, 2023 www.LocalPaper.com.au
Melbourne
is cheap, gossip is priceless Local Theatre What’s On At Arts Centre
Confidential
Talk
● ● Robert Meldrum in Worstward Ho. ● ● Sam Fallon (left), Casey Donovan, Karen Quinlan AM, Isabella Triscari, Estelle Crompton-Lamb, Steve Dimopoulos and Nina Taylor. Photo:
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Shows

■ Peridot Theatre: #Bacchae Too (based on The Bacchae by Euripedes) Until May 14 at Clayton Theatrette, Cooke St., Clayton. Adapted and directed by Elise D’Amico and Joe Dias. Bookings: www.peridot.com.au

■ Bairnsdale Production Line Theatre: School of Rock (Musical) Until May 21 at the Forge Theatre and Arts Hub, Director: Peter Martignoles. Bookings: www.bairnsdale productionline.org

■ Williamstown Musical Theatre Company: The Boy From Oz Until May 20 at Centenary Theatre, 71 Railway Place, Williamstown. Bookings: 1300 881 545 www.wmtc.org.au

■ CLOC Musical Theatre: Catch Me if You Can May 12 – 27 at the National Theatre, 20 Carlisle St., St Kilda. Director: Richard Perdriau; Musical Director: Tony Toppi; Choreographer: Felicity Bender. Bookings: www.cloc.org.au

■ The Mount Players: Buried Child (by Sam Shepard) May 12 – 28 at the Mountview Theatre, Macedon. Director: Robert Wallace. Bookings: www.themountplayers.com

■ Mansfield Musical and Dramatic Society (MMUDS): Shirley Valentine (by Willy Russel) May 13 – 27 at the Mansfield Performing Arts Centre, Mansfield Secondary College, 15 View St., Mansfield. Director: Karen Pirie. Bookings: www.mmuds.org.au

■ Warragul Theatre Company: Jekyll and Hyde (Musical) May 19 – 27 at the West Gippsland Arts Centre, Warragul. Bookings: www.warragultheatrecompany.org.au

■ The 1812 Theatre: Waiting for Godot (by Michael Aitkens) May 18 – June 10 at 3 Rose St., Upper Ferntree Gully. Director: Neil Barnett. Bookings: 9758 3964 admin@1812theatre.com.au

■ Beaumaris Theatre: The Three Musketeers (by John Nicholson and Le Navet Bete) May 19 – June 3 at 82 Wells Rd, Beaumaris. Director: Richard Keown. www.beaumaris theatre.com.au

■ Mordialloc Theatre Company: It’s Only a Play (by Terrence McNally) Until May 13 at the Shirley Burke Theatre, 64 Parkers Rd., Parkdale. Director: Peter Newling. Bookings: 9587 5141 or www.mordialloctheatre.com

■ Mountain District Musical Society: The Sound of Music May 26 – June 4 at The Karralyka Centre, Ringwood. Bookings: www.mdms.org.au

■ Wonthaggi Theatre Company: Dusty the Pop Diva Musical May 26 – June 10 at the Wonthaggi Union Community Arts Centre, 96 Graham St., Wonthaggi. Enquiries: (03 5671 2470 or wonthaggi.artscentre@basscoast. vic.gov.au

Auditions

■ Essendon Theatre Company: A series of One Act Plays, written and directed by members of the company. Auditions: May 13 3pm5pm (Dance auditions only); May 16, 18 from 7.30-9.30pm (Callbacks May 20 if required). www.essendontheatrecompany.com.au

■ LilydaleAthenaeum Theatre Company: The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged) (Revised) (Again) (by Adam Long, Daniel Singer and Jess Winfield) May 11 at 7pm at 39-41 Castella St., Lilydale. Director: Katie-Jane Amey. Audition bookings: Katie-Jane Amey kjamey327@gmail.com

■ Moonlite Theatre: An Evening of Three Short Plays (by William Alexander, Katrina Samaras and Debbie Barker) on May 13 at 2pm and May 18 at 7pm at the Holy Trinity Church Hall, 19 Gisborne Rd., Bacchus Marsh. Directors: Alex McMurray and Debbie Barker. Audition bookings: almac45@gmail.com or mickeyleigh@ bigpond.com

■ Brighton Theatre Company: Fracked! Or Please Don’t Use the F-Word! (by Alistair Beaton) May 21 at 7.00pm, May 23 at 7.30pm at Brighton Theatre, Cnr Carpenter and Wilson Sts., Brighton. Director: Alan Burrows. Audition enquiries: aburrow1@bigpond. net.au or 0412 077 761

■ Melbourne French Theatre: Flagrant Délire (in Flagrente Delirium) (Flagrantly Delirious)(by Jean-Pierre Martinez) on May 13 at 2.00pm, May 15 at 7.00pm at La Maison de Maitre Building, 203-205 Canning St., Carlton. Director: Luca Romani. Please note: Fluent French-speaking actors only. Audition enquiries: www.melbournefrenchtheatre. org.au/audition

■ Peridot Theatre: Things I Know to be True (by Andrew Bovell) May 15 and 17 at Fleigner Hall, Oakleigh East. (Director: Kellie Tweeddale) Audition bookings: k.tweeddale@yahoo.com )

Enter tainment

MARIE ANTOINETTE

■ Monash Uni Student Theatre (MUST) presents Marie Antoinette from May 11-20 in the MUST Space, 2 Chancellors Walk, Monash University.

Written by David Adjmi and directed by Annabelle Wemyss, this interpretation of Marie Antoinette transports the often-contested historical figure into an entirely new world - an expressionist fever dream.

For Marie , extravagance is escapism while she strives for comfort in her life away from Austria as the new queen of France.

She longs to bear children, and all eyes are on her to produce an heir, but instead, she is forced to deal with the immaturity of her own husband, Louis XVI

As gossip flies and revolution simmers, Marie burrows her 10 feet of hair further into her world of sugary opulence, until it soon begins to sour.

For director Annabelle Wemyss: "Marie Antoinette is a melange of nightmarish confusion and ethereal beauty. Marie's psyche is examined with moral ambiguity - served to audiences on a golden platter."

Performance Dates: May 11-20

Tickets: $16 MSA+, $18 Conc, $22 Full Bookings: msa.monash.edu/must

Venue: The MUST Space, Ground Floor, Western End, Campus Centre, 21 Chancellors Walk, Monash University, Clayton

Run Time: approx. 100 mins with interval

Age Suitability: 13+ Content Notes: Coarse Language, Physical Violence - Cheryl Threadgold

Hans Zimmer

■ In one of its MSO at the Movies series, the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, in association with Concert Lab, paid a magnificent tribute to the composer Hans Zimmer in a Music of Hans Zimmer concert at Hamer Hall, Arts Centre Melbourne.

Hosted by the presenters of the popular podcast Art of the Score, Andrew Pogson and Dan Golding, with the orchestra led by the everreliable Nicholas Buc (also a host of Art of the Score), those in attendance were treated to a wonderful uplifting evening which celebrated the genius of Zimmer.

You may not know the name but you’ve almost certainly seen a film that Zimmer has scored as music from films such as Driving Miss Daisy, Pirates of the Caribbean, The Lion King, the Batman Dark Knight trilogy and Gladiator was performed.

Film scores can be a neglected artform but they are critical in setting the mood and tone of a film. Zimmer is a pioneer in using electronic instrumentation and collaborating with fellow composers in writing scores.

Pogson and Golding (and occasionally Buc), through their introductions to each of the 12 pieces performed, added interesting context and commentary on the pieces and Zimmer’s composing process. Their contributions gave extra insight into the creative process.

However, the night really belonged to the MSO which, with Buc at the helm, gave rousing renditions of the bigger bolder pieces while finding great depth and subtlety when interpreting quieter moments.

My one reservation about the evening was a problem with sound balance during parts of the performance. This was most obvious when, after the hosts had sung the praises of the use of the organ for the Interstellar score, it was hard hearing the organ at times.

Overall, however, this night was another wonderful example of the bold, successful and highly entertaining programming and performances that the MSO continues to deliver to Melbourne audiences.

www.mso.com.au

Selling Kabul

■ There is a claustrophobic sense of both physical and moral entrapment in Sylvia Khoury’s, Selling Kabul.

Hiding in his sister’s apartment, Taroon (Khisraw Jones-Shukoor) is awaiting news regarding a putative visa to America as well as information regarding the birth of his first child.

Having translated for the American forces, he is now listed for reprisal by the Taliban. His sister, Afiya (Nicole Nabout), arrives with news but cannot tell Taroon the entire story about his wife or new child lest he endanger those that have tried to shelter him.

Neighbour and friend, Leyla (Claudia Greenstone), is also kept in the dark because information shared in confidence can compromise everyone.

Afiya’s husband, Jawid (Farhad Zaiwala) tries to make arrangements to smuggle Taroon out but he is simply a lowly tailor and powerless against the forces assailing them all.

The challenge for director, Brett Cousins, has been to convey the light-heartedness of the normal social dynamic between siblings, partners and friends while at the same time insinuating how, at each level, the dynamics we often take for granted have been perverted by the Taliban’s social perspective.

Khoury’s dramatic shifts have made this a little protracted but Nabout’s depiction of a harried sister and wife serves as the moral centre of the play.

She conveys the overwhelming exhaustion of her character’s position; a flawed individual who still insists on doing what she sees as ethical.

Sophie Woodward’s set and costumes add authenticity to both the Afghan location and the sense of confinement. The kitchenette is cramped. The rugs and cushions are almost too good in a poor home.

