The Local Paper. Eastern Suburbs Edition. Wed., July 2, 2025

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■ North-Eastern Metropolitan MLC Richard Welch has described latest ambulance delays as “heartbreaking”.

“An elderly man in Blackburn called 000 after falling in his home and suffering a serious head injury,” Mr Welch said in a question to Health Minister Mary-Anne Thomas.

“When no-one arrived, he called again, and despite being just a few minutes from Box Hill Hospital, it took almost five hours for an ambulance to reach him.

“By the time the paramedics arrived and firefighters forced entry, the man had, tragically, passed away.

“Reports now confirm that multiple ambulance crews were sitting outside Box Hill Hospital for this entire time, ramped and unable to respond.

“They were waiting for their current patients to be admitted and were not allowed to leave despite the emergency call.

“The paramedics who later attended the scene were reportedly distraught by what they found and the knowledge that they could have helped had they been free to do so.

“I think if you just imagine it was one of your loved ones in this situation and the idea that you could call for an ambulance and it not arrive in such a critical situation – to me, it is just another breach of the social contract between government and the people.

“We accept taxes and we accept difficult decisions, but there is a basic return on that, and that is that when you call an ambulance in a lifethreatening situation one comes, and to think that one was so close is just heartbreaking for that family, and my deepest condolences go to them.

“Sadly, this case is just the latest and most heartbreaking example of what happens when nothing changes.

“No amount of health funding announcements means anything if ambulances cannot get to people in time; no-one in Victoria should die when help is parked around the corner.

“The man deserved better, and his tragic death must lead to action, not just another review or internal report that this was pre-

ventable. The health system did not just fail, it abandoned him in his most vulnerable moment.

“It is unacceptable, and it must not happen again.

“The action I seek from the minister is to implement urgent reforms to reduce ambulance ramping and improve emergency department capacity at hospitals like Box Hill, and Ambulance Victoria must be properly supported to ensure paramedics are never again prevented from responding to life-threatening calls to duty due to hospital delays,” Mr Welch said.

WAVERLEY RSL FUTURE QUERY

Rooming house row at Jordanville

■ A rooming house is being built in Mount Waverley, without proper process, according to Southern Metropolitan MLC David Davis.

“My constituency question is for the attention of the Minister for Planning [ Sonya Kilkenny], and it concerns 18 Windsor Avenue in Mount Waverley, opposite Jordanville station

“I joined a community demonstration there on Thursday night at 6 pm. In the dark, in the cold, 65 people turned up to say enough is enough,” Mr Davis told Parliament.

“A rooming house is being built there without a proper process. This is Labor’s process.

“My question to the planning minister is: will you change the rules to ensure that, when a rooming house is going into a clearly suburban area, there is proper notification and proper advice?

■ Maroondah Council has received $1 million in funding from the State Government for the development of the new library in Croydon. The funding was announced by Local Government Minister, Nick Staikos, in Croydon, and is from a state-wide pool of $4 million as part of the Government’s 202425 Living Libraries Infrastructure Program

● ● ● Harriet Shing, State Minister

■ The future of Waverley RSL, and the impact on it by the Suburban Rail Loop, has been raised in State Parliament.

David Davis, Southern Metropolitan MLC, said: “I refer to the government’s forced acquisition under the MajorTransportProjectsFacilitationAct, listed in the GovernmentGazetteof May 8, of the whole of the land and the buildings of the Waverley RSL sub-branch

“I ask: given the 75-year history of the sub-branch, founded in September 1950, what guarantee will be provided that the sub-branch will be able to successfully acquire new land and relocate, and that its critical services supporting returned services personnel will not be interrupted or compromised?”

Suburban Rail Loop Minister Harriet Shing said: “Thank you very much, Mr Davis, for the opportunity to talk to some of the very careful engagement that we are undertaking across the entire corridor of the Suburban Rail Loop East , from Cheltenham through to Box Hill

“The RSL has had a very, very proud tradition of engagement across the local community for its tenure at the location.

“We have staged the construction of Glen Waverley, which as people would know, has involved the relocation of many subterranean works, to enable the RSL to operate from its current location for several additional years before it has been required for SRL construction.

“That was the case when I was there not too long ago. We are supporting them to independently explore future opportunities and options, including a potential new location, and that is part of ongoing work with the RSL

“We will continue also to make sure that the impact of construction is minimised as the SRL East construction continues and make sure that we are providing every opportunity for the best possible future for the Waverley RSL branch and the project.

“The SRL will deliver, as you know, and as the RSL knows, a brand new underground station in the heart of Glen Waverley adjacent to the existing infrastructure, and that will connect more people to this vibrant community as part of the growth that we need to manage a growing population and provide corresponding improvements to amenity at the same time.

“I want to acknowledge the work that the local member John Mullahy has put into extensive discussions with the community, including with the RSL

“He has worked tirelessly to ensure the delivery of additional car parking facilities – we are talking about hundreds of new car parking opportunities.

“We are also working alongside traders, businesses and communities who use and rely upon footpaths, roads, connections to trade and of course the existing railway station.

“This is a project of enormous complexity and size. We do not underestimate the impact that construction is having, and that has been the same with every project, from level crossing removals through to the North East Link, with the way in which we have built, developed and enhanced the road network across the state.

“We will continue to work with the RSL as we have worked with many organisations affected by construction, including in relation to new and future options available to them,” said Ms Shing.

“That is not what happened here. The City of Monash handed over a permit, having told only three households about this, and yet 500 or 600 households are going to be directly impacted.

“They will not say what people are going in there. Will there be prisoners going in there? They will not say.

“And they will not say what is going to happen with traffic or parking. It is disgraceful, and the minister should change the rules,” Mr Davis said.

WATTLE PARK TRAMS QUESTION

● ● Flashback: a burnt out tram at Wattle Park in 2011. Photo: Vicsig

■ Vandalised and rotting W-class trams in Wattle Park have been discussed in State Parliament by Richard Welch MLC.

“Very important to members of my electorate, much loved but much neglected, the trams have been sitting there decaying, getting increasingly vandalised for the better part of four years,” Mr Welch said.

“In December the minister [ Steve Dimopoulos] advised that Parks Victoria, VicTrack and Heritage Victoria were working to identify replacement options, with restoration works expected to be completed by mid2025, and it is now mid-2025.

“The trams remain untouched. They are still fenced off, being increasingly vandalised, and the only progress is the addition of a sign saying that there will be work done by mid2025.

“The question is: Minister, will you please explain why the works have not been completed to date and on schedule and let the community know when we can expect the restoration of these iconic trams?”

Cash for Manningham

■ Sonja Terpstra, North-Eastern Metropolitan MLC, has spoken about funding provided to Manningham Council by the State Government.

“This year Manningham City Council have received more than $450,000 in funding through the 2024–25 local sports and infrastructure fund, delivering support for three significant initiatives. They are $250,000 for outdoor redevelopment at Aquarena Aquatic and Leisure Centre in Doncaster, $162,937 for LED sports field lighting at Domeney Reserve in Park Orchards and $40,000 to support the development of the Manningham recreation strategy.

“These projects will deliver real, tangible benefits for local residents,” Ms Terpstra told Parliament.

Harmony Festival

■ North-Eastern MLC Richard Welch spoke about attending Harmony Day at the Box Hill Town Hall.

“Thank you to the Chinese professionals association and the City of Whitehorse for running an excellent event. It was a wonderful opportunity to come together and celebrate many cultures that make up our local community.

“Harmony Day is more than just about words; it is about connecting through food, dance, shared stories and in this case an excellent display of garden-grown vegetables from the Chinese community – fantastic. I learned a lot,” Mr Welch told the Legislative Council.

45 YEARS AS NEWSMAN

IN MELBOURNE’S EAST

In 1978, Ash Long was Editor of Bayswater News, as well as President of the Bayswater Chamber of Commerce of Industry.

Leader Newspapers promoted the 22year-old to become Manager of the Knox and Mountain District Free Press, where he led production of a record-size 76page edition.

He had stints as Manager of the KnoxSherbrooke News, as well as Acting Editor of group newspapers including Box Hill, Nunwading, Ringwood, Croydon, Lilydale, Waverley and Chadstone.

Some 45 years on, in 2024, Ash Long continues his lifetime of community service, as Publisher of The Local Paper group, which has localised newspapers across 40 local government areas covering all Melbourne suburbs, the Mornington Peninsula and beyond.

He was involved with the Australian Suburban Newspapers’ Association, later becoming a National Judge.

In 1983, he branched out on his own, developing newspapers across Victoria.

In the intervening years, there have been successes (and a few stumbles!)

Ash Long as Editor of the Bayswater News in 1978. In 2002, Long reinvograted the Melbourne Observer newspaper. It continues today as a free section within all editions of The Local Paper. There have been other involvements with TV, radio and online projects. Decades on, Ash Long and his Local Paper team remain committed to providing the best possible service to readers and clients.

● David Davis MLC

Statewide

NELSON Fatal collision

■ Police are investigating a fatal collision in Nelson on Friday morning (June 27). It is understood a car and truck collided on Portland-Nelson Rd about 7.30am.

The driver of the car died at the scene.

The male driver of the truck was taken to hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.

Police are working to establish the circumstances of the collision.

CHURCHILL

Guns, explosives

■ Armed Crime Squad detectives have charged a man after locating firearms and explosives in Churchill

A search warrant was executed at a residential property in Churchillon Monday afternoon, June 23.

As part of the search, police located what appeared to be an improvised explosive device in a nearby area.

The area was cordoned off as a precaution and the Bomb Response Unit attended and rendered the device inert.

A 41-year-old Churchill man was charged with prohibited person use firearm, prohibited person possess two or more firearms, possess explosive substance, possess ammunition and commit indictable offence while on bail.

He was remanded to appear at Latrobe Valley Magistrates’ Court on June 25.

Detectives also seized six assorted firearms, two crossbows, two signal jammers and ammunition.

PETERBOROUGH

Probe into crash

■ Police are investigating the circumstances surrounding a fatal crash in Peterborough on Sunday morning (June 29).

Emergency services responded to reports of a quad bike rolling on Jarvis Rd about 5.10am.V The female rider died at the scene.

Anyone who witnessed the incident, has dashcam footage or any other information is urged to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or crimestoppersvic.com.au

6 CHARGED OVER COPPER THEFT AT NEWBOROUGH

■ Moe police officers have charged six people after a lengthy investigation into copper thefts from a former hospital site in Newborough

From February to May this year, the alleged offenders forced entry to the site on Ollerton Avenue multiple times and stole more than 800kg of electrical cabling and plumbing.

The copper stolen is estimated to be valued anywhere up to $10,000.

Officers recovered an allegedly stolen truck and seized tools and equipment, used to remove copper, on February 21. The truck has since been returned to its owner.

Officers tracked down seven alleged offenders.

A 54-year-old Traralgon man was charged with burglary and theft offences and will appear before the Latrobe Valley Magistrates’ Court on July 7.

A 43-year-old Cranbourne West man, a 38-year-old Cranbourne man and a 55-yearold Chadstone woman were charged with burglary and theft offences.

The trio will appear before the Latrobe Valley Magistrates’ Court on August 20.

A 40-year-old Port Welshpool man and a 43-yearold Morwell man were charged with burglary and theft offences.

A 55-year-old Morwell man was interviewed by police and isexpectedtobecharged.

Statewide

Across Victoria

STATEWIDE

History boost

■ The State Government is funding community groups across Victoria to capture, preserve and share the unique stories and histories.

Danny Pearson, Minister for Acting Minister for Government Services, announced that 17 historical groups, museums, libraries and not-for-profits are the new recipients of the 2025 Local History Grants Program.

■ Australian Jewish Historical Society Victoria Inc. ($14,850)

■ BCYF - Bethany Ltd trading as Meli Community ($15,000)

■ Balnarring and District Historical Society Inc. ($2950)

■ Birchip RSL Sub-Branch ($9099)

■ Block 19 - Bonegilla Migrant Experience ($11,490)

■ Down Syndrome Association of Victoria Inc. ($12,623)

■ Kadimah Jewish Cultural Centre and National Library ($8168)

■ Kaiela Institute Limited ($13,024)

■ Koroit and District Historical Society ($5149)

■ Leongatha and District Historical Society Inc. ($1158)

■ Moonlight Head Cemetery Trust ($1050)

■ PMI Victorian History Library Inc. ($3396)

■ Prosper Australia ($2\110)

■ Queenscliffe Historical Museum Incorporated ($5100)

■ The National, Melbourne ($6520)

■ Trentham Rail and Tramway Association Inc. ($2429)

■ Wurundjeri Woi Wurrung Cultural Heritage Aboriginal Corporation ($15,000)

The Local History Grants Program is administered by Public Record Office Victoria, and supports community activities that preserve, record and share the local, social and community history of Victoria and Victorians

First Nations history will be highlighted in the new project William Barak’s Visual andMaterialLegacy:ACatologueforCommunity delivered through $15,000 to the Wurrindjeri Woi Wurrung Cultural Heritage Aboriginal Corporation.

In association with the Established September 14, 1969

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), the Box Hill Reporter (Est. 1888), Doncaster-Templestowe News (Est. 1962), Maroondah Mail (Est. 1922), Knox-Sherbrooke News (Est. 1967), Mountain District Free Press (Est. 1946). Waverley Gazette (Est. 1961) Progress News

The Local Paper is published weekly online and printed fortnightly and circulates in a local edition: • Local Paper - Eastern Suburbs Edition

Phone: 1800 231 311, 9489 2222, 9439 9927, 0450 399 932, 5797 2656. Reg. Office: 30 Glen Gully Rd, Eltham, Vic 3095 (same address for 31 years)

Mail: PO Box 1278, Research, Vic 3095

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Editor: Ash Long

Foenander, Music

Features Editor: Peter Mac

Kemp, Art

Columnists: Len Baker, Matt Bissett-Johnson, Rob Foenander, Peter Kemp, Aaron Rourke, Ted Ryan, Cheryl Threadgold, Julie Houghton, Kevin Trask, John O’Keefe

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Ash on Wednesday 32 more beds at Hospital

■ The Angliss Hospital at Upper Ferntree Gully has reached structural completion.

Health Infrastructure Minister Melissa Horne, Monbulk MLA Daniela de Martino and Bayswater MLA Jackson Taylor visited the construction site to celebrate the massive project milestone for the $112 million project.

Once complete, the new four-storey building will be home to an additional 32bed inpatient unit, four operating theatres, an upgraded central sterile supply department, spaces for outpatient services and more carparking for patients and families.

The expansion is set to increase the number of surgeries delivered by the hospital, reducing wait times and ensuring more locals can access the care they need, when they need it.

With major structural works for the tower complete, the internal fit-out of the space will now commence and the striking exterior facade will be lifted into place.

The four-storey hospital tower is made up of more than 4200 cubic metres of concrete – the equivalent of more than 422,000 bags of concrete from Bunnings –and 490 tonnes of steel reinforcement.

Delivered by the Victorian Health Building Authority alongside Eastern Health, architects Silver Thomas Hanley and builder Kane Constructions – the upgraded Angliss Hospital is on track to be completed in 2026. The Angliss Hospital expansion will transform healthcare in the outer eastern suburbs – meaning

Long Shots

more locals will be able to get the best possible care for years to come,” said Ms Horne.

Health Minister Mary-Anne Thomas said: “The expansion of Angliss Hospital will give our incredible nurses, doctors and hospital staff the modern facilities they need to do what they do best – care for our community.”

Ms De Martino said: “The bigger and better Angliss Hospital will significantly benefit our community and provide even more world-class healthcare right on our doorstep.”

Mr Taylor said: “The topping out of the Angliss Hospital redevelopment marks a significant milestone for this project – it’s fantastic to see the new facilities coming to life.”

Council wins big

■ Boroondara Council has won the prestigious LGPro Innovative Leadership Award for its Innovation Academy

The award recognised the hard work, creativity, and commitment to excellence from Council officers, said a city of Boroondara representative.

The Council also received a high commendation for its Bookable Spaces initiative in the Digital and Technology category.

“Both projects reflect Boroondara’s unwavering commitment to improving services for the community through innovation and excellence,” said the rep. LGPro is the peak body representing professionals in the Victorian local government sector.

The Local Paper is bound by the Standards of Practice of the Australian Press Council. If you believe the Standards may have been breached, you may approach The Local Paper or make a complaint to the Australian Press Council in writing at: www.presscouncil.org.au

The Council may also be contacted on 1800 025 712.

The Local Paper

association with the Established September 14, 1969

in localised editions in 40 areas across Melbourne, Mornington Peninsula and some country areas.

BOROONDARA NORTHERN SECTION

Incorporating the traditions of the Boroondara Weekly, Progress News, Camberwell Free Press (Est. 26, 1927) Boroondara (North) comprises Ashburton, Balwyn, Balwyn North, Burwood, Canterbury, Deepdene, Greythorn, Kew, Kew East, Mont Albert and Surrey Hills. Boroondara is home to more than 167,231 people, living in approximately 69,420 homes.

KNOX

Incorporating the traditions of the Knox-Sherbooke News (Est. April 19, 1967), Mountain District Free Press (Est. Aug. 9, 1946), Ferntree Gully News (Est. 26, 1923) and Ferntree Gully Times (Est. Jun. 8, 1889). Knox comprises Bayswater, Boronia, Ferntree Gully, Lysterfield, Knoxfield, Rowville, Scoresby, The Basin, Upper Ferntree Gully, Wantirna, and Wantirna South. Knox is home to more than 154,110 people, living in approximately 59,086 homes.

MANNINGHAM

Incorporating the traditions of East Yarra News (Est. May 9, 1962) and Doncaster-Templestowe News. Manningham comprises Bulleen, Doncaster, Doncaster East, Donvale, Nunawading (part), Park Orchards (part), Ringwood North (part), Templestowe, Templestowe Lower, Warrandyte, Warrandyte South and Wonga Park (part). Manningham is home to more than 122,900 people, living in approximately 45,500 homes.

MAROONDAH

Incorporating the traditions of the Ringwood and Croydon Mail (Est. Jan. 9, 1924), Croydon City News (Est. 1983), Ringwood City News (Est. Jul. 6, 1984). Maroondah comprises Bayswater North, Croydon, Croydon Hills, Croydon North, Croydon South, Heathmont, Kilsyth (part), Kilsyth South, Park Orchards (part), Ringwood, Ringwood East, Ringwood North (part), Vermont (part), Warranwood and Wonga Park (part). Maroondah is home to more than 117,498 people, living in approximately 54,921 homes.

