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#17778 From: Philip Golan <phil_g_98@...>
Date: Fri Dec 11, 2009 7:45 pm
Subject: Students from the Villers-Bretonneux have helped the children from a Victorian school gutted in Black Saturday | The Australian - Sent using Google Toolbar
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Students from the Villers-Bretonneux have helped the children from a Victorian school gutted in Black Saturday | The Australian

COIN by coin, the students in the small French village of Villers-Bretonneux have raised more than $20,000 to help rebuild a Victorian school razed in the Black Saturday bushfires.

The French students of Ecole Victoria, and three other local schools, knew little about the children they would be helping at Strathewen Primary School. They only knew their great-grandparents had promised 91 years ago never to forget the 1200 Australian soldiers who died liberating their village from the Germans on April 24, 1918.


#17777 From: Philip <phil_g_98@...>
Date: Sat Nov 28, 2009 9:37 am
Subject: Poorer schools outshine the rest
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THE nation's first school comparisons were released yesterday by the Victorian government, highlighting the greater improvement made by students in disadvantaged schools compared with their more affluent peers.

Despite the fears peddled by principal and teacher groups that reporting school performance will demonise schools in disadvantaged areas, the school performance reports for all government schools in Victoria reveal more disadvantaged schools are improving their students' results, and by a greater extent, than schools in high-income areas.

 
 

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THE nation's first school comparisons were released yesterday, highlighting the greater improvement made by students in disadvantaged schools.

 
 

Things you can do from here:

 
 

#17776 From: Philip Golan <phil_g_98@...>
Date: Fri Nov 27, 2009 6:41 am
Subject: Brits flock to start a new life in Australia - Sent using Google Toolbar
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Brits flock to start a new life in Australia

The number of people leaving Britain has soared to a record high, with Australia the top country of choice to set up home, new statistics show.

Official figures released yesterday reveal 427,000 people left Britain last year, the highest number ever recorded and up 25 per cent on the previous year.


#17775 From: Philip Golan <phil_g_98@...>
Date: Fri Nov 27, 2009 6:36 am
Subject: Survey finds Geelong has the nation's cheapest groceries | National News | News.com.au - Sent using Google Toolbar
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Survey finds Geelong has the nation's cheapest groceries | National News | News.com.au

GEELONG has the cheapest grocery prices in Australia, according to a survey.
And there are major differences in prices across different supermarket chains, with it costing just $94.30 to fill a basket at Aldi, compared with $126.87 at Woolworths/Safeway, $127.67 at Coles, $142.68 at IGA and $154.73 at FoodWorks.

#17774 From: Australia-wide@yahoogroups.com
Date: Fri Nov 20, 2009 12:55 am
Subject: Cutting Tails off Postings, 11/20/2009, 7:00 am
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#17773 From: Philip Golan <phil_g_98@...>
Date: Mon Nov 16, 2009 9:41 am
Subject: Forgotten Australians | wards of the state | apology - Sent using Google Toolbar
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Forgotten Australians | wards of the state | apology

I was made a ward of the state and placed in Bidura Children's Home at age 14 months after having been charged with having no fixed place of abode.

My file says I had a brother aged 13 and sister aged seven already in care at Westmead Boys Home and Brooklyn Orphanage.


#17772 From: Philip Golan <phil_g_98@...>
Date: Wed Nov 4, 2009 1:52 pm
Subject: Grocery savings: Sydney cleans up - Sent using Google Toolbar
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Grocery savings: Sydney cleans up

IF YOU ARE looking for bargains, stay put. The wash-up from the financial crisis has left Sydney's grocery prices the cheapest on the east coast.

#17771 From: Australia-wide@yahoogroups.com
Date: Tue Oct 20, 2009 12:56 am
Subject: Cutting Tails off Postings, 10/20/2009, 7:00 am
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#17770 From: Australia-wide@yahoogroups.com
Date: Sun Sep 20, 2009 12:57 am
Subject: Cutting Tails off Postings, 9/20/2009, 7:00 am
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#17769 From: Philip Golan <phil_g_98@...>
Date: Tue Sep 8, 2009 6:51 am
Subject: Extra income comes with a sting | National News | News.com.au - Sent using Google Toolbar
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THE modern-day family is turning NETTEL - Not Enough Time To Enjoy Life, a social researcher says.