Whilst long, Khoury’s play depicts a society that has lost any sense of trust. Individuals are trapped by repressive laws and attitudes that undermine the social fabric and foster lies, deceit and betrayal. Doing what is right under such circumstances is almost impossible.

Media Flashes

■ After 19 years as Michael Bublé’s Musical Director, Los Angeles based singer-songwriter and pianist Alan Chang is going solo with his catchy debut song Love As A Weapon. For his solo debut, Alan called on legendary bassist Pino Palladino and saxophonist Dave Koz to craft a song that sits in the Australian Indie Pop Alternative market and reveals a clever jazz aesthetic.

■ Lucy Manly has started at Daily Mail Australia as a Senior News Reporter.

■ Alexandra Middleton is now a City Reporter for the Herald Sun.

■ A broad-reaching partnership between the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra and London Symphony Orchestra signed in London last year, has resulted in the launch of a new in-house record label for the MSO that will expand the Orchestra’s international reach into more than 200 countries.

■ Corononations are in the news this week – from the one that happened in England last weeked to one coming to a theatre near you soon.

Lyster Opera’s touring production of Monteverdi’s The Coronation of Poppea is about to start its Victorian tour.

Composed in 1643, The Coronation of Poppea was an immediate success and was played across Europe.

The score then mysteriously disappeared for over two centuries, and when it was rediscovered, it was met with renewed acclaim.

It’s set on Mount Olympus , where three goddesses compete to establish their supremacy over the mortal world.

They set into action the story of the Emperor Nero, who is determined to have his mistress Poppea ascend the throne –but needs to remove a few obstacles along the way, including anyone who might stand in the way.

The roles of Poppea and Nero are sung by soprano Piera Dennerstein and tenor Hew Wagner, with Helen Koehne as the Empress Ottavia, Michael Lampard as Poppea’s discarded lover Ottone and Kerrie Ann Bolton as Poppea’s nurse, Arnalta.

Other roles are sung by Mandy Lyn Brook, Angelique Tot and Adelaide Soccio Greenaway, Troy Castle and Josh MortonGalea. Audience favourite Pamela Christie is musical director and accompanist.

Director Jamie Moffat also sings the role of Seneca, and he says that The Coronation of Poppea presents special challenges.

“It’s a witty and really theatrical work, so we shouldn’t smother it with too much reverence. It clearly wasn’t intended by its creators to be taken literally. And it has survived over the centuries because its story and music are so strong. It’s a very accessible opera which I have loved since I was a kid,” Jamie says.

Lyster Opera will be performing the opera in English with costumes designed by Maddy Connellan.

The first performance is Victoria Theatre, Tarnagulla on May 13 at 2 pm, followed by a Melbourne performance at The Edge, Federation Square on May 19 at 7.30pm. Other performances are in Oxley and Daylesford. For full details visit lysteropera.com.au or call 0410 890 388.

ABC Classic 100

■ ABC’s Classic 100 will make its way to Hamer Hall with a highlights concert performed by the MSO under the baton of Benjamin Northey, Principal Conductor in Residence and the concert’s Creative Director.

In 2023, ABC Classic and ABC Jazz are asking audiences to nominate their favourite musical instrument from all musical cultures and traditions including classical, jazz, pop, folk, and everything in between.

On the weekend of June 10-11, the top 100 instruments will be counted down live on ABC Classic and ABC Jazz, and on the ABC listen app.

On Thursday-Friday, June 22-23, ABC presenters and special guests will join the MSO and Northey for a special MSO concert that will celebrate instruments from the Top 100, as voted byAustralian music lovers.

● ● Felicity Barrow in Marie Antoinette
The Coronation
Local Theatre Observations
● ● ● ● Farhad Zaiwala, Khisraw JonesShukoor and Claudia Greenstone in Selling Kabul. Photo: Jodie Hutchinson.
www.LocalPaper.com.au The Local Paper - Wednesday, May 10, 2023 - Page 37
● ● Piera Dennerstein

GRAHAM KENNEDY REVEALS HIMSELF

■ Australian television ‘King’ Graham Kennedy described radio man H enry Gay as his “oldest living friend”.

The pair met at Melbourne radio station 3UZ in 1950, and continued their association until Kennedy’s death in 2005.

Henry Gay died last month (April 2023) after many years of retirement at Hervey Bay, with wife Maureen.

Long before his own death, Henry G ay gave permission for the Melbourne Observer newspaper to p ublish his memoir, Graham Kennedy Reveals Himself, with includes a number of personal letters and faxes from Kennedy.

PART 1

Dear Oldest Living Friend

I realise the ambiguity of the above - I meant, that of all the people I know and consider friends, I’ve known you the longest.

John Wesley, my school chum and very best friend, died (years ago) at age 38 and I’ve never quite recovered from it. He was a very special person.

His widow and I still keep in touch and she stays with me when she visits Sydney.

I keep in touch with Kathy Whitta too but I’ve known you longer, of course,

So, like it or not, you are my oldest living friend. Two of my late mother’s sisters are still alive and one of dad’s brothers but they are relatives, not friends.

So began one of the many letters Graham Kennedy sent me in the last 30 years of our 50 years’ friendship which began at 3UZ, the Melbourne Radio Station’s record library in 1950.

I was under the impression Publishers would vie with each other to publish his letters but how wrong I was.

They were not interested, so I adapted excerpts of the letters into a play, Graham Kennedy on Graham Kennedy, to be performed with another friend of Graham, Jim Murphy and myself, but was told by entrepreneurs it would only be successful if famous actors played the roles.

Not knowing Geoffrey Rush nor Russell Crowe the play has been shelved. Also, I wondered, would Messrs Rush and Crowe toss a coin to see who wouldn’t play me.

In fact, as a result of a phone call from our youngest son, Christopher, on the night of Graham’s death, I sat down and wrote a play involving a not very nice action in which Graham was a prime mover but I will not reveal the action here but maybe, God willing, when I reach a 100.

All that is revealed on the following pages is what Graham reveals plus a few anecdotes from something Graham had written which spring mind (parts of which I’m constantly losing everyday) .. .

Infinity Pool

■ (R). 117 minutes. Opens in selected cinemas May 11.

While not as good as his last movie, the marvellous Possessor, Brandon (son of David ) Cronenberg’s latest offering again provides strong entertainment.

Young couple James and Em Foster (Alexander Skarsgard and Cleopatra Coleman) are holidaying in the (fictional) island of La Tolqa, so James can find inspiration for a new book.

One evening they meet Gabi (Mia Goth) and her partner, who are part of an upper class clique who invite the two into their world, which involves wild, highly dangerous behaviour, and soon James and Em find it hard to disconnect, with their very identities beginning to blur.

Dead Ringers

■ (MA) (2023). Six episodes. Now streaming on Prime Video.

I can understand why publishers rejected publishing the letters Graham Kennedy sent to Hervey Bay, Queensland; where my family and I moved to in 1978.

The publishers all demanded the same thing with the letters, though they didn’t express it as such except one, they were only interested in the letters if they were controversial, mainly his sex life.

They were hoping the letters contained steaming homosexual liaisons with famous people, and gossip about the people with whom he worked.

These letters almost make it an autobiography by Graham Kennedy. He is not the person seen every night on television, nor what his fans would think he was like.

As a matter of interest I don’t think Graham wasted his time on anyone he didn’t like though, like all top name performers, he used people whom he didn’t consider his friends who often they declared themselves to be his friends..

Even a television station, which will be nameless, has (or had) an executive who told me that no one would be interested in Graham Kennedy these days and they were now concentrating on a younger audience under 39.

A week later they revived a one time popular Saturday night show, presented by a compere (now in his 50’s) having a successful return but the executive must have been disappointed for it didn’t attract the audience he was after.

Perhaps the executive was right. Audiences have changed. I have no intention of analyising the success or the character of Graham Kennedy. The letters will do it much better.

Hopefully the letters, and even the little bits I write, will give you another insight of this unique person. If I may offer one personal thought and, though he was more admired for his talents than the person himself, I, for one, liked him better as a person than his

TV performances, the reason being I knew him as a person before he became ‘The King’,sharing his interests in music and show business.

When people ask me why we were friends for so long I reply , “Because I was never a threat.”

Most of my friends call me a “cynical bastard” and they are right on two accounts. You will discover that Graham was nearly one, too.

The people working with Graham were all aware of his sexuality but, being professionals, the private life of their colleague wasn’t their concern; there may have been the odd moments but really, they couldn’t have cared less because Graham’s performances on TV provided them with a living and the television stations a steady income and profit. Many hated him but admired his talent.

One of the highlights of In Melbourne Tonight was the segment in which Bert Newton and Graham would spend 10 minutes in a routine that the viewers always thought were ‘off the cuff’ but it was a well rehearsed spot.

It was also an opportunity for Graham to remind viewers of Bert’s religion (Catholic) and suggesting he drank a lot; Graham occasionally played “camp” roles but, according to Bert who told Maureen, my wife, that if the “camp bit” went too long, Graham would often say, “That’s it, my mother may be watching.”

As you will discover, this was a strange remark when you read one of his letters about his mother.

Divorce was a taboo subject with him. In a play we were both in I asked an actor why he was getting divorced and Graham said to me in a voice of disapproval,

“You don’t ask people that.” The tone of his voice made me never mention or discuss divorce again.

In several of his letters you’ll find why.

Continued on Page 45

Though there is nothing new here in regards to criticising the actions and mentality of the rich and elite (a particular set-up early on is reminiscent of The Forgiven, with Ralph Fiennes), Cronenberg energetically, and at times imaginatively, dives head-on into this indulgent, bubble-like world, and his willing cast are up to the challenge, especially Goth (who mightily impressed in the recent Pearl), who is both intimidating and funny.