MONASH

Incorporating the traditions of the Waverley Gazette (Est. Feb. 8, 1961), Oakleigh Times (Est. Jun. 8, 1889).

Monash comprises Ashwood, Clayton, Glen Waverley, Hughesdale, Huntingdale, Mount Waverley, Mulgrave, Notting Hill, Oakleigh, Oakleigh East, and Wheelers Hill. Parts of Chadstone, Burwood and Oakleigh South are also included in Monash. Monash is home to more than 202,847 people, living in approximately 70,600 homes.

WHITEHORSE

Incorporating the traditions of Box Hill Reporter (Est. Jun. 26, 1889).

Whitehorse comprises Balwyn North (part), Blackburn, Blackburn North, Blackburn South, Box Hill, Box Hill North, Box Hill South, Burwood (part), Burwood East, Forest Hill, Mitcham, Mont Albert (part), Mont Albert North, Nunawading (part), Surrey Hills (part), Vermont (part) and Vermont South. Whitehorse is home to more than 176,196 people, living in approximately 65,881 homes.

Read online editions at: www.LocalPaper.com.au

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Cheryl Threadgold, Local Theatre Julie Houghton, The Arts Kevin Trask, Entertainment
Rourke, Film
Ryan, Horse Racing Len Baker, Harness Racing
● ● Daniela de Martino MLA

PHONE

Observer Melbourne

WEDNESDAY, JULY 2,

■ There are fresh calls to take greater care on Victorian roads with a Greater Sooty Owl needing life-saving treatment at Healesville Sanctuary’s wildlife hospital.

The threatened species with soulful eyes and sharp talons suffered a head trauma, suspected of being hit by a car at Gembrook

A wildlife carer rushed the large nocturnal bird to the Sanctuary’s Australian Wildlife Health Centre where it received a full medical check including X-Rays, eye examination and blood tests upon arrival.

Healesville Sanctuary Veterinary Nurse Chris Stitt said they needed to rule out rodenticide poisoning which was the main eason for the blood test.

“We found the owl was straining one of its eyes due to corneal damage. But thankfully, we didn’t find any fractures,” Mr Stitt said.

“It is not a species we see often, so it was quite an exciting moment to be up close to such an amazing bird that’s considered endangered in Victoria

“In my seven years working at the wildlife hospital, I haven’t come across one before.”

The Greater Sooty Owl was provided a quiet, dark place to recover in the new Raptor Rehabilitation Centre while it received fluids, anti-inflammatory medication and pain relief.

Wise to take care Wise to take care

Local Business Profile

Michelle Allen and team of Muddy Creek Health Hub, Yea

I have been working as a massage therapist in Yea, at my home for the last 15 years.

I have supported people's relaxation, remedial or correctional and palliative care treatments for this community and it's been an honor.. I have always been fascinated by the body and finding ways of helping people in pain and learning to see if we can push past our symptoms to heal on a deep or lasting level. It's always been a dream of mine to be part of a health hub that includes different types of therapists and modalities coming together.

Technology is happening in our health care industry and with so many amazing minds and by still using old fashioned foundations there is some seriously successful solutions for people's pain and healthcare needs.

My clinic is lucky enough to have Rebecca Bullen join the team as a Remedial Therapist who brings the same values with a different touch to her care for clients.

I have also introduced a Telsa

Former which uses Functional Magnetic Stimulation machine that can change our body on a very deep physiological level.

It supports problems around inflammation, pain, muscular atrophy and injury, stimulates the lymphatic system and supports drainage.

Weight loss or cellulite reduction or body sculpting. Pelvic floor issues and incontinence problems have had huge success and erectile dysfunction also has some.

We have an awesome team to begin with of Rebecca Bullen, Nicole Schryver, Grace Hamilton and myself who look forward to being part of Yea and districts healthcare solutions.

My telephone number is 0419 625 536 if you would like to talk more or even come in and have a look around at our facilities. The clinic's number is 0417 658 366 or email us at info@muddycreekhealthhub. com.au

Our address is 7 The Semi Circle, Yea. The old medical Centre and the old dentist.

Seven days later, wildlife carers released this beautiful species back to the wild where it was found at dusk.

Greater Sooty Owls are a medium to large owl species that stand about 40-50 centimetres tall. They are listed as endangered under the Victorian Flora and Fauna Guarantee Act 1988 and listed as least concern with a decreasing population on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Threats to their survival include habitat loss and fragmentation, rodenticide poisoning and road trauma.

Mr Stitt admits seeing this wildlife patient serves as a good reminder to take extra care when driving at dawn and dusk because that’s when so many of native species come out and explore.

The Australian Wildlife Health Centre at Healesville Sanctuary can assist with injured, sick and orphaned native animals.

A dedicated team treats approximately 2000 wildlife annually as well as caring for the Sanctuary’s resident animals.

Visitors can see the incredible vet procedures taking place in real time as the wildlife hospital has glass internal walls. Thanks to the generosity of a network of wildlife carers, patients such as this Greater Sooty Owl can receive the expert care they need and then go on to live their lives in the wild.

● ● Michelle Allen, Nicole Schryver, Bek Bullen and Grace Hamilton

Your Stars

ARIES (March 21 - April 20)

Lucky Colour: Green

Lucky Day: Tuesday

Racing Numbers: 5, 6, 3, 2

Lotto Numbers: 5, 12, 23, 36, 34, 4

This week, people around you may test your patience. Avoid unnecessary arguments to maintain your peace of mind. Financial opportunities may arise, so stay alert to potential gains.

TAURUS (April 21 - May 20)

Lucky Colour: Blue

Lucky Day: Friday

Racing Numbers: 2, 3, 6, 9

Lotto Numbers: 1, 12, 15, 21, 34, 40

Setting up financial matters early will help avoid future complications. Make time for relaxation and socialising—you deserve a break. A contact from your past could lead to an unexpected benefit.

GEMINI (May 21 - June 21)

Lucky Colour: Pink

Lucky Day: Friday

Racing Numbers: 1, 3, 6, 2

Lotto Numbers: 1, 12, 26, 39, 5, 33

Maintain a positive outlook; a smile can solve many problems. Avoid unnecessary expenses, as purchases made now may not be worth the cost. Look for workplace challenges.

CANCER (June 22 - July 22)

Lucky Colour: Red

Lucky Day: Tuesday

Racing Numbers: 4, 6, 9, 5

Lotto Numbers: 4, 12, 26, 9, 5, 11

You may be viewing life through rosecoloured glasses, but reality may differ from expectations. Surprising gestures from others could leave a lasting impression.

LEO (July 23 - August 22)

Lucky Colour: Blue

Lucky Day: Wednesday

Racing Numbers: 4, 9, 6, 1

Lotto Numbers: 4, 15, 29, 36, 37, 8

Others' cooperation might not meet your expectations, requiring flexibility in your plans. Domestic responsibilities may feel overwhelming but can be managed with patience.

VIRGO (August 23 - September 23)

Lucky Colour: Yellow

Lucky Day: Monday

Racing Numbers: 8, 6, 5, 2

Lotto Numbers: 8, 12, 26, 36, 34, 44

Mixing business with pleasure may yield a different result than this week. Stay cautious, as people from your past might reintroduce complications into your life.

LIBRA (September 24 - October 23)

Lucky Colour: Cream

Lucky Day: Monday

Racing Numbers: 1, 3, 5, 6

Lotto Numbers: 1, 12, 26, 36, 35, 4

Careful planning will ensure success, although some projects may face delays. Avoid overindulgence, as it could lead to health issues. Balance is vital to a productive week.

SCORPIO (October 24 - November 22)

Lucky Colour: Orange

Lucky Day: Wednesday

Racing Numbers: 4, 6, 2, 3

Lotto Numbers: 4, 12, 23, 32, 20, 36

Ensure all your actions are transparent, as deception could lead to complications. Avoid conflicts with authority figures, as they are unlikely to resolve in your favour.

SAGITTARIUS (November 23 - December 20)

Lucky Colour: Lilac

Lucky Day: Monday

Racing Numbers: 1, 3, 2, 5

Lotto Numbers: 1, 15, 26, 45, 42, 24

Long-term relationships may need reassessment—honesty with yourself is essential. Problems that seem significant may resolve themselves with less effort than anticipated.

CAPRICORN (December 21 - January 19)

Lucky Colour: Green

Lucky Day: Thursday

Racing Numbers: 4, 6, 3, 2

Lotto Numbers: 4, 12, 35, 36, 39, 8

Fresh ideas and partnerships could rejuvenate your work environment. Be mindful of your love life, as it may require attention and care amid your busy schedule.

AQUARIUS (January 20 - February 19)

Lucky Colour: Violet

Lucky Day: Tuesday Racing Numbers: 2, 3, 5, 6

Lotto Numbers: 2, 13, 25, 26, 35, 4

Take time to enjoy yourself and pursue activities you love. Significant connections could form, with the potential for lasting commitments and long-term happiness.

PISCES (February 20 - March 20)

Lucky Colour: Fawn

Lucky Day: Saturday

Racing Numbers: 1, 3, 2, 5

Lotto Numbers: 1, 12, 26, 36, 34, 45

Some meetings with friends or relatives may initially disappoint, but the outcomes could exceed your expectations. Fun and excitement are just around the corner.

Kerry Kulkens™ Magic Shop 1693 Burwood Hwy, Belgrave

Visit us online at: www.kerrykulkens.com.au

Follow us on Facebook for the latest updates and offerings.

budget to be cut

Sir, I read with interest a recent article in your publication headlined ‘Investment into SES’ ILocalPaper, June 25).

It quoted Minister for Emergency Services, Vicki Ward, talking glowingly about Labor’s support for the SES and spruiking unprecedented investment.

What the article didn’t say was the Minister was responding to a question from myself in Parliament

The article also failed to say that the Minister failed to answer the question, instead providing only the spin and waffle you quoted.

In Question Time, I simply asked: “What is the SES’s base budget for 2025–26?” .

Instead of answering, the Minister did nothing to dispute a looming SES budget cut, despite Victorians facing a $3 billion tax hit that is supposed to be better funding our emergency services.

Fact is, a Government Gazette has revealed the SES budget is set to be cut by $8.4 million, along with cuts to FRV and CFA

How is that supporting and investing in the SES?

of The Nationals Shadow Minister for Emergency Services

Private health

Sir,

Specialist fees are a concern, but they are not the main reason for out-of-pocket costs being barriers to private healthcare.

The real issue lies in the design of private health insurance, which typically come with exclusions and restrictions.

Many policies do not cover common procedures or only offer partial coverage, leading to high out-of-pocket costs.

While the number of people insured for hospital treatment has grown from 11.2 million in December 2019 to 12.5 million in March 2025, the number of people on exclusionary hospital policies has grown from 6.6 million to 8.6 million in the same period.

The percentage of hospital policies with exclusions by insurers has grown from 57.7 per cent in December 2019 to 67.6 per cent in March 2025.

High and growing insurance membership does not translate into high private hospital use due to inadequate coverage.

The complexity and lack of transparency in insurance policies discourage patients from using private care.

To increase private hospital use and ease pressure on the public system, insurance products must be reformed to be more comprehensive, transparent and user-friendly.

Private hospital admissions have increased 3 per cent over the last year (from 4.9 million to over 5.1 million), yet private hospitals face an existential crisis. Why? Clearly, it has little to do with volumes but payments.

As recently recorded by the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority, in the last quarter to March alone the payment ratio to private hospitals from insurers plummeted

Observer Mailbag

Shortletters(nomore than200words)onlocal subjectsareinvitedfrom readers.

Emailto: editor@Melbourne Observer.com.au

Letters must be short and may be edited. All letters to be considered for publication must have a name, street address and phone number so their authenticity can be checked. An email address is not sufficient.

from 83 per cent to just 80.7 per cent. That’s virtually 20 per cent of the premiums mums and dads pay for health insurance being siphoned into insurance company coffers.

It’s a far cry from the traditional 88 per cent benchmark, which is an annual threshold the insurers have not met since 2019-20.

Health insurance companies are pocketing an average $2 billion a year in unprecedented profits from people’s annual premiums, in addition to $3.5 billion a year in higher ‘management fees’, all while short-changing private hospitals by over $1 billion a year.

Clearly the insurers have deep enough pockets to meet their obligations without increasing premiums for their members.

In the last quarter alone, APRA reveals the insurers banked another $431 million in profits.

When the middlemen in healthcare are allowed to gouge their members at one end and short-change private hospitals at the other, the funding model is being abused to the point that it is broken.

It is now more than three months since Federal Health Minister Mark Butler publicly put the health insurance industry on notice to increase payments to private hospitals or he would regulate them to do so. That deadline has lapsed and nothing has changed.

Duck season

Sir,

The final long weekend of Victoria's 2025 recreational duck shooting season ended Monday, June 9, as it started, extremely quiet with very few shooters.

It highlighted the shocking misuse of public funds which are used to prop up recreational duck shooting seasons for duck shooters who make up just 0.2 percent of Victoria’s population.

With Victoria’s crippling debt of about $170 billion, Premier Jacinta Allan should have the vision to immediately replace duck shooting, which costs Victorian taxpayers around $11 million annually, with a First Nations naturebased, cultural wetlands tourism industry, which would inject millions, if not billions of dollars into regional Victoria’s economy.

Instead, Premier Allan is focused on her multi-billion dollar Big Build trains fetish, which is highly detrimental to Victoria’s financial wellbeing.

She has also ignored Labor’s 2023 Parliamentary Inquiry, which called for duck shooting to be banned.

New South Wales is light years ahead of Victoria, with a lucrative First Nations cultural tourism industry which, according to ABC News, October 2024, generates over $3 billion annually and aims to increase this to $91 billion by 2035.

Apart from Victoria , birdwatching is booming in Australia. International birdwatchers spent $2.6 billion on travel that involved birdwatching in the year to June 2024, according to Tourism Research Australia.

Premier Allan denied regional Victorians the chance to be inundated with overseas tourists when Labor cancelled the Commonwealth Games; and her lack of vision is presently denying regional Victorians the opportunity to establish wetlands and native bird tourism.

In the 1980s, a visionary Labor Premier John Cain and two ministers, Joan Kirner and Evan Walker, had the idea to protect Victoria’s penguins and they established a thriving, world class penguin tourism industry.

Victoria’s future Labor Premier needs to have a tourism vision.

Approaching the 2026 Victorian election, it’s important that the Labor Party changes to a Premier who bans the dying activity of duck shooting, which is incompatible with nature-based tourism, and instead promotes a First Nations nature-based, cultural wetlands tourism industry.

Laurie Levy Campaign Director Coalition Against Duck Shooting

Thousands late

■ Thousands of homeward - bound city workers were delayed up to three hours last night when two train derailments threw suburban rail services into chaos.

The accidents, at Jolimont and South Yarra, blocked the lines from Melbourne to Sandringham and from Oakleigh, Dandenong and Frankston to Melbourne

Some Frankston and Sandringham services were delayed six hours.

Trains still were half an hour behind schedule at 10 p.m. lt was one of Melbourne's worst hold-ups ever.

Trains leaving Flinders st. station were packed to capacity and hundreds were left behind.

South Yarra station was chaos as people travelling both to and from the city swarmed over the platforms.

Hundreds of angry passengers tried to get home by fra ni from South Yarra station, and police had to be called to handle the crowds which spilled from the station to Toorak rd

The first accident oc curred at 3.45 p.m. when a two-carriage train was derailed at the Jolimont yards, near the Melbourne Cricket Ground.

The second accident happened at South Yarra station, at 5 p.m., when the rear of a shunting train on the Sandringham line slid down the wrong set of rails.

This upset the emergency shuttle service already runnuing to Sandringham

People travelling on that line had to go to South Yarra by a limited service on the Frankston - Dandenong line, and then switch to the shuttle service.

Ran down bandit

A gunman last night held up a Thornbury milk bar, then ran-not knowing that the proprietor was a professional sprinter and winner of three Victorian Gifts. Sprinter Terry Brady chased the gunman 100 yards along St. George's rd. and caught him after "breaking even time."

"I won the Heathcote, Cobram, and Keilor Gifts, but I bettered those efforts in this sprint' Brady said last night.

The gunman walked into the milk bar about 8 p.m and ordered a packet of chewing gum from Brady's wife, Winifred, who was serving alone.

Mrs. Brady gave him the gum, and he pulled a .32 revolver from his overcoat pocket and said: "I want your dough quick.'!

Mrs. Brady put a ten-shil\ling note on the counter and said: "That's all I have."

"Then I sang out: 'Get out. You're not getting anything'.

"He ran and I called to my husband, who sprinted after him."

Wireless Police took the man to Russell st. for questioning.

Presented by Sarah Kulkens, Australia’s
Trusted Psychic Family

Scandinavian Film Festival

■ The 2025 Hurtigruten Scandinavian Film Festival, presenting the best new cinema from the Nordic region, will be presented at Palace cinemas from July 11 to August 3.

The unveiling of this year's program revealed a diverse and thought–provoking selection from Sweden, Norway, Finland, Denmark and Iceland with 2025 Cannes Grand Prix winner, SentimentalValueas the centrepiece.

The Festival welcomes new naming rights partner Hurtigruten, long associated with the Nordic region.

Opening the 2025 Festival is Number 24, from multi award-winning director John Andreas Andersen (TheBurningSea,The Quake). This Norwegian spy drama depicts the extraordinary true story of an ‘everyman’ drawn into the resistance movement during World War II, exploring the morality of wartime and the weight of responsibility in the fight for freedom.

Direct from the 2025 Cannes International Film Festival, where it won the coveted Grand Prix, is this year’s centrepiece, SentimentalValue, from director Joachim Trier. Reuniting Trier with star Renate Reinsve (The Worst Person in the World), the intimate drama also stars Stellan Skarsgård and Elle Fanning in a moving exploration of family, memories, and the reconciliatory power of art.

2025’s Special Presentation is Quisling: TheFinalDays(Quislingssistedager). Set in 1945 Norway, this bold and provocative drama from acclaimed director Erik Poppe (TheKing’sChoice,ScandiFF17) follows the post-liberation trial of the country’s infamous and controversial head of state Vidkun Quisling, in a stirring meditation on complicity, faith and the capacity for selfdeception.

A box office sensation in Iceland, black comedy Grand Finale (Fullt hús) is this year’s Closing Night film. Featuring an allstar Icelandic ensemble cast, this wildly entertaining tale revolves around a near-bankrupt chamber orchestra in Reykjavik who try to secure their future with a world-famous cellist.