Census statistics show families with two full-time working parents and two dependent children under the age of 24 feel that they need more than $110,000 a year to survive, and they are willing to sacrifice family time, holidays and relaxation to achieve their goals.


http://www.news.com.au/story/0,23599,26043165-421,00.html

#17768 From: Philip Golan <phil_g_98@...>
Date: Wed Sep 2, 2009 9:26 am
Subject: http://www.anmm.gov.au/site/page.cfm?u=403&c=4022 - Sent using Google Toolbar
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http://www.anmm.gov.au/site/page.cfm?u=403&c=4022

Vintage Swimwear Life Drawing Workshop
Friday 25 September ... 7.00 pm - 9.30 pm

Let loose your inner artist and develop your drawing skills in a unique venue with the National Maritime Museum's special Vintage Swimwear Life Drawing Workshop on Friday 25 September.


#17767 From: Philip Golan <phil_g_98@...>
Date: Wed Sep 2, 2009 9:11 am
Subject: Dog in Northern Territory given parking ticket | National News | News.com.au - Sent using Google Toolbar
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Have you ever heard anything so ridiculous in your life? 

Dog in Northern Territory given parking ticket | National News | News.com.au

A DOG has been booked for illegal parking.

The blue heeler was tied to a fence outside Darwin's Rapid Creek market  when it was approached by two city council traffic wardens, the Northern Territory News reports.


#17766 From: Philip <phil_g_98@...>
Date: Mon Aug 31, 2009 5:13 am
Subject: Jazz afternoons harbourside at National Maritime Museum cafe bar
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The Australian National Maritime Museum's harbour front caf bar Yots is kicking into swing this Spring with FREE weekend jazz performances. Yots Caf Bar will host 16 jazz afternoons over two months (Sept - Oct) on the big new entertainment deck in front of the caf. Each will each play twice over the 16 dates between 2pm and 5pm, Saturday and Sunday.

 
 

Sent to you by Philip via Google Reader:

 
 


The Australian National Maritime Museum's harbour front caf bar Yots is kicking into swing this Spring with FREE weekend jazz performances. Yots Caf Bar will host 16 jazz afternoons over two months (Sept - Oct) on the big new entertainment deck in front of the caf. Each will each play twice over the 16 dates between 2pm and 5pm, Saturday and Sunday.

 
 

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#17765 From: Philip <phil_g_98@...>
Date: Fri Aug 28, 2009 5:43 am
Subject: Biggest ever Books Alive kicks off - media release 27 August 2009
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You are here: » 2009. Arts Minister Peter Garrett today announced the start of Australia's largest ever Books Alive campaign. 'Anyone who buys one of the titles listed in 50 Books You Can't Put Down between August 26 and September 30 will receive a choice of free book - either Grug Learns to Read , a new title in series, or a great collection of stories by some of Australia's best writers, 10 Short Stories You Must Read This Year'.

 
 

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#17764 From: Philip <phil_g_98@...>
Date: Tue Aug 25, 2009 5:51 am
Subject: International cooperation to combat immigration fraud
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Minister for Immigration and Citizenship. A new international agreement will boost Australia's ability to detect and identify immigration fraud and cast a wider net when checking the backgrounds of unauthorised arrivals and other people held in immigration detention. 'The Australian Government's ability to detect immigration and identity fraud will be greatly improvedas a result of new biometric data-sharing arrangements with partner agencies in Canada and the United Kingdom,' Senator Evans said.

 
 

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#17763 From: Philip Golan <phil_g_98@...>
Date: Mon Aug 24, 2009 2:28 pm
Subject: NSW | Sydney | weather | gale-force winds | warm winter records | Wild weather: woman injured during gale-force winds - Sent using Google Toolbar
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NSW | Sydney | weather | gale-force winds | warm winter records | Wild weather: woman injured during gale-force winds

Parts of northern NSW today recorded their hottest August day on record as Sydney experienced gale-force winds and unseasonably warm temperatures.