Darkly humorous, and not for the faint-hearted, Infinity Pool is splendid viewing, and if you like this, and have not seen Cronenberg Jr’s previous films, Possessor and Anti-Viral, then please seek them out.

RATING - ****

November

■ (M). 106 minutes. Opens in selected cinemas May 11.

The horrific, violent terrorist attack on Paris in 2015 is given mildly compelling treatment in November, which sadly doesn’t dig deep beneath its convincing surface. The film covers the five days after the shocking attacks, focusing on the anti-terrorism services, and the pressure on every officer and agent (which includes Jean Dujardin, Oscar winning actor from The Artist) to produce results quickly. Cowriter/director Cedric Jimenez keeps things pretty taut, and presents events in a very slick manner, but just like his 2014 drug empire movie, The Connection, frustratingly maintains a rather superficial sheen, when he should have provided far more meaty and provocative material, in the vein of Kathryn Bigelow’s Zero Dark Thirty and David Fincher’s Zodiac

If treated as a visceral thriller, November is effective, but for those wanting something more, they may come away somewhat disappointed.

RATING - ***

I was definitely wary of this new limited series, as the 1988 film version (an adaptation of the novel by Bari Wood and Jack Geasland) is one of my favourite films by renowned film-maker David Cronenberg (The Fly, Naked Lunch, The Dead Zone, Eastern Promises), but the wonderful surprise is that Dead Ringers 2023 wants to create its own unique identity, and examine a number of issues relevant to what is going on today.

The basic story is still the same; two brilliant doctors, twins Beverly and Elliot Mantle (both played by Rachel Weisz), become hugely successful when they accept massive funding from controversial investor Rebecca Parker (a superb Jennifer Ehle ) to open their own, radically advanced birthing centre.

Things start to unravel when Beverly falls for actress Genevieve (Britne Oldford).

Weisz is fantastic, and the digital trickery to put two versions of the actor in the one frame is totally convincing.

However, it is made even more seamless by Weisz’s distinctively separate performances (and Jeremy Irons should have won the Oscar for Best Actor that year for his incredible performances).

The gender switch this time around is no mere gimmick, and is used by the writers and directors to explore a lot of rich subject matter (but beware, sometimes it is very graphic).

Visually the show is gorgeous, and is filled to the brim with symbolism, similar to the work of Park Chan-wook (Oldboy, Decision To Leave).

Dead Ringers 2023 is indeed a stand alone creation (much like both versions of Loilta, S tanley Kubrick’s in 1962, and Adrian Lyne’s in 1997, were both terrific in their own individual way), taking a bizarre true story and crafting something absorbing, confronting and memorable.

RATING - ****

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● ● ● ● Aaron Rourke
Page 38 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, May 10, 2023 www.LocalPaper.com.au
● ● ● ● Australian TV legend Graham Kennedy with this horse.

■ I had the great pleasure of actually seeing Ray Milland onstage in a play titled Hostile Witness at the Princess Theatre in 1967.

I had watched Ray Milland in his many films over the years and it was a big thrill to see him ‘in the flesh’.

Alfred Reginald Jones was born in Neath, W ales in 1907 and only spoke Welsh until the age of five.

Alfred was a very keen sportsman in his teenage years and became an accomplished horseman.

At the age of 21 he went to London to become a member of the elite Household Cavalry (guard for the Royal Family).

To supplement his income he worked as an actor in films, firstly as an extra and then was gradually promoted to small roles.

In 1929 he was cast as a character in a film titled The Flying Scotsman where he used the stage name of Raymond Milland

This led to a nine month contract with the MGM studios and Ray moved to Hollywood to try his luck.

He married Muriel Weber in 1932 and they were together throughout his life.

In 1934 Ray was cast in We're Not Dressing for Paramount Studios and worked with Bing Crosby and Carole Lombard

His role in Beau Geste in 1939 was a turning point in his career. Ray Milland became a big box office star and was in demand for leading

Whatever Happened To ... Ray Milland

roles. He was a licensed pilot and tried to enlist in the Army when the Second World War began but was rejected due to a hand injury.

Ray volunteered as a civilian flight instructor and continued to make films throughout the war years.

In 1942 he made a film titled Reap The Wild Wind with John Wayne and in later years stated that his premature baldness was due to the curling of his straight hair during that production.

In 1945, Ray Milland became the first Welshman to win a Best Actor Academy Award for his brilliant portrayal of an alcoholic in The Lost Weekend. His notable films included, I Wanted Wings, The Uninvited and The Big Clock.

He had his own television series, The Ray Milland Show, in 1953 and played a university professor.

Ray Milland is best remembered for the classic film Dial M For Murder. He worked with Alfred Hitchcock and his co-stars included Grace Kelly and Robert Cummings

Another Ray Milland film that has gained ‘cult status’ was titled X but is also known as The Man With The X- Ray Eyes

He starred in many television shows during his career and discarded his toupee in his later years. He played small roles in two classic films, Love Story and Rosemary's Baby Ray Milland was in more than 126 feature films which must be some sort of a record. He preferred to stay at home with his wife rather than attend Hollywood parties. The couple had two children. Ray Milland passed away from cancer in 1986 at the age of 81.

I am so pleased that I got to see him onstage all those years ago - I thought Ray Milland was a wonderful actor.

Kevin can be heard on 3AWThe Time Tunnel - Remember WhenSundays at 10.10pm with Philip Brady and Simon Owens. And on 96.5 FM That's Entertainment - Sundays at 12 Noon. www.innerfm.org.au

SOFT vs EDGY AT BURRINJA GALLERY

Soft vs Edgy –

Natalie Wijeyeratne

Soft vs Edgy is a new collection of original acrylic paintings exploring the nature of Passivity / Growth, Loud and Quiet Expression/Surrender/ Directness/ Starkness of reality/ Sensuality; and the way these themes emerge both visually on the page and meta-phonically in relationship to one’s self and others.

Are these concepts mutually exclusive? Where do they overlap? How can we be both?

In a time where vulnerability is encouraged, is it Edgy to be Soft? Or Soft to be Edgy? These are the themes Natalie invites you to explore when viewing her 2023 series.

Exhibition closes May 27

Between Two Sites

The Between Two Sites exhibition and public programs respond to the impact of human activity on habitats in the Yarra Ranges and Alpine Shire.

Curated by Madelynne Cornish and Darah Lynch for the Bogong Centre for Sound Culture , it showcases the artwork of Victorian and international artists who participated in the centre’s residency program.

These artists have undertaken extensive fieldwork within the Yarra Ranges, Alpine National Park and Yarra Valley.

They have produced a new range of site - specific artworks that comprise a rich and diverse set of environmental references to deepen our understanding of these places.

Artists have used studio-visual installation, photography and sound composition to reflect the ecology of these region.

Exhibition opens May 27 and closes July 1.

Burrinja Gallery

351 Glenfern Rd, Upwey

Light Sensitive

Light Sensitive

is a major exhibition at Town Hall Gallery showcasing the narrative potential of light and its innovative application in art.

Drawing on the symbolic, conceptual, and functional qualities of the medium, from natural to neon, Light Sensitive offers immersive and contemplative experience celebrating the medium of light in its many incarna-

The Arts

Blender Studios

33-35 Dudley St, West Melbourne

Hot Lap

Eamon O’Toole

Self confessed revhead, artist and bike rider Eamon O’Toole is fuelled by his life-long passion for all things motorsport – a passion which he turns into sculptural creations of his favourite motorbikes and cars.

Painstakingly created out of hand-moulded plastic, enamel, aluminium foil, texts and more, O’Toole’s works are authentic scaled replicas if an impressive array of motor vehicles, tools, and motorsport paraphernalia.

Exhibition opens May 19 and closes July 16.

Benalla Art Gallery

Botanical Gardens

OK. With John O’Keefe

50 years for Ronnie Charles

tions. Exhibition closes July 15.

Out

of Reach – Amy Cohen

From silicate shells to looming mountains Out of Reach by Amy Cohen is a community exhibition influenced by awe-inspiring organic structures.

Cohen experiments with form, materiality, and texture through ceramic sculpture and collages to emulate natural objects and landscapes.

Out of Reach explores the wonderment and possibilities of the vast world around us that fuels our imagination yet van sometimes leave us wanting.

Exhibition closes May 27.

Town Hall Gallery

360 Burwood Rd, Hawthorn

At Blender

Pop ‘Round

is a group exhibition curated as part of Melbourne Design Week 2023.

Pop ‘Round is a casual, yet classy collection of furniture presented by Pop ‘Round collective, a trio pf emerging designers that have come together through a mutual passion for materiality, sustainability and love for sharing creativity with others.

They draw inspiration from the current trajectory of the world and aspire top produce work that is relevant and necessary.

Exhibition opens May 20 and closes May 25.

Bridge St, Benalla - Peter Kemp

Farmers Markets

■ Regional Farmers Markets will be coming to Abbotsford Convent every month from this month.

Regional Farmers Market is one of the oldest and most established operators of farmers markets in Australia.

With 40 stalls featuring a wide range of seasonal fresh fruit and vegetables, eggs, honey, sustainably grown flowers, pastas and more from Victorian farmers, patrons can now look forward to filling their basket with the best of Victoria each month.

Regional Farmers Markets at Abbotsford Convent Saturday, May 13. 8am-1pm Cost: $2 (proceeds go to the Abbotsford Convent).