Also from Iceland is the powerful and visually stunning drama The Mountain (Fjallið), the first officially vetted sustainable production in the country, awarded the prestigious Green Film Sustainability certification. Starring Ísadóra Bjarkardóttir Barney (daughter of singer Björk and artist Matthew Barney) in her first feature role, the coming-of-age story explores how the cosmos and a road trip to the Icelandic highlands offers comfort to a family whose life is upended by a twist of fate.

The Icelandic selection also includes Odd Fish (Ljósvíkingar) a tale of dreams, identity and acceptance which follows two childhood friends who get a long-awaited opportunity to run their seafood restaurant all year round yet face unexpected personal challenges.

From Denmark comes the compelling drama SecondVictims(Detandetoffer), starring Festival favourite Trine Dyrholm Featuring Dyrholm and Özlem Saglanmak (Borgen), this timely reflection on the challenges faced by healthcare professionals follows a neurologist on a shift that will change her life forever, exploring the weight of guilt and the power of compassion.

Direct from the 2025 Göteborg Film Festival is the drama TheLastParadiseonEarth (Seinastaparadísájørð). The unique culture and stunning landscapes of the Faroe Islands are the backdrop to this moving exploration of identity, grief, and longing.

Based on the true story of Denmark’s biggest-ever robbery, TheQuietOnes(De lydløse)follows a group of criminals in their heist preparations with a stellar ensemble cast including Gustav Giese, Reda Kateb, Christopher Wagelin and Amanda Collin

From acclaimed director Charlotte Sieling (Margrete – Queen of the North ScandiFF22) and starring Nikolaj Lie Kaas, Way Home (Vejen hjem) is a gripping drama set against the backdrop of war-torn Syria that posits how far a Danish father is willing to go to save the people he loves. Finally, the Festival is screening special encores of WhentheLightBreaks(Ljósbrot) which recently won Best Nordic Film at the 2025 Göteborg Film Festival.

Melbourne Screenings: July 11 - August 3, Palace Balwyn, Palace Brighton Bay, Palace Cinema Como, Palace Westgarth, Palace Penny Lane, The Kino, Pentridge Cinema and The Astor Theatre.

Cheryl Threadgold

Talkischeap,gossipispriceless

MARY POPPINS JR

■ The Young Australian Broadway Chorus will present the musical MaryPoppinsJrfrom July 16-19 at the Cripps Centre, 217 Glen Eira Rd, St Kilda East.

A division of Stage School Australia, the YABC has assembled a cast of 90 young performers to bring the show to life.

The high-energy, large-scale production features all the well-known songs, from the frenetic Supercalifragilisticexpialidociousto the fun ASpoonfulofSugarand the fabulous Step inTime.

This junior adaptation of MaryPoppinswas written by Julian Fellowes (DowntonAbbey), based on the classic books by P.L. Travers, and showcases the wealth of young musical theatre talent from across Melbourne

One such talent is Alyssa Jandayan, 18, an aspiring young performer and first-year Bachelor of Psychology student cast in the titular role of Mary Poppins.

A student with Stage School Australia for seven years, this marks Alyssa’s debut as leading lady in a YABC production, after performing in the ensemble of the YABC’s 2023 junior adaptation of Oliver!

She describes the iconic character as her dream role, having grown up reading the books and watching the 1964 film starring Julie Andrews.

“When I was 11 and really starting to read vigorously, I was given a MaryPoppins book that contained all six original stories in the franchise,” Alyssa recalls.

“I think I’ve read that book around three times now and thoroughly enjoy each story. I genuinely can’t wait to work with everyone, cast and crew alike, because I love meeting new people and making new friends.”

Producer Corey Smark says an extensive casting process saw over 300 talented local performers aged 10 to 19 given their chance to star in the fully costumed and professionally staged production.

Performance Season: July 16, 17, 18, 19 at 7pm; July 17, 18, 19 at 2.30pm Venue: Cripps Centre, 217 Glen Eira Rd, St Kilda East

Tickets start from $29.50 and are on sale now at stageschool.com.au/shows/marypoppins-jr/ Cheryl Threadgold

Lightscape

■ The wonderful night time transformation of Melbourne 's botanical gardens into the dazzling sound and vision extravaganza that is Lightscapereturns with a whole new show this year.

If you’ve not been before, Lightscape is a series of over twenty different installations set up on a walking trail which winds its way through the gardens for a little over two kilometres. These installations take many different forms.

On an open expanse of lawn Effervescence, created by the UK company Culture Creative, consists of thousands of balls of LED light that flash on and off while changing colour, creating kaleidoscope patterns and forms.

In the garden’s lake, Water Stories is created by a variety of indigenous artists in collaboration with the Torch Project and Novak creative studio.

The installation consists of a range of indigenous motifs depicting native animals (such as yabbies, platypus, Murray cod, etc) that are projected onto the mist created by the lake’s fountains. The effect is truly mesmerising.

These are just two examples of some astounding pieces of brilliant work from both local and international artists.

The works they have created, sensitively shaping environments and atmospheres through the artistic sculpting of light and sound, give the audience immersive experiences and a totally novel perspective on the gardens.

It is unfortunate that credits for the soundscapes that are part of each installation were not available; sometimes the music used is a recognisable hit from popular musicals, others might be original compositions.

However, while not easily identifiable, their impact is as they are important elements of each installation.

Importantly, as you walk along the trail there are stretches of space free of any sort of installation. These spaces help to both demarcate each work and also afford the audience a

● ● Alyssa Jandayan (Mary Poppins) and Darcy Smith (Bert) in Mary Poppins Jr. breather from what might be an overwhelming experience.

While not cheap, Lightscape is worth visiting for a truly one-of-a-kind joyous experience and a celebration of what the human imagination is capable.

Venue: Royal Melbourne Botanical Gardens, Birdwood Avenue, Melbourne

Dates and times: Running until August 10 with entries in 15 minute increments starting at 5.15pm

Duration: Walking the trail takes approximately 90 minutes

Multiple ticketing options are available: see rbg.vic.gov.au/melbourne-gardens/whats-onmelbourne/lightscape/

Bookings: rbg.vic.gov.au/melbourne-gardens/whats-on-melbourne/lightscape/

Review by Peter Murphy

Super

■ Emilie Collyer’s Superis a theatrical indulgence whimsically delving into the absurd.

Phoenix (Lucy Ansell), Rae (Caroline Lee) and Nel (Laila Thaker) all have unconventional superpowers – the ability to control anger, to bring people to tears, and an inordinate capacity to organise.

Collyer dispenses with the usual notions of character development and narrative exploring concepts like celebrity, friendship, charity, and even technology as the three protagonists become consumed by their own capacity to influence their situation.

The nonsense is delightfully enhanced by a quirky set and extravagant costuming (Romanie Harper).

Circular portals in the walls, floor and roof not only allow for exits and entrances but become convenient chutes to discard props. The eccentricity in the outfits worn speaks to celebrity and excess.

Emma Valente’s direction delights in the nonsense. Ansell, Lee and Thaker revel in the possibilities afforded by theatrical absurdity.

There is a realism in the core of friendship between the characters though it is, perhaps, up to each individual audience member to take from the play a central theme.

It could be the corruption of celebrity, the loss of rational perspective, the fact that a superpower could be something quite ordinary and common that we exercise each day.

In this regard, the nature of the work may not be what some theatre goers expect but it does speak to Red Stitch’s commitment to negotiating theatrical boundaries.

The play was developed through Red Stitch’s INK program that encourages contemporary works by Australian playwrights.

With that creative fervour in mind, Super challenges assumptions enabling audiences to explore the dimensions of theatre and where their tastes lie.

Performance Season: Until July 6

Venue: Red Stitch Actors' Theatre, Rear 2 Chapel St., St Kilda East.

Bookings: redstitch.net Review by David McLean

● ● The Melbourne Observer section is produced weekly, and is available online at www.MelbourneObserver.com.au and at www.LocalPaper.com.au Hard copies of the Melbourne Observer are inside all editions of The Local Paper, printed fortnightly, FebruaryDecember.

St Kilda Film Festival winners

■ St Kilda Film Festival has announced the winners of Australia's Top Short Film Competition for 2025.

Australia’s longest-running short film festival award winners will take home a combined $40,000 worth of cash and prizes across 14 categories.

The prestigious Best Short Film Award, courtesy of City of Port Phillip, was awarded to TheMeaninglessDaydreamsofAugieand Celeste, which took home the cash prize of $10,000. Directed by Pernell Marsden, this is a tale of two best friends who embark on a high-stakes game of imagination, which takes a twisted turn and threatens to jeopardise their relationship (right). The film was also awarded in the Best Young Actor category for Libby Segal and Frankie Gillespie McKay

Also recognised in multiple categories I’m Not Your Heroine, took home two awards for Best Documentary, as well as Best Animation. The film examines pain, loss, addiction and the space in which they intertwine. Directed by Emmalene Vidot and Savannah James. The story follows a mother who is helpless alleviate the pain of her son, who turns to drugs after his fatherfigure commits suicide.

Best Director went to Riley Blakeway for A Thousand Odd Days, a story about a young man reflecting on a day spent with his estranged mother, to understand her enduring trauma and its effect on their relationship. Andrew Gough was recognised for his cinematography on this film, winning the Best Achievement in Cinematography award.

Best Achievement in Indigenous Filmmaking went to MotherhoodintheColony. Directed by Genevieve Grieves and Aseel Tayah , the film was awarded a $100 cash prize from CitiPower and is a love letter to mothers and the vital role they play in the resilience of Indigenous Cultures. The judges also awarded a special Judges’ Commendation in this category, to Re-imagining OurFutures:birthing

This year SKFF has set new records for the number of films screened and received. The Top Short Films Awards have been judged by a panel of industry professionals, with the 2025 judging panel including: cinematographer Ellery Ryan (WishfulThinking starring Drew Barrymore), filmmaker Rhianna Meltzer (Thor: Ragnarok and Elvis), editor Cindy Clarkson (I.Qstarring Tim Robbins and Meg Ryan), film programmer Spiro Economopoulos (Moving Story Entertainment) and City of Port Phillip First Peoples Programs Lead Fred Gesha

All award winners (excluding Best Young Actor) also received a complimentary sixmonth membership with WIFT Australia.

Accredited by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, the St Kilda Film Festival is an Academy Awards qualifying event, with award-winning films from the Australia's Top Short Films Competition eligible for consideration in the Short Film Awards and Documentary Short sections of the Oscars.

Best Original Score – Greg Dombrowski, The Horn

Best Achievement in Sound Post-Production – Wiaan van der Westhuizen, Pliers

Best Achievement in Editing – James Ashbolt – Unstoppable

Best Achievement in Screenplay – Kat Dominis & Mariana Rudan & Damian Walshe-Howling – Unspoken

Best Achievement in Indigenous Filmmaking – Motherhood in the Colony

Best Achievement in Cinematography –Andrew Gough - A Thousand Odd Days

Best Young Actor – Libby Segal and Frankie Gillespie McKay - The Meaningless Daydreams of Augie and Celeste

Best Actor – Steve Mouzakis – Hiraeth

Best Animation – I'm Not Your Heroine

Best Documentary - I'm Not Your Heroine

Best Director - Riley Blakeway - A Thousand Odd Days

Best Innovation Award - I Like Long Walks on Parramatta Road

Best Short Film: The Meaningless Daydreams of Augie & Celeste

Best Youth Short Film – S Ari Quig for Diced Peaches

Cheryl Threadgold

Local Theatre Observations

Shows

■ Malvern Theatre Company: Macbeth (by William Shakespeare) Until July 5 at 29 Burke Rd., Malvern East. Director: David McLean. Bookings: 1300 131 552.

■ Williamstown Little Theatre: Rabbit Hole (by David Lindsay-Abaire) Until July 12 at 2-4 Albert St., Williamstown. Director: John Bishop. Bookings: wlt.org.au/book-tickets

■ Wangaratta Players: Rumours (by Neil Simon) Until July 6 at Stage Door Theatre, 4D Evans St., Wangaratta. Director: Steve Thornycroft and Leanne Kelly. Bookings: Trybooking.

■ MLOC Productions: The Pirate Queen (Boublil and Schönberg) Until July 19 at the Frankston Arts Centre, Davey St., Frankston. Director: Chris Ryan; Musical Director: Matthew Pines. Bookings: mloc.org.au

■ Lilydale Athenaeum Theatre Company: The Diary of Anne Frank (by Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett) July 3 – 19 at the Lilydale Mechanics’ Institute, Castella St., Lilydale. Director: Kellie Tweeddale. Bookings: lilydaleatc.com

■ Heidelberg Theatre Company: Love, Love, Love (by Mike Bartlett) July 4 – 19 (2pm matinees on weekends) at 36 Turnham Ave., Rosanna. Director: George Werther. Bookings: htc.org.au

■ Off the Leash Theatre: Things I Know to be True (by Andrew Bovell) July 17 – 20 at the West Gippsland Arts Centre, 1 Civic Place, Warragul. Director: Amy Moss. Bookings: offtheleashtheatre.com.au

■ Theatrical: Legally Blonde July 12-27 at the National Theatre, St Kilda. Director: Aimee F orrest; Musical Director: Kent Ross; Choreographer: Maggie Lynch, Bookings: booktickets.com.au

■ Fab Nobs Theatre: Zombie Prom - The Atomic Edition. July 11 – 20 at Fab Nobs Theatre, 33 Industry Place, Bayswater. Director: Maeghan McKenzie; Choreographer: Dean Robinson; Musical Director: Sally McKenzie. fabnobstheatre.com.au

■ CPP Community Theatre: Seussical Jr. July 11, 12, 15, 17, 18 at 7.30pm; July 12,19 2pm; July 13 5pm at Boronia K-12 College, Performing Arts Centre, Albert Ave., Boronia (park at Rangeview Rd. end). Director/ Musical Director: Helen Taylor; Associate Director: Fiona Rosel. Bookings: cppcommunitytheatre.com.au/

■ Darebin Arts Speakeasy: Garçon with Wani Toaishara, July 16 – 20 at the Northcote Town Hall Arts Centre, 189 High St, Northcote.Bookings: arts.darebin.vic.gov.au/ Programs-and-opportunities/Programs/ Speakeasy-presentations/garcon-by-wanitoaishara

■ Mordialloc Theatre Company: Lord Savile’s Crime (by Constance Cox) July 24

– August 2 at the Shirley Burke Theatre, 64 Parkers Rd., Parkdale. Director: Deborah Fabbro. Bookings: mordialloctheatre. com.au

■ Encore Theatre: Agatha Crispie (by Cenarth Fox) July 18 – 27 at the Clayton Theatrette, Cooke St., Clayton. Director: David Dodd. Bookings: Trybooking.

■ Gilbert and Sullivan Opera Victoria (GSOV): The Mikado July 17 – 20 at The Alexander Theatre, Monash University, Clayton. Gilbert and Sullivan Opera Victoria (GSOV): The Mikado July 17 – 20 at The Alexander Theatre, Monash University, Clayton. Queenscliff Town Hall, July 26, Stawell Town Hall, August 2; Berninneit Theatre at Cowes, August 9. Bookings: gsov.org.au

■ PLOS Musical Productions: We Will Rock You. July 25 – August 2 at the Frankston Arts Centre, Davey St., Frankston. Director: Paul Watson. Bookings: plos.asn.au or 9784 1060. Cheryl Threadgold

Auditions

■ Encore Theatre: The Revlon Girl (by Anthony Docking) July 1 at 7.30pm at Fleigner Hall, 31 Highland Ave, Oakleigh East. Director: David Krause. Audition bookings: encoretheatre.com.au

■ Heidelberg Theatre Company: The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee. July 27 at 10.30am and July 28 at 7.00pm at 36 Turnham Ave., Rosanna. Director: Tim Scott. Audition bookings: timascott56@ gmail.com

■ Brighton Theatre Company: The Good Life (by Jeremy Sams based on TV series by John Esmonde and Bob Larbey) August 17 and August 18 at 7.00pm at the Bayside Arts and Cultural Centre, Cnr Wilson and Carpenter Sts., Brighton. Director: Joanne Gabriel. Audition Enquiries: Jo Gabriel at pukfam@bigpond.net.au Cheryl Threadgold

THE YELLOW LINE

■ TheYellowLine(twoworlds,oneline) directed and co-written by Alaine Beek and Berne-Lee (Nana) Edwards will be presented on July 26 and 27 at the Wyndham Cultural Centre, Werribee

Described as 'a powerful true story', and inspired by events at Port Phillip Prison, now set to close in 2025 amid major prison reforms, TheYellowLineis presented by Essence Theatre Productions and Nga Matai Purua Inc

Based on NMP President Tyson Tuala’s real-life experience, at the heart of TheYellow Line stands Jordan - a young Pasifika guard tasked with teaching Haka to a bunch of disconnected and disinterested prison inmates.

As Jordan walks the metaphorical (and literal) yellow line that separates guard from prisoner, this compelling new Australian work asks: What does redemption look like when you carry the weight of culture, identity, and justice on your shoulders?

The Yellow Line is said to deliver visceral honesty, unforgettable performances, and deep emotional truth, and features an ensemble cast which includes first-time performers with lived experience

“Even though the focus is Maori culture, all cultures will deeply connect with this play”, says co-writer/co-director Alaine Beek

“It’s based on a specific true story and audiences will be immersed into the Maori culture in a thought-provoking way. Each character is based on a real person and although dealing with a very significant topic, so much comedy shines through in the production.”

A story of humour, vulnerability, and connection, The Yellow Line also shares important insight into the Victorian justice system through a Maori and Pasifika lens, delving into the system and its impact within these communities.

It shines a crucial spotlight on the human stories often buried behind headlines - particularly for communities disproportionately impacted by incarceration in Australia

"I never set out to make a play,” explains Tuala. “The experiences that shaped The YellowLinecome from a part of my life I for the stage. This show is not about me. It’s about all the people - seen and unseen - who carry their culture with them into places that were never built for it.

“It’s about Maori and Pasifika men behind bars and the power of Wairua, haka, and music to reach through concrete and steel. It’s about the challenge of holding your values in systems that ask you to leave them at the gate.”

Performed by Kodie Heremia, Phil CameronSmith, Cam Venn, DJ Ahipene, Thisara Hewamanne, Elijah Logo, Wiremu Morris, Ross Daniel and Bronwynne Adeang

Performance Season: July 26 and 27

Times: Sat. 2pm and 7.30pm, Sun. 5pm

Tickets: $50 Full, $38 Grps 6+, $33 and Mob Tix (+bf)

Bookings: essencetheatre.productions/theyellow-line-1

Venue: Wyndham Cultural Centre - 177 Watton St, Werribee

Cheryl Threadgold

MSO

■ I am joining a standing ovation, having experienced one extraordinary performance and musical masterpiece after another.