Evans Head hit 36.8 degrees at 1pm, the hottest August temperature on record anywhere in NSW, commercial forecaster Weatherzone said.


#17762 From: Australia-wide@yahoogroups.com
Date: Thu Aug 20, 2009 12:57 am
Subject: Cutting Tails off Postings, 8/20/2009, 7:00 am
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#17761 From: "Philip Golan" <phil_g_98@...>
Date: Mon Aug 17, 2009 10:24 am
Subject: FW: THE OZZIE DUNNY!
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THE OZZIE DUNNY

 

They were funny looking buildings, that were once a way of life,
If you couldn't sprint the distance, then you really were in strife.
They were nailed, they were wired, but were mostly falling down,

There was one in every yard, in every house, in every town.

 

They were given many names, some were even funny,
But to most of us, we knew them as the outhouse or the dunny.

I've seen some of them all gussied up, with painted doors and all,
But it really made no difference, they were just a port of call.

 Now my old man would take a bet, he'd lay an even pound,
That you wouldn't make the dunny with them turkeys hangin' round.

They had so many uses, these buildings out the back,""
You could even hide from mother, so you wouldn't get the strap.

 That's why we had good cricketers, never mind the bumps,
We used the pathway for the wicket and the dunny door for stumps.

Now my old man would sit for hours, the smell would rot your socks,
He read the daily back to front in that good old thunderbox.

 And if by chance that nature called sometime through the night,
You always sent the dog in first, for there was no flamin' light.

And the dunny seemed to be the place where crawlies liked to hide,

But never ever showed themselves until you sat inside.

There was no such thing as Sorbent, no tissues there at all,
Just squares of well read newspaper, a hangin' on the wall.

If you had some friendly neighbours, as neighbours sometimes are,
You could sit and chat to them, if you left the door ajar.

When suddenly you got the urge, and down the track you fled,
Then of course the magpies were there to pick you on your head.

Then the time there was a wet, the rain it never stopped
, If you had an urgent call, you ran between the drops.


The dunny man came once a week, to these buildings out the back,
And he would leave an extra can, if you left for him a zac.

For those of you who've no idea what I mean by a zac,
Then youre too young to have ever had, a dunny out the back.
For it seems today they call them the bathroom, or the loo,
If you've never had one out the back, then I feel sorry for you.

 

For it used to be a way of life, to race along the track,
to answer natures call, at these buildings out the back.

 

 

 


#17760 From: "Philip Golan" <phil_g_98@...>
Date: Wed Aug 12, 2009 4:46 am
Subject: FW: Grow up and take responsibility’
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This should be published in all Australian newspapers


 

‘Grow up and take responsibility’ by ALEXANDER DOWNER May 24, 2009 11:30pm


 

I DON'T know about you, but it's always nice to get emails. Once upon a time you'd look with pleasure at a handful of letters which dropped through the letter box. Now all you get are those threatening looking envelopes with windows. Or if you're Tom Koutsantonis, those nasty missives which tell you about passing unknowingly through a speed camera. 

But this is a generalisation. At the height of the Schapelle Corby affair I received 5000 emails in one day from fellow Australians pleading with me to save "our Schapelle" from the horrors of the Indonesian legal system. Or, to be a bit more honest, the few I looked at said that. 

I'm sure my successor as foreign minister, Stephen Smith, had his in box bursting last week as people demanded he save the beer mat mum, Annice Smoel, from the ravages of the Thai police. 

I felt for him especially when the media started demanding he "do something" to save her. 

After about 10 minutes as foreign minister I was a little surprised to learn I was "responsible" for miscreant Australians who got into trouble in foreign countries. 

No, no, no, don't get it wrong - drug traffickers, drunks, kleptomaniacs and fraudsters weren't responsible for their own stupidity - I was. 

It's about time that great nanny in Canberra, the Federal Government, turned around and told people they are responsible for their own decisions. 

I was in Lebanon the other day and went down to the southern cities of Sidon and Tyre. They're fascinating places - old Crusader castles, bustling souks, colourful little food stalls with generous owners offering you a taste of their wares. 

But I couldn't help remembering the awful events in those same places three years ago when Israel went to war with Hezbollah. 