Len’s award

■ Len Baker, harness racing ccolumnist for The Local Paper/ Melbourne Observer, has been awarded the Graeme Goffin Media Award for Best Historical Feature, recounting each of the ten Inter Dominions held in Victoria from 1950 to 2018.

■ Ronnie Charles was lead singer in The Groop which was a big-time rock/skiffle band in Australia in the 1960s. They won Hoadley's Battle of the Bands and off to London they sailed. Ronnie hooked up with local UK musos writing and recording jingles. In 1974 he was lead singer on 'Prestidigitation ' featuring the London Symphony Orchestra and English Chamber Choir. No mean feat, imagine the logistics. Prestidigitation has now been remastered to cash in on the vinyl revival in this, the 50 th anniversary of Ronnie's involvement in the music business.

Bob’s good old days

■ Bob Phillips was Floor Manager of the Graham Kennedy Show on GTV during the early days of TV. Bob went onto work on Hey, Hey and many other live variety shows. He has written a book ' Like No Other Business ' relating the crazy times when even the so-called experts learnt how TV worked. It's a fun read, so relive the memories. Amazon online, or better book stores are best places to order your copy.

Beer Week in Melbourne

■ For many readers the Annual Beer Festival is a 'must', this year the magic dates are May 20-27. One popular event is the Hair of the Dog Beer Breakfast on May 26, the morning after the night before, being the 2023 Beer Awards.

Jane Fonda is 85

■ In case you were wondering, Jane Fonda is aged 85, and claims she has never felt better: “Happiest I've ever been.” Jane has every reason to be on the bright side as she will feature in four films this year.

31 flavours to sample

■ During the month of May, the place to visit is the annual Rocky Road Festival being held at the Great Ocean Road Chocolaterie in Bellbrae Thirty-one flavours to sample, your taste buds will go out of control. Festival winds up May 31.

Magazine
with Peter Kemp
Magazine
● ● Ray Milland
www.LocalPaper.com.au The Local Paper - Wednesday, May 10, 2023 - Page 39
● ● Ronnie Charles

Stateside with Gavin Wood in West Hollywood

AUSSIE STAR BACK FROM UNITED STATES

■ Hi everyone, remotely from my suite at the Ramada Plaza Hotel and Suites in West Hollywood comes this week’s news.

Still calls Australia home

■ Peter O'Brien is an Australian actor, best known for his role as an original cast member in 1985 of Australian soap opera Neighbours as Shane Ramsay

He reconnected with all the cast for an amazing final farewell. Peter came back to Melbourne for the taping from his home in West Hollywood where he is married to Australian actress Miranda Otto.

Life is grand in West Hollywood but the couple still call Australia home. It’s a trend with acting work starting back up again, the roles are on both sides of the Pacific Ocean

The big question is, will Peter O’Brien be in the new Neighbours which is now taping new episodes in Melbourne?

Long may the new version last for another 38 years. How many stories can the writers make up about the lives, loves and challenges of the residents in Ramsay Street, from their business relationships through to their deep pasts, in a cul-de-sac in the town of Erinsborough in Australia?

Soup company uses AI

■ Formed in 1869, Campbell Soup Company is now in its third century, and the iconic brand is embracing technology to make sure it survives to see a fourth.

Thanks to a growing product portfolio, and the use ofAI to spot new trends, Campbell is evolving beyond its soupy roots, per Food Dive

To identify new food trends the company uses a process called ‘Insights Engine’, which uses AI to review 300B menus, studies, and other data points per year.

Campbell’s employees use the data to understand where a trend is going, whether it will last, and if one of its brands is in position to capitalse on it.

Recent innovations include: oat milk-based soups, which the company rolled out in 2021 through Pacific Foods.

Flavour Up, a cooking concentrate that comes in three flavors and enhances the flavour of food. And these products are impacting the bottom line, innovation products currently account for 2 per cent of net sales, and the company hopes to reach 3.5 per cent by 2025.

Gone in one minute

■ Police around theUS are using gumshoe detective work to break up sophisticated rings that steal catalytic converters from vehicles, though many fear that they aren’t making a dent in a crime wave triggered by pricey precious metals.

Catalytic converters, cylindrical hunks of metal within the exhaust system of most cars and trucks, transform harmful gases into less-harmful ones using precious metals including rhodium, palladium and platinum.

Some vehicles, such as Toyota Prius models, large pickups and delivery trucks, are often targeted by thieves because their catalytic converters contain a lot of the metals.

Criminals use high-speed jacks and battery-operated saws to steal the devices in less than a minute, according to police.

Silcon Valley cuts

■ A bloodbath in Silicon Valley, Facebook aka Meta is cutting 11,000 workers roughly 13 pet cent of its workforce. Redfin and Salesforce are also slimming down. At Twitter, Musk not only laid off workers, but he eliminated the ‘Days of Rest’, the employees’ monthly paid mental health days.

Amazon is on a hiring freeze as it becomes the first public company in history to lose a trillion dollars in value. A correction for big tech isn’t all bad, though. A lot of people at these bloated Silicon Valley behemoths are doing fake jobs, and with that free time comes time to do annoying things that have nothing to do with Facebook’s bottom line, like attempting to manipulate American culture and algorithmically decide elections.

Also, people should get out of the nap pods and start companies. There’s a semi-famous quote about modern Silicon Valley that I think of a lot, said by a data scientist Jeff Hammerbacher: “The best minds of my generation are thinking about how to make people click ads. That sucks.”

Someone now is in the business of a small business; I highly recommend it. New business formation, which slumped after a 40-year decline, is on the rise again, and those businesses might be able to actually compete for talent now that the unlimited poke bowl party is over.

Out

and About Climaye Change latest

■ Five years ago, the journalist David Wallace-Wells explored a worst-case scenario for climate change one in which the planet warmed by as much as 5 degrees Celsius by 2100 causing widespread extreme weather, economic collapse, famine and war.

Now, David sees that level of doom as much less likely, he writes in an essay for the climate issue of The New York Times Magazine, where he is a columnist.

While 5 degrees of warming once seemed possible, scientists now estimate that the Earth is on track to warm by 2 to 3 degrees.

That difference might not seem huge, but it translates to fewer record-breaking floods, storms, droughts and heat waves and potentially thousands or millions of lives saved in the coming decades.

So how did we get to this point? There are three major explanations: First, the use of coal, which provides about 30 percent of the world’s energy, is expected to further decline.

Second, renewable energy prices have plummeted since 2010, solar power more than 85 per cent, wind more than 55 per cent and that affordability has made them a viable alternative to fossil fuels.

Finally, global powers have adopted serious plans to fight climate change.

US elections

■ The US is an outlier in two ways: the frequency of its elections and the number of government positions that are elected, said Larry Jacobs, a political scientist who has analyzed election trends in the US and other countries.

In other countries, parliamentary democracies typically hold elections every four or five years.

Those that have elections more frequently are typically suffering political crises. Israel, for example, held its fifth election in less than four years last week and voted to restore the previous prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, to power even as he faces corruption charges.

In the US, the Federal Government holds elections for Congress at least twice as often, every two years.

More local and state elections are sometimes pegged to the federal races, but not in most cases.

Americans elect more than half a million officials in total, from president to county coroner. It’s hard to compare this number to other countries, which might put more legislative seats to a vote but not, say, mine inspector or county engineer.

One example that’s particularly odd in a global context: “No other democracy in the world uses elections to pick judges or prosecutors,” said Richard Pildes, an elections expert at New York University . Instead, other officials typically appoint a country’s judges and prosecutors.

Service fee trap

■ You might’ve noticed something you didn’t order on your last dinner bill: a “service fee.”

Not to be confused with a tip, the service fee ranges from 3 per cent to 20 per cent of the bill, and it’s becoming increasingly common around the country.

But what exactly the fee represents isn’t always clear. The fee can indicate a range of things, including: A mandatory tip that goes directly to the server. Pay for back-of-house employees like chefs and dishwashers. Funds to cover workers’minimum hourly wage. Money for a restaurant’s credit card fees or owners. The fees also vary widely by state.

California, here you come

■ If you are considering coming over for a holiday, then I have got a special deal for you.

We would love to see you at the Ramada Plaza Hotel and Suites, 8585 Santa Monica Boulevard, West Hollywood.

I have secured a terrific holiday deal for readers of the Melbourne Observer and The Local Paper.

Please mention ‘Melbourne Observer’ when you book to receive the ‘Special Rate of the Day’ for your advance bookings.

Please contact: Jennifer at info@ramadaweho.com

In California, the fees go to the restaurants; in New York, they go to the service staff and in Florida, they can be used for whatever the restaurant wants. The tab keeps growing.

In one month, Americans spent $87Billion on dining out, up 11.4 per cent, while the price of food at full-service restaurants was up 8.8 per cent. Google searches for “service fee” and “service charge” have hit an all-time high with customers scrambling to make sense of their checks.