At Hamer Hall, the magnificent Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, under conductor Benjamin Northey and guest pianists, have transported the audience to a place of joy.

Nearly 140,000 votes were cast in this year’s ABC Classic FM Countdown for the 100 most popular piano compositions, according to hosts Jeremy Fernandez and Megan Burslem

Ten pieces were performed, interspersed with filmed interviews with performers, composers, and others discussing their passion for the piano.

William Barton described ‘setting up the lone rumble of the pedal note, like a didgeridoo’. For others, the piano meant: ‘home’; ‘an equaliser’; ‘enjoyment’ and ‘a whole musical experience’. This year’s top 100 included 27 works by living composers and 11 pieces by female composers.

Voted fourth, Gershwin’s RhapsodyinBlue (highlights), was sensuously played by Simon Tedeschi and Andrea Lam in a duet.

Beethoven’s Piano Sonata No. 14, ‘Moonlight Sonata’, voted second. was played romantically by the amazing Andrea Lam Simon Tedeschi then performed highlights from Scott Joplin’s TheEntertainerand Debussy’s Clair deLune sensitively and wistfully.

No.41,SpiritedAway:OneSummer’sDay by Hisaishi was seductively played by Aura Go, then D.J. Ha astonished us with his superb rendition (playing with one hand), of Chopin’s Etude’,Optus10,No.3.

Elena Kats-Chernin and Tamara-Anna Cislowska gave us a medley of Kats-Chernin’s Russian Rag/Butterflying/Eliza Aria. The jaunty melody was quite magical, featuring the sound of bells.

Nat Bartsch played her composition, BrightnessintheHillsbeautifully. An insistent rhythm was coupled with a lyrical melody. It was a contrast to Andrea Lam’s passionate performance of highlights from Tchaikovsky’s Piano ConcertoNo.1.

Voted number one, Beethoven’sPianoConcertoNo.5TheEmperor, was played magnificently by Tamara-Anna Cislowska.

Finally, Konstantin Shamray played the third movement of Rachmaninov’s PianoConcerto No.2, his brilliant rendition bringing the fabulous concert to a triumphant conclusion. mso.com.au

Review by Juliet Charles

Soldier Boy

■ This Theatreworks production of Soldier Boyis masterfully adapted by writer Anthony Hill into a play from his bestselling novel based on a true story.

Set in WWI in 1915, 14-year-old, Melbourne boy James Martin is resolute in his desire to put up his age and serve with the Australian forces overseas.

Playing James, Oliver Tapp’s nuanced performance impressively captures the many shades of emotion asked of the character, from his relationship with family and fellow soldiers, to horrors of the Gallipoli battlefield and to fear of dying in his troop ship hospital bed.

A good balance is created through injections of trench humour providing light relief in moments of tension.

We are drawn into the push and pull of James, his mother and father’s kitchen table conversation when he leaves them with little option but to agree to signing his illegal papers.

Through Laura Iris Hill’s performance as James’s mother, we witness her pain couched with her warmth, while combined with restraint with thoughts of losing her son.

Beng Oh’s direction unleashes this story with great strength juxtaposed with subtlety. Jack Burmeister’s composition and music selection, coupled with Sidney Younger’s lighting effects, create authenticity and added emotional charge to this play.

Adrienne Chisholm’s costuming from army uniforms to patient James’s none-too-pristine singlet as he lies in his hospital bed, to his parents’ everyday wear, transports us back to the 1920s.

The strong support cast play multiple roles as the scenes glide from domestic, to hospital, to war zone and lifeboats.

Viv Hargreaves’s uncomplicated set works well for the cast enabling them to move easily within the space throughout these constant scene changes.

Performance Dates: Until July 5

Performance time: 90 minutes (lockout policy for latecomers)

Tickets: Adults $55, concession $48 Mob tix $25

Bookings: admin@theatreworks.org.au 0451 522 869

Review by Sherryn Danaher

● Ali Berg and Michelle Kalus ■ Some best friends get together over coffee for deep and meaningful chat, but Melbourn e-based besties Ali Berg and Michelle Kalus take it one step further.

The two friends write together and have just released their fourth novel, LoveOverdue

Described as a heartwarming rom com about the ink first love puts on your heart, Love Overdue introduces us to teacher

Lauren Green

The hardworking teacher unexpectedly meets up with the man who broke her heart 20 years ago, and he is now a parent at the school where she teaches. Awks, as teenagers would say.

The story that follows includes staffroom shenanigans, playground antics and the demands on modern schools’ staff, all based on Michelle’s real-life experience as a teacher.

Love Overdue is a bookish rom com about first loves, second chances, and discovering how sometimes the best plot twists come along after you think the final line's been written.

But Michelle and Ali aren’t just bestselling authors – they are passionate about a project called Books on the Rail, where a national team of volunteers leave free books on public transport for commuters to pick up, in an imitative designed to encourage people to put their phones down and pick up a book instead.

Assisted by more than a thousand ‘book ninjas’ Ali and Michelle have distributed 20,000 books, working with dozens of publishers and providing everything from major releases to debut novels.

Not surprisingly their activities have attracted a lot of attention on social media, and Ali and Michelle are determined to spread the joy of reading throughout the country.

● ● ● ● Kodie Heremia in The Yellow Line.
Photo: David Mullins
Love Overdueis published by Allen and Unwin and available now online and in bookstores.
Julie Houghton
● ● ●
● Oliver Tapp and Emily Joy in Soldier Boy.
Photo: Steven Mitchell Wright (Report at left)

CATO THE WISE

Maxwell Newton

The Winter Blues Festival has unveiled the final artist line-up headed to EchucaMoama over the last weekend of July. Organisers say it is already shaping up to be one of the biggest celebrations of Australian blues and roots music in recent memory. Third Artist Announcement (in alphabetical order): Ally Row, Anna Scionti, Bag O’ Nails, Charlie Bedford, Corey Legge. Geoff Achison, The Heavy Kicks, Jarrod Shaw, Jungle Jim Smith, The Locky Ukers (homegrown artist), Luke O'Connor, Kane Vincent (homegrown), The Maskell Love Band, Oh Babe, Ozone Street, Sammy Owen Blues Band, Shane Pacey Trio, Silent Voices (homegrown), Sarah Mackenzie-Ross (homegrown), Silent Voices (homegrown), Still Bileve and Zevon Lee Trio.

★A major limited edition publication and two new exhibitions will be unveiled this August, celebrating 45 years of Artbank, Australia’s national art collection and leasing program. Launching on August 8, On Display: The story of Artbank, Australia’s most visible art collection is a significant publication that delves into the history of the dynamic program, its impact on the contemporary art landscape in Australia over 45 years, and the artworks within the collection.

★Melbourne based company, AG Theatre, is bringing a new season of the moved loved children’s classic, The 3 Little Pigs, back to the stage this July school holidays, playing for a limited season at the National Theatre, Melbourne from July 9. The show had a stellar run in the West End’s Palace Theatre, delighting audiences with its pantolike irreverent humour as a clever reinvention of an old tale, centred around the pressured single mother pig, who just wants her very different three little piglets, Bar, Bee & Q, to move out and make their own homes.

★The Bastille Day Film Fes tival presebnts Paris May 68 > The Struggle Continues, a bold and series exploring the creative legacy of the 1968 Paris uprisings through underground French music, powerful films, and rare protest posters. From film screenings to panel talks, this three-day program is packed with revolutionary energy—and it’s also the force behind the Lumière Rouge panel and market DJ set. July 11-13 at Wardlow II, Fitzroy + Queen Victoria Market. Discover more: www.sofitelmelbourne.com.au

Melbourne Observer Melbourne Observer

Rourke’s Reviews Entertainment

★Monash University Museum of Art MUMA presents the first major solo exhibition in Melbourne of acclaimed artist Nusra Latif Qureshi Opens July 26 to September 21. Forming part of MUMA’s 50th anniversary year, The House of Irredeemable Objects offers a survey of Qureshi’s 30-year practice, bringing together painting, collage, photography, and installation, alongside a new commission developed in response to the Monash University Special Collections

★The Preatures, Tex Perkins and Matt Walker, Mama Kin Spender, Ella Hooper, Velvet Trip, The Badloves and more join the Queenscliff Music Festival lineup for a sun-drenched coastal celebration from November 28 –30.

★ Creative Climate was launched last Thursday (June 26) at Federation Square. It is a national consortium dedicated to building a low-carbon, adaptive and regenerative arts sector. “As part of a broader movement, it recognises culture is both shaped by the climate crisis and instrumental in reshaping it,” said a group representative. Funded by Creative Australia and led by Green Music Australia, the alliance provides the tools, knowledge and leadership to help the creative sector transition away from a carbon-based economy and adapt to climate impacts.

★When Melbourne-based art ist Sole Galvan picks up a paintbrush, she paints with deep purpose, honouring two special people: her father who died after a stroke in Argentina; and her partner who continues to recover from a stroke here in Australia. Now, Sole is one of dozens of artists across the country donating original works to Strokes4Stroke, a national online art auction raising funds to support stroke prevention, awareness and recovery initiatives through Stroke Foundation

★The 12th annual Seeing Eye Dogs Appeal is a life-changing initiative that provides independence for Australians who are blind or have low vision. The monthlong Appeal aims to raise over $1.1 million to fund the training of 22 Seeing Eye Dogs, with some of Victoria's top sporting talent, Melbourne Victory FC and Collingwood’s Brownlow Medallist Tom Mitchell supporting the campaign throughout July. These elite athletes are lending their voices to encourage Australians to 'Help Train Up a Pup'. Each dog costs over $50,000 to train and transforms the life of someone who is blind or has low vision.

AC/DC second concert

■ Tickets to AC/DC’s Melbourne show at the MCG went on sale late last week.

A second and final show was added. Concert dates are wedenesday, November 12 and Sunday, November 16.

Joining AC/DC as special guests on the tour is Australian rock band Amyl and the Sniffers.

The tour shares its name with AC/ DC’s 2020 album, Power Up, which debuted at #1 on the ARIA Chart in Australia and 20 other countries.

Power Up notably notched the band’s third #1 debut on the Billboard 200 and exploded as one of the best-selling albums of 2020 worldwide.

It closed out the year on Rolling Stone’s Top 50 Albums of 2020’ and Consequence of Sound’s ‘Top 50 Albums of 2020’.

It garnered Grammy Award nominations in the categories of Best Rock Album, Best Rock Performance, and Best Music Video for ShotInTheDark

In 2024, the Power Up Tour kicked off in Europe with a staggering 1.7 million tickets sold in the first days of sales, eventually surpassing two million tickets sold across 24 shows.

The band just concluded 10 soldout shows in North America and has 15 additional shows scheduled across Europe before returning to Australia.

Open House

■ One of the largest programs in the history of Open House Melbourne Weekend has been unveiled, with almost 200 buildings, places, and experiences open to the public to explore.

Across one weekend this month (Saturday - Sunday, July 26-27), Victorians will be granted rare access to some of metropolitan Melbourne’s most fascinating buildings, new projects, and private homes ordinarily closed to the public.

This year’s program features some of Melbourne’s most high-profile architecture and public infrastructure projects, including the Metro Tunnel Project’s Anzac Station , and public access for the first time to the new Veloway on the West Gate Tunnel Projec t and Port Phillip’s new EcoCentre

These landmark developments will be open on the weekend for a special public preview, providing a rare glimpse behind the scenes of the projects shaping the city’s future.

New, unusual and notable in this year’s program this year are the Essendon Fields Airport Terminal; the new 21-hectare elephant habitat at the Werribee Open Range Zoo; Mission Whitten Oval home of the Western Bulldogs Football Club; a First Nations kayak tour down the Yarra; a city-wide role-playing game set in the year 2050 and behind the scenes tours of the city’s coolest street art studios.

The full program is now available on the Open House Melbourne website.

Open House Melbourne’s Executive Director and Chief Curator, Dr Tania Davidge, explained this year’s theme and how Open House Melbourne Weekend helps shine a light on Melbourne’s hidden histories.

“‘Stories of the City’ underscores that idea that the city is more than just bricks and mortar—Melbourne is about people and place. Every building, street and public place in our city has a unique story to uncover, and Open House Melbourne Weekend is your best time to explore the secret histories of our city hidden behind closed doors.”

Beasts of No Nation

■ (MA). 137 minutes. Available now on Netflix.

BeastsOfNoNationis an emotionally draining, brilliantly crafted drama that was one of the most powerful films of 2015, and is a fiercely important look at the impact of war.

Set in an un-named West African country, the story centres on 12 year-old Agu (Abraham Attah), who enjoys a generally peaceful existence with his family in a U.N. protected ‘buffer’ zone, where the bloody civil war between NDF rebels and NRC government soldiers is kept at a relative distance.

All this is shattered when NRC soldiers invade the protected area, violently attacking the local population and sending Agu running into the jungle on his own.

Shaken and upset, Agu soon crosses paths with a platoon fighting for the NDF, led by the imposing Captain (Idris Elba), who eventually takes the youngster under his wing.

From a loving family environment, Agu is soon inducted into a life of hatred, violence and bloodshed, crushing the childhood innocence a boy of his age should have the right to enjoy.

Beasts Of No Nation is not an easy film to watch, and deliberately so. The big budget 2006 Hollywood film Blood Diamond attempted to look at the same problem, but it sacrificed genuine insight for impressively staged action scenes (a pity, since Leonardo DiCaprio and Djimon Hounsou both delivered top-notch performances), and its child soldier subplot was tied up too conveniently and easily.

Here we have no such compromises. AgU, once brainwashed, totally believes in the carnage his side is carrying out, as the Captain convinces all the children in his outfit that the opposition is the reason why family and friends have been slaughtered, instead of the simple fact that there are two adult factions that will stop at nothing to achieve ultimate power and glory.

Attah is simply astonishing as Agu, completely drawing us in to his terrifying world, a world that no child should have to endure.

Whether it be during scenes of graphic violence, intimate family gatherings, or telling moments between soldiers who are briefly allowed to remember what it was like to be a child, Attah is heartbreakingly real, and reminds one

of Sean Nelson’s character in Boaz Yakin’s outstanding urban drama Fresh (1994), and of course Matheus Nachtergaele in the highly acclaimed Brazilian film CityOfGod(2002).

As much as I admire Leonardo DiCaprio (who should have won the Oscar for The Wolf Of Wall Street, not for the technically brilliant but heavy-handed, overlong, and dramatically hollow The Revenant), Attah’s acting and personal journey was more worthy of an Academy Award that year.

Elba ( Luther TV series / Mandela:LongWalkToFreedom /28WeeksLater) is equally as good as the Captain, creating a threedimensional person instead of a contrived, one-dimensional monster.

The entire cast, mostly made up of non-professional actors, are all extraordinary, making sure there is not one false moment during the film’s lengthy running time.

For a low budget feature, Beasts Of No Nation is beautiful to look at and listen to, with work that is world class.

Despite the controversy of not crediting photographer Richard Mosse as an influence, there is one sequence that highlights the surreal nature of war and the young people fighting in it.

Immense praise must go to screenwriter/director Cary Joji Fukunaga, whose detailed writing (based on the novel by Uzodinma Iweala) and patient, uncompromising direction makes sure that the material never becomes cliched or superficial.

After achieving independent success with Sin Nombre (2009), before delivering a surprisingly strong take on Charlotte Bronte’s JaneEyre (2011), Fukunaga then wowed viewers with the unanimously praised season one of the HBO TV series True Detective (2014).

One of the few highly-touted shows that actually delivered the goods, this absorbing crime drama, despite its expensive trappings (something modern television productions are currently enjoying), still concentrated on character, mood, and story, with Fukunaga treating the program as an eight-hour movie rather than a weekly TV serial.

Fukunaga’s most recent film was the 2021 Bond film, No Time To Die, which was Daniel Craig’s final outing as the iconic character. Ten years later, Beasts Of No Nationis sadly still relevant viewing.

RATING - ****½ Aaron Rourke

In Memory of
● ● Aaron Rourke

Melbourne Observer Melbourne Observer

Across Observer Melbourne Lovatts Crossword No 13

1. Shabbiness in dress

6. Light-bulb inventor

11. Shiny

15. Forts

20. Egyptian river

21. Reproductive organ

22. Shopping precinct

23. Lead dancer, ... ballerina

25. South Africa's Cape ... Hope (2,4)

26. Pakistan currency units

27. Actor, Ryan ... (1'4)

29. Likable

32. Tube

34. Without delay (1,1,1,1)

36. Look-alikes, dead ...

39. Caravan rover

41. Brief

43. Sparking stone

46. Boils or ulcers

48. Low wetland

49. London's ... Mall

51. Curving lines

52. Exploited

55. Territory, Puerto ...

56. Every

59. Composer, Andrew ... Webber

61. Antarctic inlet, ... Sea

62. False god

63. Crowd brawl

64. Corrected (wrong)

67. Dalai Lama's nationality

68. Bitter regret

70. Very keen enthusiast

71. One who owes money

72. Overeats

73. Firebomb liquid

74. Of punishment

75. Batting spell

77. Broken down

78. Resounded

79. Theatre reviewer

82. Hazardous

86. Loft

87. Peace prize city

89. Spick & span

92. Merge

94. Get up

96. Biblical son of Isaac

98. Naming word

100. Recycle

101. Mongolian desert

103. Painting, Mona ...

105. From Baghdad

106. Adolescent

108. Sports match

111. Autograph

112. Actor's outfits

114. Rat

116. A single time

119. Droplet

120. Location

121. Kind

123. Leave out

124. Madam (2'2)

125. Flowing

126. Loudness

127. Grand house

130. Born as

131. Cleaning up (room)

135. English coin

138. Not stereo

139. Large jug

141. Computer/phone link

144. A lot of

146. I am, you ...

147. Looked up & down

148. UK national broadcaster (1,1,1)

149. Mad Roman emperor

150. Fuss

151. Female zebra

152. German emperor

153. Repast

155. Drink, ... spumante

157. Golfer, Greg ...

158. Unseat

160. Release (3,2)

161. Sprite

162. Italian city

163. Honey liquor

165. Brother's daughter

166. Souped-up car, hot ...

AcrossDownDown

167. Scamp

168. Laid slates

169. Upper-class

171. Document, Magna ... 172. Glossy black bird

175. Entrails

176. Lubricates

179. Breakfast dish

180. Cow flesh

182. Flowers, sweet ... 184. Chirps

185. Castle water ditch

186. 24 December, Christmas ...