There were said to be 20,000 Australians in Lebanon at that time and a hefty percentage of them were demanding the Australian Government save them and fast. 

Lebanese support groups hit the airwaves screaming that the Government was too slow getting those Australians who wanted to be evacuated to safety. But hang on, Australia's about 15,000km from Lebanon and we don't dock ships in the eastern Mediterranean ready to ferry Australians to safety. 

And there was something else. We'd issued a travel advisory months earlier warning Australians of the dangers of southern Lebanon and the risks of going there. 

It didn't matter - apparently we had to get them out. 

We were lucky. The Australian ambassador, a petite, charming professional called Lyndall Sachs, worked day and night chartering ferries and providing comfort to the evacuees, who hadn't cared about the travel advisories, and whisked them to safety. 

It was one of the great achievements of an Australian diplomat. Almost single handedly, she managed to get around 5000 Australians to Cyprus and Turkey. 

We then chartered planes to take them back to Australia. I hope they built shrines to her. Some did, at least metaphorically. 

But some just whinged. They felt seasick on the ferry and that was our fault. Could they get frequent flyer points for the free flight back to Australia? And all this cost around $30 million dollars - your dollars. 

I'll tell you this - I didn't get 5000 emails of thanks but I got plenty of abuse because we weren't fast enough, the ferries didn't go from their port of choice and we were slow because we were racist, and so on. I mean, we'd warned them and told them not to go to the south of Lebanon. They went all the same. And when the proverbial hit the fan it was, you guessed it, "our fault". 

Then there was Hurricane Katrina, which flooded much of New Orleans. A mother of an Australian who arrived in New Orleans the day the hurricane hit came to see me in Stirling and demanded I get her son out. Americans couldn't get out but I had to get her son out. I asked if he'd heard the warnings from the U.S. Government that week to avoid New Orleans. 

She started shouting. He doesn't follow the news, he doesn't watch TV or read the newspapers. I see, I said. It was my fault he was in New Orleans, was it? What were we to do? Fly helicopters from Australia to America and pick up Australians and leave the Americans behind? 

I didn't have the guts to say this as foreign minister but don't you think you should take responsibility for yourself when you go overseas? 

If you're too dumb or idle to read the travel advisories and too mean to take out travel insurance when you go overseas then you ought to take responsibility for your own behaviour. 

Sure, if there's a catastrophe like the Bali bombings or you're trapped in a corruption scam the government should try to help. But not if you're too lazy and silly to help yourself. 

Remember two things when you travel. First, there are no special laws for Australians overseas. Foreigners make the laws over there, not us. And secondly, foreigners do things differently and they're entitled to. 

If you go to a Muslim country and get wildly drunk and women start dressing down (if you know what I mean) it can be bloody offensive to the locals. You'll soon be in trouble. 

And learn to take responsibility for your own behaviour. Stealing is wrong, even stealing beer mats. I know, I know, the beer mat mum had a few drinks but, no, she wasn't drunk and she was charmingly polite to the local police. 

But she was in a foreign country with a different culture and all of us ought to respect that. 

Alexander Downer was Australia's Foreign Affairs Minister from 1996 to 2007

 

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#17759 From: Philip Golan <phil_g_98@...>
Date: Sun Aug 9, 2009 6:46 am
Subject: Digging dirt from beneath family trees - Sent using Google Toolbar
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Digging dirt from beneath family trees

RECORD numbers of Australians are digging up their past.

More than 20per cent of visitors to the State Library of NSW are researching ancestry, while the NSW Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages reports a steady rise in family history inquiries over the past two years.

Genealogical websites such as ancestry.com.au have also observed an increase in membership.

The State Library has created a dedicated Family History Service to meet the demand, with up to 50 people a day using its resources.


#17758 From: "Philip Golan" <phil_g_98@...>
Date: Fri Aug 7, 2009 4:09 pm
Subject: FW: FW: Australia's got Talent (this young man is too good for 15yrs. Wow!
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Australia's got Talent (this young man is too good for 15 yrs. Wow!