With all the confusion, the fee can cause diners to tip less, mistakenly thinking the money is going directly to their server

Magazine Magazine
www.gavinwood.us
Wood From my Suite at the Ramada Plaza Complex on Santa Monica Blvd ● ● ● ● ●
Gavin
Alan Johnson, Managing Director of Ramada Hotel and Suites in West Hollywood, with his good friend Peter O’Brien.
P age 40 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, May 10, 2023 MARKETING FEATURE
● ● Ramada Plaza Complex, West Hollywood
www.LocalPaper.com.au The Local Paper - Wednesday, May 10, 2023 - Page 41

Lovatts Crossword No 37

Across Across Down Down

1. Most private (thoughts)

6. Eyeball membrane 11. Pond plants 15. Made anew (2-7) 20. Impact sound 21. Genuine thing, the real ... 22. Hawaiian island

172. Heavy horned animal

175. Jogs 176. Boys

179. X, Y or Z

180. Be defeated

182. Upon 184. Abrupt

185. Destitute

186. In the manner of (1,2) 188. Jazz legend, ... Fitzgerald 189. Rabble 190. Sacred

The self 193. Olden days, days of ... 194. Narrow roads 196. Type of lily

Defendant's bond money

Collier

Hawkers

Unwell

Moneylenders

Machinery serviceman

Captivated

Arabian sultanate

... & papa

Vapour

Irish sweater style

Lots of

Imminent

Drawing up roughly

Comfortable chair

Jump

Mad Roman emperor

Honourable

Amateur radio enthusiasts

Church celebration

Fume-filled

Stagger

Actress, ... Russo

South American dance

1. Terrible tsar

2. Hitler follower

3. More mature

4. Stares lasciviously at 5. Pairs 6. Weaving fibre

7. Gives off 8. Lit 9. Alters

10. Undeniable (facts) 11. Bobcats 12. Comedian, ... Ball 13. Nailfile (board) 14. Bar

145. Squander, ... away

151. FA Cup stadium

154. Wooden beams

156. Eye-watering vegetable

159. Fuss, ... & cry

164. Bushranger, ... Kelly

169. Complete task (3,2)

170. Architect, Frank ... Wright

173. Turning up (skirt)

174. Incapacitates (racehorse)

177. Positive electrode

178. Casseroles

181. Male rowers

183. Scottish emblem

187. Retriever dogs

192. French policemen

195. Atone for

199. Infuriate

201. TV award

202. Actress, ... Redgrave

203. Frighten

204. Ski-track

206. Singer, ... Abdul

207. Russian mountains

208. Sloped walkway

209. Risqué

213. Numerous

215. Pink-eyed rabbits

217. Loch ... Monster

221. Chops down

222. Bury

223. Biting fly

224. Authentic

225. Pursue

226. Pakistan's ... Khan

228. Legal trade bans

234. Compliance

236. Most avid

238. Conger

240. Convent sister

242. Diminishing

243. Early foetuses

245. Disillusions (4,4)

247. Uranus & Pluto's neighbour

248. Paris boulevard, Champs ...

250. Students

251. Wild ponies

253. Sunset

255. Utilised

257. Oil cartel

258. Moon about

261. Kremlin country

262. Responsible

Outshine 273. Irish lass 274. Undisguised

277. Rotated

279. Heroic tale

281. House lizard

284. Just OK (2-2)

286. Spiders' traps

288. Was expert (in) 292. Deck over water

294. Arranges, ... up

295. Grieve 298. Sticker 300. Sultan's wives

301. Colorado ski resort

303. Volley of bullets

306. Exhale & inhale

308. Scarce as ... teeth (3'1)

309. Successor 311. Stingiest 314. Chilly 315. Clash 316. Flamenco instrument 317.

265. Rounded stone

266. Drift (into coma)

268. Corrosive fluids

269. The D of AD

275. Take part in ballot

276. Frolic

278. Boosts morale

280. Ringing (of bell)

282. Famous English college

283. 21st birthday symbols

285. Cosmonaut, ... Gagarin

287. Summer shoe

289. Lucky amulets

290. Covered shopway

291. Mental pictures

292. Looked intently

293. Delight

296. Pig's grunts

297. Reimburse

299. Record's secondary track (1-4)

302. Introduce gradually, ... in

304. Abundant

305. Indistinct

306. Skin eruption

307. Hindu garment

308. London's ... Park

310. Polishes

312. Repeat

313. Soft knocks

Magazine Magazine www.LocalPaper.com.au Page 42 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, May 10, 2023
Observer Melbourne
200.
205.
207.
210.
211.
212.
213.
214.
216.
218.
219.
224.
231.
235.
244.
246.
249.
252.
254.
256.
258.
259.
260.
263.
264.
265.
267.
270.
271. Slid 272.
191.
197.
198.
220.
227.
229.
230. Adolescent
232.
233.
237.
239.
241.
Different
Embroils
Former Soviet region (1,1,1,1)
Complained
Gloss
Beatle, John ...
Angrier
Crazy
Herb garnish
Grow quickly, ... up
Knaves
Shotgun lead
Reduced, ... down
Homing bird
Remove from washing-line
Deceased
Mosquito-like pest
Belgrade native 321. Afro or beehive 322. Spectacle glasses 323. Moaned wearily 324. Secrets, ... in the cupboard
318.
319.
320.
35. Equal (2,1,3) 37. Vipers
... Bana
(4,4)
Religious statues 44. Logic
Predicament, fine ... of fish 47. Uluru, formerly ... Rock 48. Long race 49. Distinguished conductor 50. Computer input (4,5) 53. Charged with bubbles 54. Metal extraction plant 57. Electrical device 58. Barristers 60. Ocean phase (3,4) 63. Easily 65. Viewed speculatively 66. Anxious 68. Engage (with) 69. Rove 76. Bigger 79. Exercise club 80. Majestic 81. Musical notes 83. Royal racecourse 84. Less wild 85. Japanese currency 88. Classifying 90. Confesses, ... up 91. Jug 93. Treat with O2 95. Concave mark 97. Constantly busy (2,3,2) 99. Mindless 100. Hair parasites 102. Street urchins 104. One's school, alma ... 107. Fool 109. Fish lungs 110. ... spumante 111. Timbuktu is there 113. Deceive (lover)(3-4) 115. Competitor 117. Ding ... dell 118. Remove peel from 121. Fine 122. Pizza herb 127. Taut 128. River-mouth triangle 129. Parent's mother 132. Embassy bosses 133. Absurd 134. Desexes 135. Fleeting 136. Spotted dog 137. Closets 138. Long thin cigar 140. Mushroom relative 141. Alias 142. Groups' representatives 143. Tyrant
15. Skating arena 16. Get by begging 17. Painter's stand 18. Pour with rain 19. Achievement 24. Singer, ... Redding 28. Dashing style 30. Small horse breed 31. Competes 33. Go too far with
38. Chopper actor,
40. Retaliates
42.
45.
23. Paralysis disease 25. Woman's betrothed 26. ... & dime 27. Nodules 29. Artlessness 32. Easiest choice, ... option 34. Chess castle 36. Sparkled 39. From Emerald Isle 41. Call in on 43. Male duck 46. Provide (food) (3,2) 48. Dinners or lunches 49. Manufactured 51. Concept 52. Endlessly 55. Space flight organisation 56. Bucket 59. Humble (oneself) 61. Set of rules 62. Be introduced to 63. Animal welfare group (1,1,1,1,1) 64. Doctor's ... manner 67. Award ribbon 68. Ghastly 70. Encrusted 71. Black Sea port 72. Not as much 73. Sharpshooter, Annie ... 74. From Lone Star state 75. Line touching curve 77. Onward 78. Putrid 79. Revolve on axis 82. Crudely hearty 86. In flight 87. Acceptable 89. Car distance gauges 92. Immense time spans 94. Sauteed 96. Pollution haze 98. Tailless feline, ... cat 100. Hang unlawfully 101. Female sheep 103. Identify 105. Cathedral, ... Dame 106. ... & twos 108. Yoga master 111. Classic painting, ... Lisa 112. Survives longer than 114. Leaving workforce 116. Chilled 119. Japan & Korea are there 120. Cake level 121. Career sportsperson 123. Model, ... Macpherson 124. Acorn trees 125. Consequently 126. Capacity to remember 127. News 130. Maiden name indicator 131. Sinking in middle 135. Bequeath 138. Cocktail, ... colada 139. Capricorn zodiac symbol 141. Parmesan & basil sauce 144. Chasm 146. Golfing body (1,1,1) 147. Biblical first man 148. Meadow (poetic) 149. Intelligence 150. High spirits 151. Unseen observer, fly on the ... 152. Deep ditch 153. Baby bird shelter 155. The N of NB 157. Peacock's mate 158. Siamese 160. Information services 161. Power pole 162. Intoxicated 163. The M of YMCA (3'1) 165. Poisonous tree-snake 166. Liqueur, ... Maria 167. Uncertainties 168. Smooths 169. Dissolve 171. Steak cut (1-4)
Magazine Magazine www.LocalPaper.com.au The Local Paper - Wednesday, May 10, 2023 - Page 43 g MEGA CROSSWORD No 37 12345 6789 10 11121314 1516171819 20 21 22 2324 25 26 2728 293031 3233 3435 363738 3940 4142 434445 4647 48 4950 51 525354 55 565758 5960 61 62 63 646566 67 6869 70 71 72 73 74 7576 77 78 798081 82838485 86 8788 899091 9293 9495 9697 9899 100 101102 103104 105 106107 108109 110 111 112113 114115 116117 118 119 120 121122 123 124 125 126 127128129 130 131132133134 135136137 138 139140 141142143 144145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153154 155156 157 158159 160 161 162 163164 165 166 167 168 169170 171 172173174 175 176177178 179 180181 182183 184 185 186187 188 189 190 191192 193 194195 196 197 198199 200201202203 204 205 206 207208209 210 211 212 213 214215 216217 218 219 220221222223 224225226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235236 237238 239240 241242 243 244245 246247248 249250 251 252253 254255 256257 258 259 260261262 263 264 265266 267268269 270 271 272 273 274275276 277278 279280 281282283 284 285 286287 288289290291 292 293 294 295296297 298299 300 301302 303304305 306307 308 309310 311312313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324
Page 44 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, May 10, 2023 www.LocalPaper.com.au

Crossroads

Ben’s new single

■ Better Side Of Me is the new single release for singer-songwriter Ben Sorenson

Ben says that the song pays homage to the person in your life that brings out the best and understands you unconditionally.