188. ... Lang Syne

189. US anti-crime agency (1,1,1)

190. Measure (out)

191. Fifth musical note 193. Own 194. Father 196. Verge

197. Fiesta, Mardi ... 198. Medicine amounts 200. Unhappiest 205. Vicious dog

207. Second-hand vehicle (4,3)

210. Playwright

211. Reparation

212. In a frenzied state

213. Grass skirt dance

214. USA nickname, Uncle ..

216. Steals from 218. Created

219. Prepare (newspaper)

220. Tights

224. Coffee style

227. Spiky plant, ... vera

229. From Bangkok

230. Abhor

231. Gallantly

232. Dr Jekyll & Mr ...

233. Heredity unit

235. Out of order

237. Solidifies

239. Actor, Richard ...

241. Timepiece

244. Forewarning

246. Blankness

249. ... & twos

252. Depletes

254. Crave

256. Heaven's ... Gates

258. French Mrs

259. Pins for hammering

260. Romantic US falls

263. Internal

264. Lump of gold

265. Legless grub

267. Actress, ... Kidman

270. Digit

271. Funeral Mass

272. Actor, Dustin ...

273. Lewd

274. Loses (hair)

277. London nightspot

279. Make (wage)

281. Throw out

284. Only fair (2-2)

286. Crustacean with nippers

288. Small distance measures

292. Yoga master

294. Raw metals

295. Domestic servants

298. Screen legend, Sophia ...

300. From Emerald Isle

301. Sum up

303. Baby's skin problem, ... rash

306. Bashfulness

308. Japan & Korea are there

309. Oil-exporting cartel

311. Throb

314. Mushy

315. Energetic

316. Do the dishes (4,2)

317. Throng

318. Former spouses

319. Paris landmark, ... Triomphe (3,2)

320. Tennis ace, ... Sampras

1. Renovate (2,2)

2. Become distorted

3. Suggest

4. Kuwaiti rulers

5. Clean break

6. Flees to wed

7. Delay

8. Bathroom fixtures

9. Fall asleep (3,3)

10. Brigand

11. Revolve on axis

12. Stood against

13. Smudge

14. Palestinian chief, ... Arafat

15. Pour carelessly

16. Aida or Carmen

17. Potters' ovens

18. Pantomime lead

19. Observes

24. Rebukes, ... over the knuckles

28. Put on ... & graces

30. Spoken

31. Hideous

33. Irritated the skin

35. Incidental comments

37. Clarified butter

38. Curry & ...

40. Face veils

42. Physical activity

44. Portugal's capital

45. Scientist, Sir Isaac ...

47. Stench

48. Elevated railway

49. Drainage tradesman

50. Extortionate lender (4,5)

53. Largest bird

54. Calls (5,2)

57. Ancient Mariner's seabird

58. Protective headwear

60. Cloth retailers

63. Cleaver

65. Frosted (cake)

66. Expensive

68. Coral bank

69. Cosy

76. Set up (machinery)

79. Long-leafed lettuce

80. Nunavut native

81. Eastern faith

83. Twig shelters

84. Cartoon strip, Li'l ...

85. Flightless bird

88. English cheese

90. Fleur de lis plant

91. Among 93. Riveted

95. Easter gifts

97. Unplaced competitor (4-3)

99. Constantly busy (2,3,2)

100. Hire

102. Pungent bulb

104. Largest African nation

107. Uncanny

109. Wet

110. Vocal solo

111. Jet-baths

113. Soapie session

115. Obvious

117. TV award

118. Young deer

121. Contemptibly

122. Patella

127. Nonsense, ... jumbo

128. Razor cuts

129. Bits & pieces (4,3,4)

132. Recipe components 133. Stupid 134. Avarice

135. Packaged 136. Dilapidated

137. 24 hours ago

138. Unforgettable

143. Huge stone blocks

145. Tomahawk

151. Enormous

154. Men's Singles champion, .. Agassi

156. Lustre

159. One, numero ... 164. Totally 169. Cougars

170. Steam burn

173. Influences

174. Short, witty remark

177. Author, ... Asimov

178. Take oath

181. Whirling (of water)

183. Women warriors

187. Wantonly destroy

192. Female hormone

195. Current of air

199. Supervise

201. Points gun

202. Anti-flood embankment

203. Genuine fact

204. Implicit

206. Gay

207. Non-rural

208. Cheap, a ... a dozen

209. Lends a hand to 213. Smacks

215. Strolling

217. Killed

221. Helium & hydrogen

222. Not ever 223. Cut with scissors

224. Charlotte Bronte novel, Jane ... 225. Withdraw, ... out

226. Poet, ... Allan Poe

228. Legal trade bans

234. Phone security device

236. Wrongdoers

238. Terminate

240. Singer, ... Orbison

242. Normally (2,1,4)

243. Peculiarity

245. Mussels or clams

247. Peppermint essence

248. Nut fastener

250. Scientist, Albert ...

251. Weasel-like animals

253. Overfill

255. College test

257. Recline lazily

258. Restaurant list

261. Lovers' fling

262. Military forces

265. Valuable ores, precious ...

266. Garden ornament

268. Hex

269. The Continent

275. Jolly laugh (2,2)

276. Rounded roof

278. Hampers

280. Pressurised spray

282. Delights

283. Dollar division

285. Properly positioned, in ...

287. Steam generator

289. Tripoli citizen

290. Impersonates

291. Melted

292. Barked shrilly

293. Potato

296. Colorado ski resort

297. Writer, ... Thomas

299. Obtain (funds)

302. Two-door car

304. ... Fools' Day

305. Earnest requests

306. Crown Princess of Denmark

307. Opera singer

308. Yes votes

321. Urges

322. Sense

323. Blunted

324. Movie actors (4,5)

140. Enforces once more 141. Pacified

142. Courageous

310. Head cook

312. Charismatic air

313. Spreading trees

Buoys unplugged

■ It’s all happening again at the Two Buoys Dromana Wine and Cocktail Bar.

This year’s Unplugged open music competition has kicked off and will run over the next few months.

Featuring solo artists, duos and acoustic acts, contestants will be playing their best for prizes totalling over $14.000 and the chance for future work opportunities. Visit www.twobuoys.com.au for more info.

Beth’s Debut

■ Hailing from Bendigo, Beth-String Fix Guitar has released her debut single Heavy Landing which is now available on all streaming platforms.

Inspired by current world events and the need for humanity, I feel it’s becoming even more relevant by the day, Beth says.

The song is a guitar-based story where multiple guitars battle it out, like a conversation between different people. The atmosphere builds with tension, then resolves into hope.

Magnetism

■ Brooke Miller will launch her debut EP Magnetism at the Brunswick Ballroom on Sunday, October 19 commencing 1pm.

Step into an afternoon of raw connection and magnetic storytelling as Brooke takes the stage for her highly anticipated show. With a clear, sweet, and powerful voice, Brooke shares songs woven from years of lived experience by sharing intimate, anecdotal tales of romance, longing, and the undeniable pull between hearts, says her media release.

- Rob Foenander

Melbourne Observer Melbourne Observer

Chamber made listening acts

■ Chamber Made will transform Melbourne Recital Centre into a sonic playground with Listening Acts – a bold takeover of its public and hidden spaces for the Now or Never festival

Listening Acts isn’t a typical concert or exhibition – it’s a portal into the unheard and unexpected, featuring three live performances and six sound installations that intersect sound, technology, memory and identity.

Grounded in the artists’ lived experiences, personal histories and cultural perspectives, the works create sensory encounters that are both solitary and shared, blurring the boundaries between hearing and feeling.

Chamber Made Artistic Director, Tamara Saulwick, invites audiences to experience this multiartform sonic inquiry – one that reframes how sound is perceived and encourages listening in en“ListeningActs transforms everyday sounds into something profound, strange and moving. How do we hear ourselves and each other through the layers of technology, trauma and time?”

asks Saulwick

Over three days in August, surrender to sound in unexpected ways. ListeningActsis a moment to hear hospital machines sing, watercoolers gossip and ancestral voices reverberate through the walls.

The intimate live performance features three acoustic works:

Song to the Cell by Biddy Connor is a haunting duet between a live vocalist and a hospi-

Crossword Solution No 13

tal IV machine. Featuring hums, beeps and mechanical rhythms, it’s a transhumanist song cycle exploring healing, dependence and human–machine connection.

Tactile Piece for Human Ears by Aviva Endean offers a subtly communal binaural experience.

Audiences wear headphones to enter a surreal soundscape shaped by wind currents, pipe tones and underwater vibrations – altering their sense of acoustic reality.

Sounding forms / forming sounds by Alexandra Spence begins as a solo and evolves into a trio with Connor and Endean. Using resonating sinewaves, custom-built perspex instruments and drum skins, the work reveals the physical presence of sound in space and the body.

Six free installations guide audiences on a sonic journey throughout the venue:

AccordionWithoutOrgans by Rebecca Bracewell is an unfolding work of sonic archaeology centred on a single accordion recording. Played through multiple cassette players with amplifiers, each iteration adds acoustic layers while partially veiling the last.

Cathedral Reverb by Hannah de Feyter invites one listener at a time into a sculpted sound space. Inspired by classical mnemotechnics – ancient memory techniques – it conjures imagined architecture through reverberant sound and image.

WithGhosts:AChoreography ofPresenceby Anna Liebzeit centres on a 13-foot plait of hair suspended on a wall.

Observations with Matt Bissett-Johnson

Observations with Matt Bissett-Johnson

● ● ● ● Tamara Saulwick

CLASSY FIELD LINES UP FOR EPSOM HANDICAP

■ One race that proves popular with the top echelon is the Epsom Handicap run over 1600 metres come early October.

So much so they have framed a classy field for the rich mile.

The Chris Waller trained galloper, Autumn Glow, heads the markets.

The top mare has taken all before her winning the first four of her starts in top company.

She is by the good young sire, Autumn, who won the Caulfield Guineas in his short career in fine style.

She showed her class by winning the Darby Munro event beating a class field.

On the next line is another classy filly in Lady Shenandoah who is also taking all before her.

She is by the famous sire, Snitzel, who we lost just recently.

From her seven starts she has won five with a second and a third. She is good and is all class.

Then we have yet another smart filly in Aeliana, yet another star in the Waller camp, winning the ATC Australian Derby over 2400 metres

The John O’Shea and Tom Charlton trained Linebacker, has ability.

The three-year-old is by Super Seth, who won a Blue Diamond Stakes at Caulfield

The Victorian horse, Another Wil, has ability as proven in the recent starts.

He was unplaced in the Doncaster Mile, but was a bit unlucky, just missing a place behind a wall in front of him

He’s another nicely bred type, by yet another Blue Diamond winner in Street Boss

Another who competed in the Doncaster was Gringotts, prepared by top young Victorian trainer, Ciaron Maher.

He holds a victory over the smart mare, Fan Girl.

Another good type is the Gai WaterhouseAdrian Bott trained, Royal Patronage, who won the Canterbury Stakes in fine style beating, Here to Shock and Magic Time and StefiMagnetica.

Another that has ability is the Hawkes team trained, horse, Ceowulf.

He won the Neville Selwood event at Rosehill in a tight finish.

He has raced the best and can match them.

The James Cummings trained Tom Kitten is one who goes alright and matched the best, in the Queen Elizabeth Stakes at Randwick on April 12.

Another that can fire is StefiMagnetica who ran a good second behind Fan Girl in the Queen of the Turf Stakes.

Last but not least is the ex-Clinton McDonald galloper, Angel Capital, who is smart. It has won four of its first seven starts, now with Chris Waller.

It is one of the most open races, leave me out.

New arrangement

■ Racing Victoria and the Seven Network are coming together forming a long-term extension of their broadcast partnership to further showcase and grow the Sport of Thoroughbred Racing.

The new agreement will help foster a closer working relationship between RV and Seven in the broadcast and promotion of Victorian Thoroughbred Racing across Australia.

Ted Ryan

For the past decade, RV -owned and operated Racing.Com has been Australia’s only 24/ 7 Free-to-Air Sporting Channel showcasing Victorian Thoroughbred Racing and that will continue for another five years from July 1. Racing.com will be broadcast on free-to-air Channel 78(Metropolitan) and Channel 68) Regional) across the nation, with broadcast quality to be further enhanced across the following 12 months.

In addition, Racing.Com will be accessible daily on 7plus Sport where it will garner more prominence alongside Seven’s Premium sporting products for these or watching on the go.

The announcement coincides with plans for Racing.com to expand its coverage of Western Australian racing as Seven has done, alongside broadcasting, Victorian, South Australian and Hong Kong racing and feature International meetings, including Royal Ascot Ted Ryan It also cements Seven’s standing as the home of live and free Thoroughbred Racing and ensures that sports fans can continue to

Via Sistina. Racing Photos.

MULTIPLE WINNERS AT SHEPP.

■ Multiple winners were the order of the night at Shepparton’s regular Tuesday fixture on June 24 with Allendale’s Adam Stephens snaring a double, while ‘ace’ reinsman James Herbertson chalked up a treble and Rochester’s Caitlin Guppy a quinella. The Stephens double consisted of 7Y0 Union Guy-Alberts Belle mare Ruby Wingate in the Neatline Homes Pace over 2190 metres and half sister 12Y0 I Am The Way gelding Iamawingate which snared the 1690 metre Cottrells Electrical Pace, both driven by ‘Herbie’. Ruby Wingate settled at the tail from the extreme draw as Our Sonny Maguire (gate six) went forward to be gifted the lead by Laura Wilson aboard the favourite Soho Playgirl (gate four).

Going forward off a double trail in the last lap, Ruby Wingate finished with a wet sail to blouse Im Wesley (gate three second row) in the running line by half a head, with Animado (gate two) leading up the three wide line in the last lap third 14.5 metres back. The mile rate 1-57.2.

■ Iamawingate driven by ‘Herbie’ began best to lead from gate four registering a 1.9 metre margin over Skinny Horace which trailed in 159.5. Cresco Threepeat (one/one last lap) after racing exposed from outside the front line was third 1.8 metres back.

■ Rochester part-owner/trainer Caitlin Guppy and family owned 9Y0 Life Sign-Tinted Rose mare Mynameisruby who loves Shepparton landed the 2190 metre Cobram Trials Pace. Driven by James Herbertson, Mynameisruby starting from gate five on the second line settled in the last half of the field as stablemate Noble Julia led from gate four before restraining to allow Nevs Dream (gate three) to cross.

Gaining a three wide trail home from midfield in the last lap, Mynameisruby despite being very wide on the final bend, motored home to blouse Noble Julia along the sprint lane by a nose in a tricky finish giving her the quinella.

Lochinvar Charm was third off a three wide double trail in the last lap a half neck away in a thrilling finish. The mile rate 2-01.4. It was Mynameisruby’s 11th success in 134 outings, many of them being at Shepparton.

■ Andy and Kate Gath’s three year old What The Hill-Watts Up Rainbow colt Watts Up The Hill made it two from two when defeating his rivals in the Willowood Farm Trotters Mobile over 2190 metres.

Settling a long way back from inside the second line as Starlight Red (gate two) led before handing over to Settle The Bill from the extreme draw which had weaved inside runners to assume control at the judge on the first occasion, Watts Up The Hill made ground rapidly in the last lap to race away in the straight to score easily by 7.6 metres in a rate of 2-02.6. Polemarker Abbie (three pegs) ran on late for third albeit 15.9 metres back.

Double Day

■ Two meetings were held on Wednesday –Terang during the afternoon and Bendigo at night.

A terrific race commenced the Terang fixture consisting of classy standardbreds Keayang Tokyo, Young Bluey, Ultimate Vinnie and Jilliby Nitro in the 1680 metre Terang CoOp Rural Store Pace.

Keayang Tokyo and Jilliby Nitro trained by Marg and Paddy Lee, Young Bluey (Mattie Craven) and Ultimate Vinnie (Sam Barker) –the surprise victor being Jilliby Nitro. Roughie All Blazing Guns (gate two) was best to begin for Amy Day with both Jilliby Nitro (Lochie Cook – gate five) and Young Bluey (gate six) going forward, while Keayang Tokyo was eased from outside the front line.

On settling it was Jilliby Nitro leading with Young Bluey moving to park outside him, All Blazing Guns trailing, Keayang Tokyo (one/ one) and Ultimate Vinnie (one/two).

Appearing to be under pressure approaching the final bend Jilliby Nitro found another gear with Young Bluey about to join him and Keayang Tokyo angling three wide on turning being followed by Ultimate Vinnie easing wider. Refusing to give in, Jilliby Nitro defied all challengers to register a half neck margin over Keayang Tokyo, with Young Bluey 2 metres away third and Ultimate Vinnie fourth 1.3 metres back. The mile rate 1-54.4 (last half 58.1 – quarter 29.3).

■ The Lee stable finished the day with three winners – the others being 3Y0 Downbytheseaside-Garden Gate Tina gelding Keayang Seaside in the Cobden Artificial

Harness Racing

len-baker@ bigpond.com

with Len Baker

Breeders Co-Op Pace over 2180 metres and two year old first starter Keayang Bazlenka, a gelded son of What The Hill and Keayang Snow Pea in the 1680 metre Terang Fitness Maiden Trotters Mobile, both driven by Jason Lee. Keayang Seaside (gate six) settling three back in the moving line and ran home nicely to score by 3 metres in advance of Major Crunch (gate four) which trailed the weakening leader Keayang Galliano. Ynobe Dakota (one/one from gate eight) was third 3.1 metres back in a mile rate of 2-01.1.

■ Keayang Bazlenka attracted plenty of attention and after going forward after being trapped wide from outside the front line joined the pacemaker Trouville Sur Mer (gate five). Cruising to the front approaching the home turn, Keayand Bazlanka greeted the judge 5.3 metres clear of the leader in an auspicious debut. Rasengan (one/one) from gate six after galloping in the score up was third 2.7 metres away, ■ Hamilton’s “gentleman” Jim Barker prepared a double during the afternoon with 12Y0 Rocknroll Hanover-Best Of Wine gelding Dancin With Elvis successful in the Brandt Equipment Pace over 1680 metres and 10Y0 Changeover-Presidential Drive gelding Presidential Drive the 2180 metre Terang Storage Pace.

Dancin With Elvis driven by Chris Walsh settled mid-field from inside the second line and after going forward three wide to join the leaders Dancebytheseaside and Ona Merry Dance approaching the home turn, finished best to gain the day by a neck over Ona Merry Dance and El Awoman (one/two) who was 2 metres away third. The mile rate 2-01.1.

Dancin With Elvis had won at Mt Gambier back in April. Most reliable Presidential Drive driven by granddaughter Jackie Barker peeled off a one/one trip from outside the front line at the bell to register a 2.9 metre victory from Listrepo (gate four) which followed him, with She Will Wantano (gate two second line) third 1.5 metres back after moving to race exposed at the bell. The mile rate 2-01.1.

■ At Bendigo, Daylesford duo Michael Barby and Anne-Maree Conroy’s handy 7Y0 Love You-My Valerie mare Amour Maternal was victorious in the 2150 metre Prydes Easifeed Trotters Mobile.

Trained by Mick, Amour Eternal driven by Anne-Maree began safely from gate three to possie one/one after Billy Zippin went forward from gate four to race exposed outside the leader Tella Shes Dreamin.

Moving outside Tella Shes Dreamin prior to the home turn, Amour Eternal was too strong in the run home for polemarker Karbine which had followed the pacemaker before easing wide on turning. Tella Shes Dreamin held third. The margins 1.3 by 12 metres in a mile rate of 2-03.6.

■ Maryborough owner/breeders Len and Irene Parker’s American Ideal-Flying Moth 3Y0 filly Ideal Moth notched up her 6th success in 18 outings when victorious in the 2150 metre $9,000 Apco Service Stations Strathdaleand Kangaroo Flat Pace Final returning a 1-57.6 mile rate.

Trained and driven by Byrneside’s Damian Wilson, Ideal Moth settled three back in the running line from gate three on the second line as polemarker Foresight led with Cee Ceem Lou on her outside. Angling three wide before the home turn, both Cee Lou and Ideal Moth surged past the leader with Ideal Moth doing best to register an easy 8.5 metre victory over Katunga Express which had trailed Foresight from inside the second line angling clear on turning. Rabada starting from the extreme draw ran

on late for third a half head away.

■ Lara part-owner/trainer Wally Dummett combined with Craig Demmler to capture the Alabar Vicbred Platinum Mares Sprint Championship (1st heat) over 1650 metres with smart 4Y0 Marjendos, a 4Y0 daughter of Sportswriter and Penny Union. Given an easy time from gate five one/one as Foxy Two Gloves led from gate five.

Giving chase approaching the final bend, Marjendos ran home strongly to record a 3.4 metre margin over Joe Got Rolled (mid-field in the running line from inside the second line), with Mitzi Said (one/two from gate two on the second line) running her usual honest race for third a head back. The mile rate 154.2.

■ It was welcome back to the winners list for Huntly trainer/driver Stuart Rothacker when 4Y0 Great Success-Delphi Rose mare Alabama May scored in the Great Ocean Road Real Estate Maiden Trotters Mobile over 2150 metres returning a respectable mile rate of 204. Bred and raced by Stuart and wife Janice, Alabama May received the run of the race from gate five trailing the front runner Jetaway Saint (gate two) and was always travelling kindly. Easing to the outside on the final bend, Alabama May put the race beyond doubt in a couple of strides to score easily by 12.9 metres from Jetaway Saint and first starter Waikare Adrienna (four pegs from gate three) which ran on late along the sprint lane to be a half neck away third.

At Kilmore

■ Kilmore was Thursday’s meeting and area trainers Chris Lang and Sonia Mahar (Riddell) were winners on the night when smart 4Y0 Tactical Landing-Dream Interest mare Rubys Dream landed the Nagambie Senior Citizens Trotters Mobile over 2180 metres while Love You-Access To Success mare Preferred Love scored in the C&M Build Trotters Mobile over the same journey for Romsey’s Chris Svanosio.

■ Rubys Dream driven by Chris Lang for Port Fairy owner Pauline Matthews wasn’t pushed from the extreme draw settling at the rear as Sovereign Tiger was best to begin from gate four to lead before taking a trail behind Link In Bio which had raced parked.

Off and running three wide racing for the bell, Rubys Dream assumed control with a lap to travel before coasting to a 3.2 metre untouched victory over Sovereign Tiger along the sprint lane, with Link In Bio holding down third 2 metres back. The mile rate 2-01.7.

■ Preferred Love also starting from the extreme draw was sent forward three wide racing for the bell to take over from the leader Rarity Rock (gate four) and was not headed from there on, accounting for Rarity Rock and Shes Sky High (three pegs from the pole before moving outside the winner on the final bend). The margins 1.7 by 2.4 metres in a mile rate of 2-03.1.

■ The $8000 Momentum Gaming Pace Final over 2180 metres saw Congupna trainer Steven Duffy victorious with 3Y0 Soho Lanikai-Stunin Art gelding Mad Punta. Driven by son Ryan, Mad Punter (gate six) was given a good trip one/one with Fiano leading from the pole. Easing three wide prior to the home turn, Mad Punter dashed clear shortly after but had to pull out all stops to just last by a half head from polemarker The Blazin Boots which trailed angling wide on turning after causing a false start at the first attempt.

Rakarompa (one/three from inside the second line) went forward three wide in the last lap to finish third three metres back. The mile rate 1-58.6.

■ The 1690 metre O’Brien Electrical Pace saw Ryan Duffy chalk up a double after guiding Bowenvale part-owner/trainer Gerard Jamieson’s 5Y0 Lincoln Royal-Jilliby Nippa gelding Sir Nippa to victory returning a 1-57.3 mile rate.

Trailing the speedy beginner Polly Peachum (gate six) from the pole, Duffy angled Sir Nippa into the open at the bell before opening up a handy lead in the last lap. Kept going in the straight, Sir Nippa had six metres up his sleeve on reaching the wire, accounting for Celestial Zodiac (extreme draw) from last at the bell. Midnight Mojo (gate five) was third 5.2 metres away after racing exposed for most of the trip.

■ Youthful Ballan trainer/driver Leilani Justice trained and reined 7Y0 A Rocknroll DanceGolden Flyin gelding Wichita Kansas to an all of the way victory from outside the front row in the Jet Roofing Pace over 1690 metres. Rated to perfection, Wichita Kansas held too many guns for the Ross Graham stablemates Tophut

Sulky Snippets Sulky Snippets

This Week

■ Tuesday – Shepparton, Wednesday –Bendigo, Thursday – Kilmoree, Friday –Melton/Mildura, Saturday – Melton, Sunday – Cranbourne, Monday – Charlton, Tuesday – Echuca.

Johny (one/one from gate five) and Bettorsweetvictory (three pegs) from gate four which used the sprint lane. The margins 4.1 by 2.1 metres in a mile rate of 1-58.7.

■ The 1690 metre Carlton & United Breweries Trotters Mobile went the way of Kurunjang trainer Maree Caldow’s most beautifully bred and consistent 5Y0 What The Hill-Cloud Chaser mare The Sky Is The Limit. Raced by the Caldow family along with many other part-owners, The Sky Is The Limit driven by husband John began fast from gate five to lead and rated a treat defied all challengers to greet the judge 5 metres clear of polemarker Boutika which trailed, with Flyin Time (gate two - one/one) third for Darraweit’s Lisa Miles 8 metres away. The mile rate 2-01.1.

■ Kilmore more than often cater for the young reinspersons and the MC Security Concession Drivers Pace over 1690 metres was taken out by Goulburn Valley based Grace Bilney aboard the Michael/Jack Laugher (Bendigo) trained 11 year old For A Reason-In The Beginning gelding Budd Sidewinder who started his career in Western Australia.

Trailing the fast beginner Jay Bee (gate six) from the pole, Budd Sidewinder enjoyed a cosy passage before angling into the clear on the final bend to score by 9.5 metres in a 1-58.7 mile rate from The Democrat (gate six) which ran home late from near last. Murial (three pegs from gate three) used the sprint lane for third a nose away.

■ Derrinal trainer/driver Glenn Bull rarely misses a Kilmore meeting with his team and has a great strike rate as well and it was 8Y0 Western Terror-Paris Highlights mare Favouritehighlight who added another winner to the list when successful in the 2180 metre TAB Pace.

Trapped in the open from gate five before crossing polemarker stablemate Very Tempting, Favouritehightlight was never headed, reaching the wire 4.9 metres in advance of Sea Hawk (one/one from gate three) and Very Tempting who was 8.2 metres away third. The mile rate 2-02.7.

Latest News

Pedestrian dies

■ Detectives are investigating a fatal collision in Grovedale on Friday morning (June 27).

Emergency services were called to reports of a collision involving a motorcycle and pedestrian at Reserve Rd about 10.05am. The pedestrian died at the scene. The motorcyclist, a 20-year-old Tarneit man, was taken to hospital under police ghuard, with non-life-threatening injuries.

Exact circumstances surrounding the collision are yet to be determined and investigations remain ongoing.

W’bool car fire

■ Warrnambool Crime Investigation Unit detectives are investigating after a Molotov cocktail was thrown at a parked car in Warrnambool . Emergency services were called to a property on Birdwood Avenue about 7.25am on May 29.

The car, that was parked in a driveway, was destroyed in the blaze. Investigators have released an image and CCTV of a male who may be able to assist with their enquiries.

He is described as Caucasian in appearance, wearing a dark hoody, grey track pants, white runners and carrying a bag. Victoria Police

Breakaway bridge at Acheron

■ Bridges over the many rivers, creeks and streams running throughout Murrindindi Shire were vital for transporting travellers from one end of the shire to the other, says the Heritage Study completed in 2011 and 2014:

Crossing the rivers began with barges and punts, and developed according to the available technology and finances often sought from the Colonial, later State Governments

Alexandra and Yea, first designated Road Districts in 1868, progressed to Shire Council status in 1869 and 1873, respectively.

This change of status allowed the Shires to tender for, and construct, roads and bridges in their locality.

The Melbourne Road passing through Acheron and Taggerty dates from around 1870 when the area was surveyed.

A timber bridge over the Goulburn River at Acheron was built in c.1877 on land donated by Thomas Connelly

Later, a single lane bridge was built. As the river widened, the bridge was extended and remodelled.

This bridge was swept away shortly after the First World War, c.1918, following several wet seasons.

Attempts were made to divert to original course of the river because of the many floods, caused by torrential rain in the headwaters.

The area became known as the Goulburn Breakaway Historian of the Taggerty Primary School, Peter Kerr, wrote that the remains of the timber bridge are still on the bed and banks of the river downstream of the existing bridge which was built to replace it.

The single-lane bridge, replacing the original, was built c.1920 by the Country Roads Board.

Handwritten notes on the reverse of photographs indicate that the bridge had five spans added on the south side c.1932 when the river shifted course approximately 150 feet.

The c1920 section of the bridge served for 12 years with only minor repairs.

Timber for the bridge came from the Dobson and Rennie families who lived nearby.

The term 'breakaway' describes the movement in the river, and the portion of the river that broke away during the floods of the early twentieth century.

The Breakaway Bridge crosses the Goulburn River where Hobans Road and Breakaway Road meet at the boundary between the localities of Acheron and Alexandra

It is a timber pile and stringer bridge, with raker piles, cross braces and corbels.

Its structure is similar to that of the Country Roads Board's standard timber bridge introduced in the early 1920s.

A 1932 extension to the bridge after the ' Breakaway' was constructed in the same way.

It comprises the five spans on the south (Acheron) side. In all the bridge has nine spans and is 67.5 metres long (the individual spans measure 7.8, 8.3, 7.7, 7.3, 7.7, 8.7, 6.5, 6.6, and 6.9 metres).

It is a single-lane bridge with cross decking, timber kerbs and two strips of running boards.

Running boards were phased out in 1930 by the Country Roads Board,

and are rare survivors. The piles and stringers are rounded logs, while the corbels beneath the stringers are squared timbers. Roman numerals are incised on the piles.

The piers appear to have five original piers (plus some later reinforcements), and two pairs of criss-cross braces each.

This is in contrast to the standard CRB single-lane bridge which has only three-pile piers. The extra piers may have been intended to combat the flooding this area was prone to.

The original timber railings have been replaced with metal. The transverse decking timbers are of varying lengths, indicating that some may have been replaced over the years.

Some of the stringers are rather deteriorated and some of the piles have been replaced with steel Ibeams.

The Murrindindi Shire Heritage

Study said that the following specific conservation guidelines apply:

As bridge members deteriorate, they should be replaced with identical timbers.

And where only part of a member is deteriorated, new sections should be spliced in where possible as a preference over total replacement of that member.

In order to conserve the heritage significance of this place, it is recommended that the following conservation guidelines, as appropriate, be given priority in the future maintenance, development or management of the place:“

■ Conserve the fabric of the building/s or other built elements, which is identified as contributing to the significance ofthe place. This includes the original fabric as well as fabric that may demonstrate important successive stages in the historic devel-

opment of the place and/or provide evidence of changing architectural styles or techniques.“

■ Discourage the demolition or removal of significant fabric unless the demolition or removal is only of part of the building and it can be demonstrated to the satisfaction of the responsible authority that, as appropriate:“

• The fabric to be removed is not significant, or“

• The fabric to be removed is not of primary significance and its removal will not adversely affect the significance of the place, or

• It will assist in the long term conservation of the place, or

• It will facilitate the historic use of the place and will not result in the loss of fabric considered to be primary significance.

■ Where there is a complex of buildings and other elements the aim

‘Historically, a tangible reminder of the frequent flooding of the Goulburn River in the early 20th century, and particularly of the time the river 'broke away' and formed a new course in 1932. Also as a large and relatively intact Country Roads Board bridge of the type built in the 1920s, with extra reinforcing for this flood-prone location.

The running boards are a rare survivor.’ should be to conserve or reveal the historic visual relationship between the buildings and other elements in order to demonstrate the historical use and layout of the place.

■ Conserve significant plantings on the property, and maintain a visual relationship between the plantings and the significant buildings on the property.

■ Encourage the removal of nonsignificant or intrusive elements, particularly where this would assist in understanding or revealing the significance of the place.

■ Ensure that the siting and design of new development does not overwhelm the historic setting of the building and the site as a whole by becoming a dominant element or by interfering with key views to and from the site. “

■ Encourage any new development on the property to relate and be complementary in form, scale and materials to the significant buildings and other elements, but be clearly contemporary in design.

■ Retain views of significant building(s) and plantings from the street.

■ In the case of subdivision of the property, encourage the retention of the significant buildings, trees and related elements on one lot.

Shire works undertaken

■ Murrindindi Shire Council undertook works on the Breakaway Bridge and road in recent years. In 2013, the Council repaired and refurbished the bridge over the Goulburn River.

The bridge was closed for some months so that strengthening and refurbishment could take place. The handrail was made of timber wood again, as it was originally. Heavier loads - the fire truck, ambulances, school buses, were allowed.

● ● ● ● The Breakway Bridge at Acheron. Photo: Murrindindi Shire Heritage Study.
● ● The Breakway Bridge at Acheron. Photo: Murrindindi Shire Heritage Study.
● ● The Weir, Lower Side, Yarrawonga. 1950
● ● St Andrew’s Kirk, Ballarat
● ● Entrance to ‘The Chalet’, Warburton. 1940.
● ● ● ● The main road, Olinda. 1945.
● ● View at Mt Dandenong, 1925.
● ● The Great Ocean Road, Wye River
● ● ● Near ‘Elephant Rock’, Flinders. 1921.
● Steam Tram. Back Beach, Sorrento. 1914.

Where to pick up your free copy of The Local Paper

■ ■ ASHBURTON. Ashburton Newsagency. 168 High St.

Court Lists

Heidelberg Magistrates’ Court Criminal Court Listings

Wednesday, July 2, 2025

Local Briefs

Survey result drop

■ HOLMESGLEN. The Lott/Holmesglen Newsagency. 637 Warrigal Rd.

■ BALWYN. Balwyn Newsagency.

413 Whitehorse Rd.

■ BALWYN. Coles Express. 449 Whitehorse Rd (Cnr Imaroo St).

■ BALWYN. United Petroleum. 99 Balwyn Rd.

■ BAYSWATER. 7-Eleven. Cnr Scoresby Rd and High St.

■ BAYSWATER. Cellarbrations. 717 Mountain Hwy.

■ ■ BAYSWATER. Coles Express. 768 Mountain Hwy.

■ ■ BORONIA. Metro Boronia Cinemas. Dorset Square.

■ ■ BORONIA. Tatts/Cignall. Shop 5, 123 Boronia Rd.

■ ■ BOX HILL. 7-Eleven. Cnr Elgar Rd and Whitehorse Rd.

■ BLACKBURN. BP. Cnr Whitehorse Rd and Goodwin St

■ ■ BLACKBURN. Tatts/Newsagency. 116 South Pde.

■ ■ BLACKBURN SOUTH. 7-Eleven. Cnr Canterbury Rd and Middleborough Rd.

■ ■ ■ BLACKBURN SOUTH. Duncan’s Licensed Grocers. Blackburn Rd.

■ ■ BOX HILL NORTH. Box Hill Licensed Grocery. Middleborough Rd.

■ ■ ■ BOX HILL NORTH. Hyper Star Convenience Store. 941 Station St.

■ ■ ■ BOX HILL NORTH. Kerrimuir Post Office. 527 Middleborough Rd.

■ ■ HUNTINGDALE. Huntingdale Newsagency. 290 Huntingdale Rd.

■ ■ KEW. Cotham Road Newsagency. 97 Cotham Rd.

■ KEW. Kew Newsagency. 175 High St.

■ KEW EAST. Kew East Supermarket. 653 High St (near Westbrook St).

■ MITCHAM. Mitcham Newsagency. 503 Whitehorse Rd.

■ ■ MITCHAM. United Petroleum. Cnr Whitehorse Rd and Alexander St.

■ ■ MONT ALBERT. 42 Hamilton St.

■ ■ ■ ■ MONT ALBERT. Post Office. 1a Hamilton St.

■ MOUNT WAVERLEY. Newsagency. 63 Blackburn Rd.

■ MOUNBT WAVERLEY. NexsXpress. 71 Hamilton Place.

■ ■ MOUNT WAVERLEY. Tally Ho Cellars. 65 Blackburn Rd.

■ MOUNTAIN GATE. 7-Eleven. 844 Burwood Hwy.

■ MOUNTAIN GATE. Mountain Gate Newsagency and Lotto. Shop 3, 1880 Burwood Hwy.