It’s the second single this year for Ben following on from the success of Slow Lane which featured on ABC Radio Grass Roots program.

More info: facebook.com/sorensen music66

Energy and depth

■ Melbourne blues artist Lloyd Spiegel is celebrating the release of ‘Bakehouse Dozen’

It was recorded live in session with no overdubs at Melbourne’s iconic Bakehouse studios. The album offers reimagined versions of songs from Spiegel’s last three multiaward winning recordings and showcases the raw energy and depth of the trio, signalling what’s to come, says his media release.

Album Launch: Friday, August 11, at Memo Music Hall.

Skyhooks Show

■ Bob 'Bongo' Starkie, guitarist with the legendary Skyhooks, performs the classic songs and a few more that need to be heard, in a personal celebration of one ofAustralia's most beloved bands. In between songs, Bob shares humorous anecdotes and insights into the inner workings of the Skyhooks. Birds Basement, Saturday, May 27.

From Page 15

He was deeply hurt when I didn’t invite him to my 21 st birthday and I don’t think he ever forgave me.

The reason I didn’t invite him was because most of those who attended were members of the football team I played with and I wasn’t sure if he would mix in with them but, when he became involved in a church concert with them, there were no problems.

He mixed in well with them. This was probably his second public performance. The year, by the way, was 1951.

As you read Graham’s letters you will begin to see another person emerge, surprising you not only by his humour, but by his interests and attitudes towards his parents.

I think he missed a normal family life. A friend and his young daughter and her friend once visited Graham’s Frankston home and as they watched the two young girls swimming Graham remarked how nice it was sit and watch the kids having fun.

You may be surprised, or even shocked by the remarks he makes about his parents, but one interesting theme running through his correspondence was the referral to his age and health.

If you didn’t know him you would think he had suicidal tendencies.

One of the strongest links of our friendship was music. Several of his letters have referred to suicides.

NOTRE ONES YOGI E A MONA OUTLASTS E RETIRING ICED S

ASIA TIER H T W PRO N N N ELLE OAKS T L F THEREFORE RETENTION L N I

TIDINGS I G R T NEE R Y N A SAGGING

I E R ENDOW PINA GOAT PESTO M N E

GULF A PGA ADAM LEA NOUS PEP B WALL H TRENCH L R NEST NOTA E O PEAHEN D

THAI D E MEDIA PYLON DRUNK

One very depressing letter referred to George Sanders’ successful attempt at dispatching himself. The $28,000 he mentions in the letter caused him much pain though, at the time, I was unaware of it until I had lunch with him one Saturday afternoon in Sydney as I went down to meet Maureen and a friend, Laurel Hosking, returning from a Mary Kay Seminar in Melbourne.

Graham cooked spaghetti with a very tasty homemade sauce, based on a recipe given to him by an aunt who had married an Italian.

It was during this lunch in his Hunter’s Hill flat, sharing a bottle of red, that I paid him a compliment on his loyalty to Harry M Miller during his imprisonment.

Almost spilling his drink Graham immediately changed the friendly mood to one of anger telling me that he was taking Harry to court over secret commissions.

Graham told me that Harry, on behalf of Channel 9, had asked him to come back to do a News Show at night.

It was good money. Graham said he didn’t want to do it but Harry said that if Graham did the show he (Harry) would give his commission to any charity he nominated.

Graham agreed if the money went to the Sydney City Mission, but he found out that Harry was receiving a commission. Graham felt betrayed. Then the mood changed, we just chatted about other things and I never mentioned the subject again.

GRAHAM KENNEDY REVEALS HIMSELF Magazine Magazine Crossword Solution No 37 Mike McColl Jones Top 5 THE TOP 5 COMMENTS THE 5 COMMENTS THE TOP 5 COMMENTS THE 5 COMMENTS HEARD A HEARD A HEARD A HEARD A T KING CHARLES KING CHARLES T KING CHARLES KING CHARLES CHARLES THE THIRD’S CORONA THIRD’S CORONA THE THIRD’S CORONA THIRD’S CORONA THIRD’S TION. TION. TION. TION. 5.“Thank God the bloody pen worked.” 4. “Why can’t we have a radio in the coach. I’ve got a red hot tip for the first at Ascot.” 3. Have we got time to duck down to the local for a quick pint?” 4.“With such a well-heeled congregation, the ‘collection’ should be a ripper,” 1.“Did someone say KFC?” Observations with Matt Bissett-Johnson Observations
To Be Continued INNERMOST RETINA A LILIES RECREATED V A I G WHAM G MCCOY U MAUI A A E E A Z POLIO FIANCE T NICKEL NODES E E NAIVETE SOFT I N U X I ROOK GLEAMED R IRISH VISIT DRAKE LAYON MEALS R MADE S IDEA CEASELESSLY NASA N PAIL ABASE T R CODE A T MEET P R RSPCA E T BEDSIDE N ROSETTE R MACABRE P W SCABBY B ODESSA O L LESSER T OAKLEY T E TEXAN G TANGENT S AHEAD I E RANCID C GYRATE R EARTHY O MIDAIR O T D OKAY E ODOMETERS A EONS L N S FRIED SMOG N W A W C MANX LYNCH Y EWES NAME
R S MENS U T MAMBA R TIA IFS D EVENS B E MELT O E TBONE RHINO TROTS S A LADS O LETTER I B LOSE ONTO N M SUDDEN T POOR H ALA ELLA MOB HOLY EGO O YORE U Y E LANES ARUM BAIL MINER R D W PEDLARS B X P S ILL S P N N USURERS M Y C REPAIRMAN ENTRANCED R A A OMAN MAMA I S E GAS L U E ARAN MUCH Y NEAR DRAFTING L RECLINER LEAP Y E NERO TEEN NOBLE HAMS MASS O SMOKY REEL T A I A A RENE SAMBA E B E ELSE L ENTANGLES A USSR B E B MOANED E LUSTRE O LENNON C MADDER B R NUTTY S PARSLEY P SHOOT I O ROGUES S PELLET U I SCALED O PIGEON Y O SKIDDED A UPSTAGE C COLLEEN N C OVERT O B SPUN S B EPIC M A GECKO SOSO Y WEBS SPECIALISED PIER G TEES T MOURN LABEL HAREM ASPEN SALVO Y RESPIRE HENS I A C A L HEIR MEANEST A A NIPPY DIFFER A GUITAR UNPEG C A S R K A DEAD T MIDGE N SERB L U H P HAIRSTYLE LENSES E SIGHED SKELETONS ● ● ● ● One of Graham Kennedy’s letters to Henry Gay. www.LocalPaper.com.au The Local Paper - Wednesday, May 10, 2023 - Page 45

GIGA IS THE ONE TO BEAT

■ The top young V ictorian galloper Giga Kick is the one to beat in the Doomben 10000, to be run on May 13.

The son of Scissor Kick is looking to atone for an unlucky second in the T.J.Smith Stakes behind I Wish I Win, only beaten a half-length, after becoming unbalanced in the early stages.

His record speaks for itself with a brilliant win in the rich Everest event, beating the best in the land, a great effort for a three-year-old, prepared by young Mornington trainer Clayton Douglas.

With his win in the Everest,he has taken his earnings over nearly $8 million rom only nine starts.

Another outstanding three-year-old Aft Cabin, prepared by leading trainer James Cummings, is all class as shown by his big win in the Arrowfield Sprint over 1200 metres at Randwick on April 8.

Prior to that run he was never out of trouble in the Randwick Guineas over 1600 metres.

On that occasion he missed the start and became unbalanced.

Another that has become right into the market is the top Queenslander, Rothfire , who scored a clever win, although just getting there, in the last few strides in the Victory Stakes at Eagle Farm.

He has been first-class since he started racing under leading Queensland trainer Robert Heathcote.

He has suffered a couple of nasty injuries throughout his career, but always gives of his best. He will be right in the firng line here.

Another good run in the Victory Stakes was that of the second placegetter King Of Sparta, prepared by the Snowden team, Pat and Paul.

He came at Rothfire hard in the last few bounds to go down by a half-neck.

The favourite in the Victory Stakes, top Sydney horse Private Eye, I felt was a little bit disappointing finishing out of a place, after appearing to have every chance in the straight.

Private Eye is rated among the best in the land and can atone.

One of the best sprinters going around at the moment is another Sydneysider, Mazu.

He finished a good third behind two of the best sprinters in the land, I Wish I Win, and Giga Kick, in the T.J.Smith Stakes at Randwick on April 1.

The four-year old by the top Japanese sire, Maurice, has won over $7 million in his 17 starts, for the Snowden team at Randwick.

He will be there when the whips are cracking, that is for sure.

On the next line is another Sydneysider in Overpass, a surprise winner of the Tabtouch Quokka over 1200 metres at Ascot in Western Australia.

In the care of leading Sydney trainer, Bjorn Baker, he was able to hold on to narrowly beat Western Australian champion mare, Amelia’s Jewel.

It was a great effort by the star three-yearold filly, Amelia’s Jewel, who has won eight of her nine starts now, with two seconds.

After drawing the extreme outside of the 14 runners, her rider, Pat Carberry, decided to

Ted Ryan

but he has won some good races. Another of Queensland trainer Rob Heathcote’s, in Prince of Boom, ran a good race to just get beaten by top sprinter Rothfire in the Victory Stakes and is in fine form, after winning his previous start.