■ ■ MULGRAVE. BP. Cnr 682-688 Wellington Rd and Springvale Rd.

■ ■ MURRUMBEENA. Murrumbeena Newsagency. 456 Nerrim Rd.

■ NORTH BALWYN. Bellevue Milk Bar. 113 Bulleen Rd - Service Road.

■ ■ BOX HILL NORTH. Milk Bar/ Newsagency. 515 Middleborough Rd.

■ ■ ■ BOX HILL NORTH. United Petroleum. 604 Elgar Rd.

■ ■ ■ BOX HILL SOUTH. Box Hill South Newsagency. 870 Canterbury Rd.

■ NORTH BALWYN. The Lott/ Newsagency. 77 Doncaster Rd.

■ NORTH BLACKBURN. 7-Eleven. Cnr Springfield Rd and Williams Rd.

■ ■ BOX HILL SOUTH. BP. Cnr Canterbury Rd and Station St.

■ ■ ■ BRANDON PARK. 7-Eleven. 602-606 Ferntree Gully Rd.

■ ■ ■ BULLEEN. Duncan’s Bulleen Cellars. 190 Bulleen Rd.

■ NORTH BLACKBURN. Coles Express. Cnr Springfield Rd and Middleborough Rd.

■ NORTH MITCHAM. BP. Mitcham Rd (near cnr Andover Ave)

■ NORTH MITCHAM. Licensed Post Office. 228 Mitcham Rd.

■ ■ BULLEEN. Thompsons Road News and Lotto. 123a Thompsons Rd.

■ ■ ■ ■ BURWOOD. Burwood Authorised Newsagency. 1394 Toorak Rd

■ ■ ■ ■ CANTERBURY. Buckley’s Licensed Supermarket. 92 Maling Rd.

■ ■ ■ ■ CANTERBURY. Canterbury Newsagency/Tatts/Post Office. 104 Maling Rd.

■ ■ ■ ■ CANTERBURY. Coles Express. Cnr 260 Canterbury Rd and Redvers St.

■ ■ NORTH MITCHAM. United Petroleum. 208 Mitcham Rd.

■ ■

■ NUNAWADING. Mountain View Newsagency. 293 Springfield Rd.

■ OAKLEIGH. The Lott. 28 Atherton Rd.

■ OAKLEIGH. Oakleigh Central Lotto. 48 Portman St.

■ OAKLEIGH EAST. BP. 229 Ferntree Gully Rd (Cnr Stephensons Rd)

■ ■ RINGWOOD. 7-Eleven. Cnr Loughnans Rd and Warrandyte Rd.

Contents of Court Lists are intended for information purposes only. The lists are extracted from Court Lists, as supplied to the public, by the Magistrates’ Court of Victoria, often one week prior to publication date; for current Court lists, please contact the Court. Further details of cases are available at www.magistratescourt.vic.gov.au The Local Paper shall in no event accept any liability for loss or damage suffered by any person or body due to information provided. The information is provided on the basis that persons accessing it undertake responsibility for assessing the relevance and accuracy of its content. No inference of a party’s guilt, innocence or liability should be made by publication of their name as a defendant. Court schedules may be changed at any time for any reason, including withdrawal of the action by the Plaintiff/Applicant. E&OE.

■ Knox Council’s community survey results show the perception of the city’s overall performance remains good at 6.8, which was lower than 2024.

Local library services, youth services, fortnightly bundled branch collection, waste management, and sports ovals and other outdoor sporting facilities are the areas where Council performed best.

Main issue highlighted by residents was road maintenance and repairs. When asked what was driving this response, most respondents indicated complaints about the maintenance of state-owned roads.

“Feedback will inform Council’s plans and strategies and provide insight into ways we can continue to improve the services we deliver,” said a City of Knox representative.

Plans updated

■ Monash Council has updated its plans and designs for a new civic precinct in Glen Waverley.

“Glen Waverley will change and grow over the coming years, with the Victorian Government's Suburban Rail Loop making it easier for people to experience everything that makes it a special place to live, work and visit,” said a Council representative.

“Our new civic precinct will play a huge part in that by creating:

■ a new modern library to meet the needs of Glen Waverley's growing community

■ a civic hall and community events space to host events like Council's citizenship ceremonies, larger gatherings or groups and smaller community group meetings

■ outdoor and green spaces for activation and community use

■ 117 car parking spaces, complemented by nearby parking options such as Council's extended Bogong Avenue multideck car park

■ office space for council operations, removing our reliance on rented office space in Glen Waverley

“Visit Shape Monash before July 27 to learn our how new designs have evolved since earlier consultation and let us know what you think and how you'd like to use

Glen Waverley’s new community spaces.

■ ■ CLAYTON. Clayton Newsagency.

345 Clayton Rd.

■ ■ ■ CROYDON. Coles Express. 168172 Mt Dandenong Rd.

■ ■ ■ ■ CROYDON. Croydon Lotto. 118 Main St.

■ ■ ■ RINGWOOD. BP. Cnr Carcoola Rd/ Old Lilydale Rd and Maroondah Hwy.

■ ■ RINGWOOD. Coles Express. Cnr Oban Rd and Maroondah Hwy.

■ ■ RINGWOOD. Loughnans Rd Milk Bar. 83 Loughnans Rd.

■ ■ CROYDON. Milk Bar. Cnr Old Lilydale Rd and Everard Rd.

■ ■ CROYDON. Newsagency. 166 Main St.

■ ■ ■ CROYDON SOUTH. Eastfield Milk Bar. 11 The Mall. Eastfield Rd

■ ■ ■ CROYDON SOUTH. Eastfield Newsagency. 7 The Mall. Eastfield Rd

■ ■ ■ CROYDON SOUTH. IGA Supermarket. 13 The Mall. Eastfield Rd.

■ ■ ■ ■ DONCASTER. Budget-Rite Licensed Supermarket. Cnr High St and Village Ave.

■ ■ RINGWOOD NORTH. 7-Eleven. Cnr Warrandyte Rd and Oban Rd.

■ ■ RINGWOOD NORTH. North Ringwood Newsagency. 182 Warrandyte Rd.

■ ■ ROWVILLE. Caltex. 940 Stud Rd.

■ ■ ROWVILLE. Stud Park Lotto. K03 Stud rd and Fulham Rd

■ SCORESBY. Coles Express. Cnr Stud Rd and Ferntree Guilly Rd.

■ ■ SURREY HILLS. Post Office. 100 Union Rd.

■ ■ DONCASTER. Coles Express. 551-557 Doncaster Rd.

■ ■ ■ SYNDAL. Syndal Newsagency. Cnr Blackburn Rd and Matthew St.

■ ■ EAST BURWOOD. BP. Cnr Burwood Hwy and Blackburn Rd

■ ■ TEMPLESTOWE. 7-Eleven. Cnr Anderson St and Wood St.

■ ■ EAST DONCASTER. BP Service Station. 880-882 Doncaster Rd.

■ EAST DONCASTER. Caltex. 987 Doncaster Rd.

■ EAST DONCASTER. Dunburn Deli/Milk Bar. 262 Blackburn Rd.

■ ■ EAST DONCASTER. Jackson Court News and Lotto. 74 Jackson Ct.

■ EAST OAKLEIGH. East Oakleigh Newsagency. 190 Huntingdale Rd.

■ ■ FERNTREE GULLY. 7-Eleven. Cnr Station St and Burwood Hwy.

■ ■ FERNTREE GULLY. Ferntree Gully Newsagency. 69 Station St.

■ ■ FERNTREE GULLY. Ferntree Gully Supermarket. 9-13 Alpine St.

■ ■ DONVALE. 7-Eleven. 95 Mitcham Rd.

■ ■ DONVALE. Lucky Corner (Fish and Chips). Cnr Springvale Rd and Doncaster Rd.

■ GLEN WAVERLEY. BP. Cnr Blackburn Rd and Highbury Rd.

■ ■ GLEN WAVERLEY. Coles Express. Cnr Springvale Rd and Ferntree Gully Rd (north-west corner)

■ GLEN WAVERLEY. Glen Waverley Newsagency/The Loott. 4/39 Kingsway

■ ■ HEATHMONT. Heathmont News/ Tatts. 150 Canterbury Rd.

■ ■ HEATHMONT. IGA Supermarket.

116-120 Canterbury Rd.

■ ■ HEATHMONT. Sunrise Convenience Store. 30 Canterbury Rd.

■ ■ TEMPLESTOWE. Macedon Square Newsagency. 25 Macedon Rd.

■ ■ TEMPLESTOWE. Templestowe Newsagncy. 122 James St.

■ ■ TUNSTALL SQUARE. Caltex. Cnr Tunstall Square and Doncaster Rd.

■ ■ ■ TUNSTALL SQUARE. Tunstall Square Bottle Mart. 17 Tunstall Square.

■ ■ TUNSTALL SQUARE. Tunstall Square Newsagency. 4 Tunstall Square.

■ VERMONT SOUTH. Coles Express. 602-604 Burwood Hwy.

■ WANTIRNA. IGA Supermarket. Wantirna Mall.

■ ■ WANTIRNA. Tatts/Manfre’s Hairdressing. Wantirna Mall.

■ ■ WANTIRNA. Wantirna Newsagency. Wantirna Mall.

■ ■ WANTIRNA SOUTH. Cellarbrations. 4/249 Stud Rd.

■ ■ WANTIRNA SOUTH. Coles Express. 435 Stud Rd (cnr High St Rd)

■ ■ WANTIRNA SOUTH. Foodmax. 1/ 249 Stud Rd.

■ WANTIRNA SOUTH. Studfield

IGA. 191-195 Stud Rd.

■ ■ ■ ■ ■ WANTIRNA SOUTH. Studfield Newsagency. 1/223 Stud Rd.

■ ■ WATTLE PARK. Wattle Park Licensed Post Office. 190 Elgar Rd

WHEELERS HILL. Wheelers Hill Hotel. Cnr Ferntree Guilly Rd and Jells Rd.

Abusud, Amenah Ahmadpoor, Javad Al Janahi, Zahra Ali, Hossein Alkan, Ibrahim Amboka, Peter Angelopoulos, John Antonacci, Marco Atkinson, Tyson Atonio, Patrick Awad, Siobhan Ballantyne, Christopher Phillip Barnes, Harley Bettenay, Danielle Brookes, Alexandra Jane Bukhari, Syed Arslan Burhala, Mihai Ceniti, Vince Anthony Century Apartments Pty Ltd Charles, Jarrad Charles-Roberts, Opal Chatfield, Robert Chugg, Rodney Clohesy, Daniel Coleman, Logan Collard, Jade Francis Coscarella, Jacob Croft, Jeffrey Edward Czerniawsky, Curtis Dafalias, John Daish, Daniel Davis, Lonnie Delmo, Paul Derar, Noah Dines, Paul Dixon, Jack Dowdle, Clancy Dowdle, Claritha Mavis Drossos-Spiteri, Thalia Dumsday, Gavin Edwards-Lovett, Nekeisha El Abdallah, Abdallah El Chaabaan, Christopher El-Hassan, Hanadi Ellis, Wingara Ellul, Michaela Ford, Ashley Garrett, Jack Gatherer, Mason James Geddes, Kyle Antony Glasby, Bradley John Gonzalez, Santiago Escalante Halkos, Chris Harris, Adam Hedges, Christopher Heers, Teena Anne Herro, Mourad Herzel, Christine Hill, Andrew Ho, Quang Iaconis, Dominic Ianusi, Christine Iveson, Peter Jeal, Darren Kairouz, Sylvanua Kantzidis, Harry Katranis, Christakis Keays, Darren Kelly, Hugo Keyes, Darran Khoury, Tony Kiro, Timmy Conrad Kong, Yangdow Koufalas, Pauline Lakeman, Craig Leboutiller, Deklan Lee Miller, Jamie Lee, Isabella Amberly Li, Christopher Lomani, James Lopez, Chris Loschiavo, Steven Lsks Pty Ltd Marsh, Cleo Massey, Kane Mayne, Philip David Mccallum, Joseph Mckay, Darcy Mckeown, Phillip Meredith, Sean Miller, Jamie Lee Mina, Mohamed Myles, Nicholas Owen Nabelski, Django Richard Nagi, Zacariah Noack, Michael Nugent, Tristan Benn O'donnell, Julian Gerard Oparanozie, Malachy Parisi, Frank Parker, Kazmer Robert Patti, Costa Pattison, Catherine Petsinis, Victoria Power, August Proctor, Nikita Ragupathy, Ravichandran

Rennie, Troy Rossi, Sebastian Rough, Aaron Gregory Ruscitti, Josephine Russo, Marisa Ryan, Steele Saad, Paul Short, Stephen Joseph Smith, James Frederick Smith, Scarlett Sotiro, Kym Steel, Ashley Raymond Subasinga Arachchige, Chaminda Subramanaim, Siva Taleb, Ali Tangas, Taylor Thompson, Ryan David Thorpe, Colleen Tivanis, Chris To, Annie Vincent, Matt Walker, Shawn Ward, Brett John Weedon, Brett Whelan, Brodie Wilson, Erica Younger, Adam Younger, Adam Thomas Zaatiti, Omar Zotos, Angelo Zotos, Evangelos Sunshine Magistrates’ Court Criminal Court Listings Wednesday, July 2, 2025 Adams, Kerry Ahmed, Anwar Andelman, Gari Araipu, Tearou Baxter, Gaje Bhardwaj, Rajat Cameron, Michael Chabiet, Ayan Demicoli, Megan Falzon, Jason Fracassi, John Anthony Grigg, Robert Hagi-Hashi, Younis Harris, Phillip Gordon Humberstone, Chantal Johnson, Peter Lyne, Josh Mulvay, Liam Munn, Peter Lesley Muo, Agor Narang, Yash Newcold Melbourne Pty Ltd Phelan, Michael Joseph Salefao, Junior Stenborg, Ashley Swanson, Abraham Vasconcelos, Murilo

$2.2 mil. winner

■ An Abbotsford dad who became a multi-millionaire in Tattslotto knows exactly what he’ll do with his $2.2 million prize, dedicating the lifechanging win to supporting his closest loved ones.

The man held one of nine division one winning entries nationally in the June 21 draw. Each division one winning entry pocketed $2,222,222.23.

When an official from The Lott called to confirm the multimillion-dollar news, the hardworking father couldn’t help but burst into tears of joy.

“Hang on a minute. Have I just won $2.2 million?!” the winning man cried. “Oh my god. You have no idea how much this means to me.”

“You can also join our architects and project team to ask questions and provide feedback at a drop-in session at Glen Waverley Library on Tuesday July 8 from 4.30pm-7pm.”

Templestowe works

■ Manningham Council is this week starting construction on the Templestowe Route Upgrade

“All businesses at the Templestowe Village will remain open and accessible throughout the works, with clear pedestrian and road detour signage in place,” said a Manningham Council representative.

The Templestowe Route is a series of connecting roads including Parker St, Swilk St, James St and Anderson St. It’s commonly used by local residents and drivers travelling to Templestowe Village and surrounding suburbs.

Several safety issues have been identified with Templestowe Route, including poor drainage and inadequate facilities for pedestrians and cyclists.

“This upgrade will improve safety for all road users, while also enhancing the vibrancy of Templestowe Village by creating more connected and inviting public spaces,” the representative said.

“Over the next 18 months, we will deliver four stages of works to upgrade Anderson St and Parker St.”

Works will include:

■ full road reconstruction

■ installation of underground drainage, kerb, and channel

■ new footpaths and improved pedestrian access

■ new pedestrian-operated crossing at Wood and Anderson Sts

■ reduced and variable speed limits between Porter and Milne Sts

■ formalisation of existing parking spaces

■ upgraded bus stops on Swilk and Parker St

■ new street lighting

l■ andscaping, including selective tree removal and planting.

Stage 1 will take place between June 30 to mid-August 2025. “We’re rebuilding this part of the road, which will include fixing the road base, adjusting road levels and installing underground drains.”

Classifieds 9489 2222

Classified Information

DISPLAYCLASSIFIEDADVERTISING

Paid display advertising is available for $20 per column centimetre. Sample prices: Full-Page Ad (37cm h x 8 cols w), $5920. Half-Page Ad (18cm h x 8 cols w), $2880. Quarter-Page Ad (18cm h x 4 cols w), $1440. All ads are pre-paid at time of booking. Pre-pay by Card: Visa, Mastercard, American Express. Pre-pay by EFT to 033091 260131 (Local Media Pty Ltd, Westpac, Eltham).

LINECLASSIFIEDADVERTISING

Paid line advertising is available for $20 for first 20 words, then $1 per word thereafter. All ads are prepaid at time of booking. Pre-pay by Card: Visa, Mastercard, American Express. Pre-pay by EFT to 033091 260131 (Local Media Pty Ltd, Westpac, Eltham).

STATEWIDE,MELBOURNEWIDE

Classified Ads are read across Victoria, included in all online (digital) editions of The Local Paper and Melbourne Observer. Fresh online editions are published weekly on Wednesdays, February-December (with exception of Easter Wednesday). You can have Digital Editions emailed free to you - register at www.FreePaper.com.au Print editions are published fortnightly on Wednesdays, February-December.

ONLINEEDITIONDATES-2025

Go directly to www.LocalPaper.com.au or www.MelbourneObserver.com.au to read digital editions (exact replicas of print editions), free. Online edition dates in 2025 are: Feb. 5, Feb. 12, Feb. 19, Feb. 26, Mar. 5, Mar. 12, Mar. 19, Mar. 26, Apr. 2, Apr. 9, Apr. 16, Apr. 30, May 7, May 14, May 21, May 28, Jun. 4, Jun. 11, Jun. 28, Jun. 25, Jul. 2, Jul. 9, Jul. 16, Jul. 23, Jul., 30, Aug. 6, Aug. 13, Aug. 10, Aug. 27, Sep. 3, Sep. 10, Sep. 17, Sep. 24, Oct. 1, Oct. 8, Oct. 15, Oct. 22, Oct. 29, Nov. 5, Nov. 12, Nov. 19, Nov. 26, Dec. 3, Dec. 10. Lodge ads by 4pm Friday prior to publication.

PRINTEDITIONDATES-2025

‘Hard copies’ available free through a network of outlets across Melbourne, Mornington Peninsula and selected country areas. Print edition dates in 2025 are: Feb. 5, Feb. 19, Mar. 5, Mar. 19, Apr. 2, Apr. 16, Apr. 30, May 14, May 28, Jun. 11, Jun. 25, Jul. 9, Jul. 23, Aug. 6, Aug. 20, Sep. 3, Sep. 17, Oct. 1, Oct. 15, Oct. 29, Nov. 12, Nov. 26, Dec. 10. Lodge your ads by 4pm Friday prior to publication.