Then we have another good type in Mariamia, with Joseph Pride at Warwick Farm, although now six, the mare is showing plenty of fight in her runs, but she is meeting the very best here.

If he goes around the Evergreen old sprinter doesn’t know how to run a bad race. She has raced against the cream of sprinters and always puts in.

The James Cummings trained Vilana gives of his best each time he steps out, and was a winner back on April 15, taking out the Hall Mark Stakes at Randwick over 1200 metres.

The four-year-old has now won seven of his

12 starts for the top team. He beat a couple of smart ones, last start, In the Congo, and Apache Chase. Of the others, the John O’Shea trained, six-year-old Lost and Running is good on his day, but could be found wanting.

Back on April 15, he failed to fire in the Al l Aged Stakes among the top echelon. From his 19 starts he has accumulated nearly three million dollars in stake money, but as mentioned when he puts in, he goes hard.

Giga Kick as mentioned looks the one to beat, with Rothfire, Aft Cabin and Private Eye hardest to beat.

Darley flourishes

■ On top of the announcement that champion Anamoe will represent them in the near future, there are plenty of bright lights flying the All Blue flag.

Darley’s trio of 2023 Freshman Yearling Sales sires, Too Darn Hot, Blue Point, and Microphone, led their cohort at the yearling sales with Too Darn Hot, the only first-season sire to achieve a million-dollar result.

Blue Point led all the first-season sires by average, and the progeny of Microphone, were snatched up by all the leading stables. The highlight wasa $750,000 Magic Millions colt.

The three champion racehorses have unchanged service fees.

A leading first-season sire, Harry’s Angel’s second-crop yearlings realised up to $400,000, and averaged nearly eight times the service fee with 100 per cent clearance rate across all Book 1 offerings.

Following the performances of Blue Diamond placed Arkansaw Kid, Tom Kitten’s last to firstvictory in the listed Fernhills-Stakes, and Stretan Angel’s dominant win in the listed, Dequettvilleville Stakes, HarryAngel’s fee raises to $33,000 (inc. GST). Proven Group One Sires, Astern ($22,000. inc.GST). and Kermadec ($16,500 inc. GST).

her out to last to avoid being caught wide. He didn’t move on her until the turn, and she flashed home down the outside to get beaten a short half-head.

Overpass’s form of late had been ordinary,

Sport
Private Eye winning the Gilgai Stakes..Racing Photos.
● ● ● ● Gigakick wins the Danehill Stakes at Flemington. Racing Photos. Looking for a Professional to run the show? Ted Ryan Phone 9876 1652 Mobile: 0412 682 927 E-Mail: tedryan@australiaonline.net.au ★ Compere/Host ★ Auctioneer ★ Promotions ★ A-Grade Journalist ★ Voice-Over Commercials ★ Race CallerAll Sports, Race Nights ★ TV, Radio, Press ★ Respected Member of the Media ted.ryan@optusnet.com.au
P age 46 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, May 10, 2023 www.LocalPaper.com.au

WEEK STARTS AT HAMILTON, SWAN HILL

■ The week commenced with two meetings on Monday May 1 – Hamilton in the afternoon and Swan Hill at night.

At Hamilton, McKenzie Creek (Horsham)part-owner/ trainer Janet Exell was victorious with 7Y0 Elsu-Jagged Lady gelding Areuohkay in the Fincjetts Plumbing Pace over 1660 metres.

Starting solo on the second line, Areuohkay driven by Dunnstown’s Declan Murphy possied four back along the markers after Nifty Jolt burnt away from outside the front line to lead. Easing three wide to follow both Image Of Starzzz and Midnight In Memphis approaching the final bend, Areuohkay although right off the track rattled home to score by 1.8 metres from Image Of Starzzz returning a mile rate of 1-58.7. Be The One (three pegs) was third 4.5 metres away.

■ Another Horsham winner was Vinny Rock for Rod Carberry which landed the Alexandra House Sports Club Pace over 2160 metres.

WithAaron Dunn in the sulky, Vinny Rock, a 4Y0 gelded son of Pet Rock and Doutzen was given a sweet trip throughout from gate two following the pacemaker Vapar Fire (gate four). Angling off his back on turning, Vinny Rock ran home best to prevail by 1.2 metres, with Janet Exell’s It’s A Good Feeling (four pegs) running home late out wide for third 5.9 metres back. The mile rate 1-59.3.

■ Pootilla trainer ‘Bassie’ Steenhuis combined with David Murphy aboard 4Y0 Betterthancheddar-Im Tondelayo mare Chedalayo to land the 1660 metre Happy Mothers Day Sunday May 14 Pace.

Given the run of the race from inside the second line trailing the poleline front runner Iamawingate, Chedalayo used the sprint lane to blouse Iamawingate by a head in 1-59.3. Leica Buddy after racing outside the leader was third 3.8 metres away.

■ Honest 5Y0 Courage Under Fire-As Above gelding Zwick chalked up win number four from 35 outings when leading throughout from gate four in the 2160 metre Bendigo Bank Pace for Stawell based trainer/driver Jason Ainsworth, accounting for 50/1 chance Kintsukuroi which trailed from the pole by two metres. My Waterlou was third from mid-field in the running line 2.1 metres away. The mile rate 2-02.6.

Thrilling dead heat

■ Extremely competent former Tasmanian reinsman Jack Laugher now based in Bendigo took the honors on a big nine race Swan Hill card with three winners on the night including a thrilling dead heat.

The first to arrive was 6Y0 Shadow PlayImachicitoo gelding Rojenbye which dead heated with Bella Abby (Michael Bellman) in the VHRC The Members Pace over 1750 metres.

Trained by Reece Moore at Red Cliffs, Rojenbye was eased from gate two, settling midfield in the moving line as Friends flew away from gate four to lead with Bellasteel (gate five) after being caught wide going forward to race exposed giving Joe Costa’s local hope Bella Abby (gate three) one/one cover being trailed by Rojenbye.

With runs coming from all directions approaching the home turn, Friends shifted ground on straightening, with Bellasteel taking a slender lead momentarily and Bella Abby which was now in the centre of the track issuing a challenge.

Rojenbye after extricating six wide in the home running finished hard to join Bella Abby hitting the wire with the judge unable to separate the pair. Saint Win (three pegs) after obtaining a split between runners late in the straight dashed through a gap to be third a nose away making it almost a triple dead-heat, with Bellasteel a half neck away fourth and Friends a further half neck away fifth in an incredible finish. The mile rate 1-58.6.

■ Five year old Art Major-Collectable gelding Major Collect a raging hot $1.30 favourite was an easy victor of the 2240 metre $500,000 Available in VHRCS Super Bonuses Pace. Trained at Strathfieldsaye by Julie Douglas, Major Collect settled near last from the extreme draw with polemarker Hez Harrywho leading for Bunbartha duo John and Matt Newberry.

Harness Racing

■ Atego Dawn (gate two) outside him to take over leaving Meadowvalley Road (gate five) in the open with the hot favourite Triumph Stride (one/one) after easing away from the markers shortly after the start.

Vacating the prime spot to race outside the leader with a circuit to travel, Triumph Stride was able to drop to the back of Atego Dawn approaching the home turn with Hold That Gold commencing a forward move. In a slugging finish, Hold That Gold out wide prevailed by a head from Triumph Stride, with Meadowvalley Road third 1.9 metres back after gaining cover from Triumph Stride. The mile rate 1-59.6.

Sulky Snippets Sulky Snippets

This Week

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Going forward with a rush three wide at the bell to park outside the leader for the last lap, Major Collect was much too solid in the straight, scoring by 4.8 metres from A Rocknroll Jet (one/ one – three wide last lap), with Hez Harrywho holding down third 1.8 metres away. The mile rate 1-57.4.

■ Former Kiwi 6Y0 American Ideal-Chloe Finn gelding Dhaulagiri which competed in the Mildura Cup Heats found the quality of the 2240 metre VHRC Super Bonus Program Pace a little easier and registered a strong 7.7 metre victory to give the Douglas stable a double.

Pushing through from a solo second line draw to settle three pegs following both stablemate Mighty Flying Art which exploded away from outside the front line to lead with polemarker Diamond Eclipse trailing, Dhaulagiri eased away from the markers at the bell to race uncovered for the last lap and ran home best to defeat Mighty Flying Art which gave a sight in a 1-58.2 mile rate. Diamond Eclipse safely held third 3.1 metres back. Many readers will recall the top class galloper of the same name racing a number of years back trained by Brian Courtney.

■ Once again the trotters competing in the VHRC – Aldebaran Park Trotters Handicap put on a good show over the 2240 metre trip with victory going the way of Gordon father and son Tim and Darby McGuigan’s 7Y0 Repeat LoveMicro Chip mare Petite Love in a rate of 2-01.9. Settling four back along the markers from a 30 metre handicap as Aunty Ethal led from barrier four before being crossed by One Muscle Hill (10m) from three pegs, Petite Love angled away from the markers to race exposed for the last lap, proving too strong for One Muscle Hill, with Aunty Ethal third. The margins 5.8 metres by a head.

■ John and Matt Newberry were successful on the night when 5Y0 Rock N Roll Heaven-Universal Alice mare Kia Ora Beauty led throughout from gate four in the $10,000 Alabar Vicbred Platinum Mares Sprint Championship (heat two) over 1750 metres. Rated to perfection, Kia Ora Beauty defied all challengers to register a 4.3 metre margin over Blood Moon (one/two - three wide last lap – behind winner home turn), with Alwaysbealady (one/one) third 12 metres back. The mile rate a slick 1-54.2.

■ Bendigo’s Alex Ashwood trained and reined

5Y0 Art Major-Sparks Under Fire mare Major Fire to score in the VHRC 1750 metre Rich River Golf Club Pace .

Given a sweet passage one/one from outside the front line as Petreos (gate four) led before being crossed by Chogi (gate five), Major Fire given full rein led at the bell before coasting to a 19.4 metre victory in advance of Star Shine (three pegs – one/one – three wide home turn). Petreos came again in the straight for third albeit 9.5 metres away. The mile rate 1-56.2.

Shepparton thrills

■ Shepparton raced on Tuesday and Longlea trainer/driver Mattie Gath along with Echuca owner/breeders Norm and Joan Visca would have received a tremendous thrill when 4Y0

Angus Hall-Hold That Grin gelding Hold That Gold scored in the 1690 metre Cottrells Electrical Trotters Mobile, paying odds of $41.00. Settling mid-field from the extreme draw where Starlight Storm led from gate five before allowing

■ Smart 4Y0 Western Terror-Cold Outside gelding Alfresco trained at Tatura by Craig Turnbull and driven by daughter Abbey landed the 1690 metre Shepparton Travelworld Pace in a mile rate of 1-58.

Enjoying a perfect trip on the back of the poleline leader Zaras All Good from inside the second line, Alfresco although slightly held up approaching the home turn as the leader weakened was able to use the sprint lane on turning and raced clear over the concluding stages to register a 1.2 metre margin over Malava Miss (one/two – four wide home turn) and Alta Bedford (one/one – three wide home turn) who was a head away.

■ Moorilim owner/trainer Greg Fleming is having a great run with his large team at present and chalked up a double after Bettors DelightJazz Opera gelding Bart Bentley scored in the Your Sold Real Estate 3Y0 Pace over 2190 metres and American Ideal-Arctic Fire filly Maurlen Annie the 1690 metre Jims Diggers 2Y0 Maiden Pace, both driven by the stable’s Codi Rauchenberger.

Bart Bently led throughout from gate three, accounting for Dun Me Up Francy which trailed moving outside him on the home turn by a half neck, with first starter Island Feenix third 36.2 metres back third after following the pair.

The mile rate 1-59.5. Maurlen Annie greeted the judge in identical circumstances, defeating a game first starter My Four Sisters (four pegsone/one last lap – three wide home turn). Olivia Rose (three pegs) also on debut was third 3.3 metres away. The mile rate 1-59.5.

Excitement at B’rat

■ Ballarat held a massive 10 race card on Wednesday – the most exciting race being the low grade Ferndale Confectionary Maiden Pace over 1710 metres resulting in a dead-heat between Wichita Dance (Tina Ridis) and Gamer (Jason Hackett) in a mile rate of 2-01.4.

Wichita Dance a 4Y0 A Rocknroll DanceShes In Vogue gelding part-owned and trained by Daryl Crone at Great Western led from gate four with Gamer also a 4Y0 Rock N Roll Heaven-Nosotros gelding trained by Jason Hackett at Balliang immediately joining him from gate six.

With the pair having a great battle all the way up the running after turning together, the judge could not separate them on the wire. Remi Magic after trailing the leader gained a late split for third a half neck away.

■ Six year old Peak-Yankee Poem gelding My High Peak brought up his fifth victory in 29 outings when taking the 1710 metre Del-Re National Trotters Mobile. Trained at Moonlight Flats (Maryborough) by Joanne Franklin and driven by Michael Bellman, My High Peak enjoyed a sweet one/one trip from gate two on the second line as Rioterra led from gate six before being crossed by Well Deserved at the bell. Angling three wide on turning, My High Peak put the race beyond doubt in a couple of strides, scoring by 4.9 metres untouched over Rioterra in a rate of 2-01.4. Mulberry Pie (three pegs) was third 3.1 metres back.

■ Lancefield’s ‘Rocket’ Rod Petroff made a welcome return to the winners list after 4Y0 Bettors Delight-Eye Like Candy gelding Bettororworse snared the 1710 Regent Entertainment Pace.

Starting inside the second line, Bettororworse settled at the rear of the field after the heavily supported Ribelle Rose led from gate four. Still at the tail prior to the home turn, Bettororworse despite making the home turn four wide, finished full of running down the centre of the track

■ Wednesday – Geelong, Thursday –Cobram, Friday – Maryborough/Mildura, Saturday – Melton, Sunday – Cranbourne, Monday – Hamilton, Tuesday – Swan Hill.

to greet the judge 4.4 metres in advance of Glenline (one/one), with Ribelle Rose weakening for third 7.2 metres back. The mile rate 200.3.

10 events at B’go

■ Big race programs have been the order in recent times and on Thursday Bendigo held a 10 race card featuring some interesting racing during the evening.

One winner well worth a mention was 3Y0 Sweet Lou-Chloe Finn colt Loui Lou I who has a huge future, toying with his rivals in the Result Financial Services Pace over 1650 metres. Raced by a huge syndication including renowned veterinary surgeon Alistair MacLean’s Family Group, avid trot fans Julie and Jennifer Coventry, ‘girl about town’ Carol Bass and always ready to assist Clare Payne to name just a few, Louie Lou I trained at Romsey by Chris Svanosio and driven by stable foreman Ross Payne used a little petrol from gate three to head off polemarker Another Nien, but once there , travelled beautifully, running out a 5.3 metre victor over Another Nien which stuck to his task. Andaman Bay (three wide trail last lap) from the rear on the back of well supported Goulburn visitor King Tintin was third 17.4 metres away. The mile rate 1-55.9.

■ Local trainer Trevor Monk landed a double on the night with 8Y0 We Will See-Little Bonzer gelding Magnified (Ellen Tormey) taking the 1650 metre Bendigo Power Coating Pace and 5Y0 Western Terror -Blue Seelster gelding Blue Cannon (Greg Sugars) the Nigel Milne Harness Racing (Insanity Lodge) Pace over 2150 metres. Magnified led all of the way from gate three, accounting for Sugoi Alto from mid-field by 3.2 metres in 1-59.4. Pinnacle Hope (one/one) was third 1.1 metres back. Blue Cannon (gate five) was most impressive peeling three wide off a one/one trip to blouse the long odds-on favourite Dougls Platter which led by 2.8 metres. Warrantee held on gamely for third after racing exposed. The mile rate 1-58.

Sour note

■ Two meetings Friday Yarra Valley and Mildura and Mount Wallace part-owner/trainer Warren Green started Yarra Valley quaddie punters off on a sour note when Bling It On-Classy Dream filly Lunar Dream snared the first leg –the Ashmore’s Smash Repairs 3Y0 Maiden Pace over 2150 metres at odds of $34.00.

With Chris Alford in the sulky, Lunar Dream was restrained from gate five to settle mid-field in the moving line and although five wide on the final bend, finished all over the top of her rivals to register a 4.4 metre margin in advance of Shoobees Spirit (one/one) and Inexorable (gate three) which led until being crossed by the favourite Cool Night finishing 6.8 metres back in third place after being inconvenienced when the leader capitulated. The mile rate 2-01.5.

■ Seven year old Modern Art-Lavra Cloe gelding Nationaldraft has been a giant killer at times and was again when successful in the $10,000 Thanks To The Cup Week Committee Pace over 1790 metres at Mildura.

Trained at Irymple by Boris Devcic and driven by Tayla French, Nationaldraft starting inside the second line was quickly away from the markers to settle four back in the running line as United led from the pole.

Tayla enjoyed a great night also piloting Beaudacios and Cheeky Eagle to victory.

Sport
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BELT AND DISC SANDER. FC. $25. Greensborough. 0406 939 273.O-R

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PROPOSAL TO INSTALL A NEW MOBILE PHONE BASE STATION AND 5G ON AN EXISTING FACILITY AT 237-243 REX ROAD CAMPBELLFIELD VIC 3061.

1. The scope of the proposal consists of:

Installation of triangular headframe on existing 30m high

Telstra monopole

Installation of nine (9) Optus 4G & 5G panel antennas mounted on a headframe on the pole

Installation of one (1) GPS antenna

Installation of six (3) future Remote Radio Units (RRU’s)

Installation of four (4) bay outdoor units at the base of the facility

The installation of new ancillary equipment including antennas mounts, feeders, cabling and other associated equipment

2. Optus and Vodafone regards the proposed installation as a Low-impact Facility under the Telecommunications (Low-impact Facilities) Determination 2018 (“The Determination”) based on the description above.

3. In accordance with Section 7 of C564:2020 Mobile Phone Base Station Deployment Code, we invite you to provide feedback about the proposal. Further information and/or comments should be directed to Ventia.

Name: David Hodgkinson, Town Planner

Phone: 0437015282

Email: community.consultation@ventia.com

Web: www.rfnsa.com.au/3095010

Address: 167-169 Cremorne St, Cremorne VIC 3202

Submission due by COB on Friday 12th May 2023

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MOONEE PONDS BAPTIST CHURCH , 4 5 Eglinton St, 5.30pm Mondays, supports those from Moonee Valley in a tough place. All welcome for a free hot meal from 5.30pm on Mondays. If you have food handling, listening or cleaning skills, then contact us to help out. 0466 075 820. UFN

MORNINGTON Dutch Australian Seniors Club. Meets weekly in Tyabb Community Hall, Frankston-Flinders Rd, Tyabb on Mondays, 10am2pm. Morning coffee, games of Klkaverjas and Rummicub. New members welcome. Nel, 0414 997 161. Paula, 5779 8291. UFN

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