PRINTEDITIONAREAS

Eastern Suburbs Edition. Boroondara (north), Knox-Sherbrooke, Manningham, Maroondah, Monash, Whitehorse. Lilydale and Yarra Valley Edition. Healesville, Lilydale, Mount Evelyn, Warburton. Mitchell Strathbogie Edition. Avenel, Beveridge, Broadford, Euroa, Kilmore, Nagambie, Seymour, Wallan, Wandong-Heathcote Junction. North-West Edition. Brimbank, Hobsons Bay, Hume, Maribyrnong, Melton, Merri-bek, Moonee Valley. Moorabool, Wyndham Northern Suburbs Edition. Banyule, Darebin (north - Preston-Reservoir), Darebin (southNorthcote, Thornbury), Nillumbik (urban), Whittlesea (urban). Regional Edition. Mansfield, Murrindindi (Alexandra, Kinglake, Yea), Nilllumbik (rural), Whittlesea (rural). Southern Cross Weekly Edition. Bayside, Boroondara (south), Glen Eira, Kingston, Melbourne, Port Phillip, Stonnington, Yarra. South-East. Cardinia, Casey, Frankston, Greater Dandenong, Mornington Peninsula.

FREECLASSIFIEDADVERTISING

Free non-commercial classified advertising is available for individual readers, selling iitems. Your ad can be up to 40 words. This service is available at the sole discretion of the Editor. Ads will appear for up to 4 weeks. Free ads are not available to businesses or organisations. Deadline: 4pm Fridays prior to Print Edition. You can lodge your Free Ad by:

• WEB: www.AdvertiseFree.com.au

• EMAIL: editor@LocalPaper.com.au

• POST: Mail the form (available in this newspaper) to PO Box 1278, Research, Vic 3095. Free Ads will not be accepted by phone.

SOMEADVERTISINGRULES

• All car advertisers must supply registration or Vehicle Identification Numbers. By law, we are unable to publish listings without those details.

• Any person or business advertising to sell or give away a dog, cat, puppy or kitten in Victoria must be enrolled on the Pet Exchange Register to obtain a source number, and must include this source number along with each animal's microchip number in all advertisements.

• Advertisers should be honest in their dealings. Claims should be true, accurate and based on reasonable grounds.

FREE non-commercial classified advertising is available for individual readers, selling iitems. Your ad can be up to 40 words. This service is available at the sole discretion of the Editor. Ads will appear for up to 4 weeks. Free ads are not available to businesses or organisations. Deadline: 4pm Fridays prior to Print Edition. You can lodge your Free Ad by:

• WEB: www.Advertise Free.com.au

• EMAIL: editor@Local Paper.com.au

• POST: Mail the form (available in this newspaper) to PO Box 1278, Research, Vic 3095. Free Ads will not be accepted by phone.

ANTIQUE DRSSING TABLE. 3 mirrors, size: wdith 1.23m, depth 55cm, height 1.82m. Delivery arranged. VGC. $250. Coburg. 0428 130 049. Z-CC

BAR STOOLS. x2. $2 0 each. Whittlesea. 0494 380 264. Z-CC

BED. Single. Electric folable with massage and remote control. Adjustable back, legs and height. New Aspire mattress. German motor. EC. $500. Diamond Creek. 0401 473 565.N-Q

BED HEAD. Wooden. And base. With slats. As new. $80. Whittlesea. 0494 380 264. Z-CC

BIKE. Ladies. Make: Friction Huffey. Purple. Plus helmet, basket and pump. VGC. $110. Pakenham. 5940 5018. R-U

BIRD CAGE. Green. 52cm square. as new. $40. Whittlesea. 0494 380 264. Z-CC

BOAT. Savage 12’. 15HP Johnson OB. Trailer. All Safety EQ. Bow canopy. Storm cover. VGC. $1800. Alexandra. 0419 329 264. Z-CC

BOAT. Aluminium. 3.8 motor. Evenrude motor. 6HP . Free winch and trailer and accessories. GC. $1000. Wandong. 0418 399 261. R-U

BRICKS. 100 clean, red. Plus halves. $50. Keon Park. 9469 4558.N-Q

BUILDER’S Electrical Pole, steel box and timber pole. GC. Free. Murrindindi. 0418 564 174. R-U

CAMPER TRAILER. Tru Blu heavy duty all terrain 12V accessory outlet plus slide out kitchen and extras. VGC. $4300. Frakston. 9789 9634. Z-CC

BASKETS. Two, Large. GC. $30. Keon Park. 9469 4558. N-Q

CHAIRS. Two, Cush- ions. $50. Keon Park. 9469 4558. N-Q

PRIVATE SELLERS can have a free 40-word ‘For Sale’ ad - plus a single colour photo - in The Local Paper Classifieds to sell their items. Your free ad will appear in all editions of The Local Paper, covering all suburbs of Melbourne, the Mornington

CARAVAN. E20½ ft reegal 2009 Aussie Tourer Caravan. Full ensuite with separate shower, queen bed and AC/heater, TV, stereo, gas cooktop, microwave, comes with cover and large outdoor mat. EC. $32,000. Taggerty. 0438 782 112. R-U

CARAVAN. 21’6” 2014 Crusader. Reg till Feb. 2026. Full ensuite, separate shower/toilet, queen bed, a/c heater, TV radio, Gas/Elec. cooktop, micro washing machine, solar panel, large fridge, freezer, new tyres and batteries. many extras. EC. $40,000 ONO. Mount Eliza. 0429 877 964. Z-CC

CIRCULATION STIMULATOR. Clare. VGC. $20. Frankston. 9789 9634 Z-CC

COLLECTORS Melway Nos 9, 20, 33. Wax matches (234) in book, 17 loose. VFL Records, finals, mainly Richmond. Small and large. Phone cards. Vatious prices. Box Hill South., 9890 7904.N-Q

CRIME FICTION BOOKS. Various authors. Harlen Coben, James Patterson plus others. GC. $2, or 3 for $5. Mill Park. 052 665 276. H-O

DOG KENNEL. Plastic. Grey colour. Very clean. never used as kennel. GC. $10. Purchaser to collect. Doreen. 9717 3465. N-Q

EDISON STANDARD PHONOGRAM Serial Nuimber 638427. October 1905 with five Edison goldmoulded records complete with reproducing trumpet model C. Rare antqiue, working well. VGC. $1850. Glen Iris. 0407 276 973. Z-CC

ENCYCLOPEDIA. Complete set A-Z. GC. $50. Frankston. 9789 9634. Z-CC

FOLDING BIKE. Suit adult. Everything works. Gears. GC. $120. Seymour. 0419 881 573. R-U

FORD AUII Fairport V8 Sedan. Original.Runs well. No rust. Good tyres, new screen, bring your mechanic or RACV test, RWC. Reg 7/27. 2AN3XE. VCG. $8000. Seymour. 0419 881 573. N-Q

GARDEN ROCKS. Approx. 200mm-150mm for landscaping. Approx. 260. Free. Nunawading, 0407 696 343. N-Q

GARDEN ROCKS. Small and medium. All sizes. All free. Also 12 blue stone pitches. All free. Bulleen. 9850 5128. N-Q

HORSE RUG. Tartan. Never used. VGC. $65. Macleod. 9459 6714. R-U

INVERTER-GENERATOR. 2200-watt. 91 octane 4-stroke petrol motor, single phase, 240 volts, 50 hertz output, little used. GC. $95. Doreen. 9717 3465. R-U

JAYCO 2004 Freedom Caravan, single beds, RC/ AC, new tyres, unused porta potti, m’wave, 3 way bridge, gas & elec. cooktop and grill, 240/12 volt TV. Aerial. Reg till Jan. 26. Everything in working order. 1150kg. Tows great. VGTC. Hastings. 0409 645 059. Z-CC

The Local Paper Email: editor@LocalPaper. com.au Postal: PO Box 1278, Research, 3095 BOOKING AND COPY DEADLINE: 5pm Fridays, prior to Wednesday issue. CLASSIFIED ADS Classified ads are available each week in The Local Paper, which is published on Wednesdays, February-December (with the exception of Easter Wednesday). All Classified Ads appear in the print and online editions. It is important to check your advertisement is correct on the first day it appears. While every care is taken to ensure your advertisement is correct, errors can occur. If this happens to your ad please contact us the first day your advertisement appears and we will be happy to correct it as soon as we can.

LAURA ASHLEY Cotton Queen Coverlet set. Size 220cm x 240cm, plus 2 pillowcases. Pale blue with thin white stripes. Never used. EC. $30. Ashburton. 9885 2203. Z-CC

MAGAZINES. Collectors. New Idea, Woman’s Day, Stellar, Body and Soul, House magazine and many others. GC. Price negotiable. West Preston. 0416 576 660. R-U

MAGAZINES. Purnells History of WWII, Australian Geographic, Choice, Burke’s Backyard, Organic Gardener, Gardening Australia, Vegi Patch and some odd ones. GC. 50c each. Reservoir. 0421 131 681. Z-CC

MOBILITY SCOOTER. Pre-owned. Sill under warranty with new batteries. Features headlights and tail lights, swivel seat, rear shopping bag, includes key and charger. max user 136kg, 35km range per cahrge. Free delivery. VGC. $1295. Moorabbin. 0401 980 969. R-U

OLD Bike Australasia 11, 16, 17, 18, 19, 21, 22, 23, 37, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46,. 47, 48, 49, 51, 52. GC. $3. Mill Park. 0452 665

PARTS for Ford AUIIV8. Secondhand. Struts. New parts: ball joints, 2 boxes of parts. VGC. $1000. Seymour 0419 881 573. N-Q

PICTURE FRAMES. 40 large to small. Various styles. VGC. All only $70. Keon Park. 9469 4558. N-Q

PLUMBING FITTINGS. 1 box PVC 100m Sew/SW, Elbows 45°. As new. $35. Z-CC

SHEEP. 60 mixed breed ewes, been running with rams, have ear tags. Friendly, great lawnmowers, saves mowing the paddocks and helps reduce fire risk. Can deliver. GC. $130. Deanside. 0426 397 741N-Q

TABLE. Large solid timber, dining room table, 2100mm x 1000mm. Plus six chairs. GC. $30. Yea. 0419 109 887. N-Q

TABLE. Round. Polished timber. 100cm diameter. Seats 4. VGC. $90. Mill Park. 9436 8935. N-Q

magnification. Equatoirial mount. As new. $60 ONO. Cheltenham. 0438 533 123.F-M

276 H-O

TRAIN BOOKS. Wide variety of books and pamphlets to all types of trains. All prices negotiable. Research. 9437 1253. N-Q

TYRE CHANGERS. Manual. Little used, complete with instructions, purchaser to collect. GC. $90. Doreen. 9717 3465 N-Q

WALKERS. Two. One new, hardly used, $120. Second one: GC but some small marks. $80. Seymour. 0419 881 573. R-U PRAM. Old, child’s col- lectable. GC. $60. Wandong. 041`8 399 261. R-U RIDE-ON Deutscher 280 Honda motor, runs fine, seal on shaft leaks, heaps of parts including new seat, new cutting plate, body part dismantled, everything is there. GC. $800. Yarck. 0414 718 812. R-U

PRESSURE WASHER. Karcher. Good working order. little used. Complete with operating instructions. Purchaser to collect. GC. $55. Doreen. 9717 3465 Z-CC

WOOD FIRE STOVE HEATER. Ozpig Traveller. Used twice. Comes with grill and hot plate, lifting handle, carry bag. heaps ofready cut fire lighters. Heavy duty grate and 45 quart camp oven. VGC. $3000. Montmorency. 0483 881 609. R-U

Cast

GC. $500. Seymour. 0422 204 977. Z-CC

R-U WHEELCHAIR. Electric.

0418 583

WHEELCHAIR. Manual. Evoke 2 Aspire 450mm. new, never been used as too small for subject. Foldable and extremely light for easy transport. Well made, Top of the range. EC. $600. Diamond Creek. 0401 473 565.N-Q
NOTICES GOD’S CHURCH invites faithful followwees of Christ to attend the New Testament local Passover night service. Alfredton, Ballarat. To secure your seat, 0419 327 366. N-P
WINDOW. Aluminium. 1600mm x 1600mm with windout window. GC. Free. Murrindindi. 0418 564 174.
WOOD HEATER.
iron.
WORKSHOP
MANU-
ALS. Holden VR Commodore. Vol 8, 4 and 5,. $220. Kangaroo Groundf. 9712 0337. Z-CC
REAR SPOILER for VE Holden Commodore Sedan. EC. Best Offer. Mornington. 5975 3609. Z-CC
HEDGE TRIMMER. Honda. HHH25D. 4 stroke. With hour meter fitted. VGC. Bought in Feb. 2022. Has done 20.8 hours. $650 ONO. Pearcedale. 0418 457 588. Z-CC
WHEELS IN VICTORIA Rare 528 page volume, registered 1518 by Harold H. Paynting. History of Wheelecd Transport 1824 to 1984, mint condition in hard cover sleeve. EC. $400. Glen Iris. 0407 276 973. Z-CC

Classifieds

REQUEST FOR COMMUNITY ASSISTANCE

Relates to a Hit run collision on the Melba Hwy, Glenburn, about 9.40 am on June 10, 2025.

An unknown white van, similar to a 4.5T delivery van has collided with snow group tour bus.

The van was travelling toward Yarra Glen and failed to stop after the collision. Minor injuries were received to a number of passengers in the minibus.

Any information to Leading Senior Constable MCCORMICK at the Yarra Ranges Highway Patrol, 6-10 Albert Hill Road Lilydale 3140 Ph: 9739 2402

Notice is hereby given that South Pacific St Kilda Pty Ltd has applied to lease, pursuant to Section 134 of the Land Act 1958, for a term of up to 41 years, Crown allotment 102C, Parish of Melbourne North at St Kilda, as a site for i) Health and Fitness Centre incorporating heated sea baths, swimming pool, saunas, steam baths, gymnasiums, health and beauty therapy centre, sports medicine centre, multi-purpose activity rooms which includes the sale and disposal of liquor for consumption in that area; recreational and entertainment uses and drinking and/or eating areas (including liquor), restaurants, cafés and take-away food facilities, entertainment; tourist, beach and health related retailing; and administrative and maintenance facilities and other special events and related activities; and, ii) Any other use or development permitted under Consent Notice (Amendment L18), Specified Area No 1 incorporated into the St Kilda Planning Scheme as amended from time to time.

NOTICE OF AN APPLICATION FOR A PLANNING PERMIT APPLICATION DETAILS

Application reference number: P25/0803

Applicant name: NEPEAN PLANNING CONSULTANTS

The Land affected by this application is located at: 1 MARVIN AVENUE RYE

Lot 32 on Plan of Subdivision 030579 VOL 10852 FOL 565

The application is for a permit to: VARY RESTRICTIVE COVENANT CREATED IN TRANSFER NO. A208723 AFFECTING CERTIFICATE OF TITLE VOLUME 10852 FOLIO 565 BY VARYING THE RESTRICTION WORDING FROM: “ANY BUILDING WHICH SHALL NOT BE SET BACK AT LEAST FORTY FEET FROM THE STREET ALIGNMENT OF SUCH LAND” TO: “ANY BUILDING WHICH SHALL NOT BE SET BACK AT LEAST 7.5 METRES FROM THE FRONT TITLE BOUNDARY”

A permit is required under the following clauses of the planning scheme:

PLANNING SCHEME CLAUSE

Clause 52.02 (Easements, Restrictions and Reserves)

MATTER FOR WHICH A PERMIT IS REQUIRED

Under section 23 of the Subdivision Act 1988, to vary a restriction.

The Responsible Authority will not decide on the application before: 9 JULY 2025

How can I find out more?

You may look at the application and any documents that support the application free of charge at: www.mornpen.vic.gov.au

You may also call (03) 5950 1010 to arrange a time to look at the application and any documents that support the application at the office of the responsible authority, Mornington Peninsula Shire Council. This can be done during office hours and is free of charge.

Privacy Notification: The personal information provided in an objection is collected for planning purposes in accordance with the Planning & Environment Act 1987 (the Act). The public may view an objection in accordance with Section 57 of the Act whilst the planning application is current

ROOFTOP MOBILE PHONE BASE STATION AT 503 ORRONG ROAD, ARMADALE VIC 3143 RFNSA Site No: 3143022

1. Waveconn is proposing to install a new rooftop telecommunications facility at 503 Orrong Road, Armadale. The new facility will be utilised by TPG/Vodafone, Optus and Telstra and will replace an existing base station at 291-295 Dandenong Road, Prahran.

2. In summary, this new rooftop facility will consist of:

➢ New panel antennas for TPG/Vodafone, Optus and Telstra (21 antennas in total, each less than 2.8m in length)

➢ Four equipment cabinets

➢ Shrouding of the facility on all four sides

➢ Ancillary works and equipment necessary for the installation, operation and maintenance of the facility

3. In accordance with Section 6 of the Industry Code C564:2025 Mobile Phone Base Station Deployment, we invite you to make comments about the proposal.

4. Please direct comments to Mark Baade (Planning Consultant), SAQ Consulting on mark@saqconsulting.com.au, 0417 088 000 or P O Box 50 CLAYFIELD QLD 4011 by Friday 11th July 2025.

For more information about the proposal, scan the QR Code or visit www.rfnsa.com.au/3143022

LOST - Stolen from MCC Bowls Club, Hawthorn. White 2-door manual Honda Prelude. Much loved vehicle. ENI318. Reward when found. 9191 0099. Z

Business Guide

■ North. Banyule, Darebin, Nillumbik (urban), Whittlesea (urban).

■ South. Bayside, Boroondara (south), Glen Eira, Kingston, Melbourne, Port Phillip, Stonnington, Yarra.

■ East. Boroondara (north), KnoxSherbrooke, Manningham, Maroondah, Monash, Whitehorse.

■ West. Brimbank, Hobsons Bay, Hume, Maribyrnong, Melton, Merri-bek, Moonee Valley, Moorabool, Wyndham.

■ South-East. Cardinia, Casey, Frankston, Greater Dandenong, Mornington Peninsula (inc. Southern Peninsula and Western Port).

■ Regional. Mansfield, Mitchell,

Nillumbik (rural),

(rural),

(Back load Specialist. Conditions apply)

24 HOURS7 DAYS A WEEK

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