 

 

 


#17757 From: Philip Golan <phil_g_98@...>
Date: Mon Aug 3, 2009 3:49 pm
Subject: Convict trials published online, now we’re chained to internet - Sent using Google Toolbar
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Convict trials published online, now we’re chained to internet

THOUSANDS of Australians have discovered their convict roots, learning of great-great relatives transported for theft or poaching or some other crime. But in-depth information about the crimes, trials and sentencing will soon be available at the click of a mouse.

#17756 From: Philip Golan <phil_g_98@...>
Date: Wed Jul 29, 2009 1:11 pm
Subject: Sydney Travel: August 2009 Events in Sydney, Australia - Sent using Google Toolbar
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#17755 From: Philip Golan <phil_g_98@...>
Date: Fri Jul 24, 2009 7:19 am
Subject: Twitter to help beat supermarket monopoly | National News | News.com.au - Sent using Google Toolbar
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Twitter to help beat supermarket monopoly | National News | News.com.au

TWITTER is the new tool being used to fight against high supermarket prices across Australia.

Following the failure of the Federal Government’s Grocery Choice website - set up to help shoppers find the lowest grocery prices in supermarkets around the country - a group of IT experts are using Twitter and Google Groups to develop Price Check, a website they hope will save shoppers money.


#17754 From: Philip Golan <phil_g_98@...>
Date: Fri Jul 24, 2009 5:57 am
Subject: Wix.com - Website built by Oziwood based on Nu Classic Com - Sent using Google Toolbar
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This site belongs to a photography friend of mine, and is highly recommended for the home, garden and as excellent gift ideas.


http://www.wix.com/Oziwood/OziwoodProducts

#17753 From: Australia-wide@yahoogroups.com
Date: Mon Jul 20, 2009 12:57 am
Subject: Cutting Tails off Postings, 7/20/2009, 7:00 am
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#17752 From: Philip Golan <phil_g_98@...>
Date: Sat Jul 18, 2009 7:36 am
Subject: The Terror Finance Blog: Jakarta Marriot & Ritz Carlton, 17 July 2009; Australian Government Dereliction Of Duty Cannot Be Ignored - Sent using Google Toolbar
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The Terror Finance Blog: Jakarta Marriot & Ritz Carlton, 17 July 2009; Australian Government Dereliction Of Duty Cannot Be Ignored

Jakarta Marriot & Ritz Carlton, 17 July 2009; Australian Government Dereliction Of Duty Cannot Be Ignored

Ganesh Sahathevan

Suicide bombers attacked the Jakarta Marriot and Ritz-Carlton hotels on 17 July 2009, killing nine and wounding at least 50 more at time of writing . (http://www.indianexpress.com/news/Blasts-at-Jakarta-Ritz--Marriott-kill-9--wound-50/490636/. The Al-Qaeda linked Jemaah Islamiyah (JI)  had attacked the Jakarta Marriot in 2003 , and there is speculation that these  attacks are also the work of the JI (http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aOxAF.fdhFK0) 

B.Raman , director of the South Asia Analysis Group has provided an analysis of attacks against Western and Jewish targets which can be sighted at the link http://www.southasiaanalysis.org/papers34/paper3310.html

The above taken together would suggest that the attacks of 17 July 2009 are also the work of a group of Muslims committed to acts of violence against those they perceive to be enemies of Islam.This writer has on many occasions here and elsewhere critized as naive at best, acts and programmes promoted by Western governments and NGOs designed to "moderate" the "small minority" of Muslims who hold "extremist" views. These iniatives, as well as some recent developments, are reviewed here to show how they aid rather than hinder the jihadist cause.


#17751 From: Philip Golan <phil_g_98@...>
Date: Wed Jul 8, 2009 3:27 pm
Subject: Town's ban is a bottler, Premier says - Sent using Google Toolbar
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Town's ban is a bottler, Premier says

THE State Government has followed the lead of the Southern Highlands village of Bundanoon, and moved to ban commercially bottled water in all government departments and agencies.

The Premier, Nathan Rees, said he was seeking "urgent advice" on ways to reduce bottled water consumption across the state, including a public campaign highlighting the economic and environmental costs of the bottled water market.


#17750 From: Philip Golan <phil_g_98@...>
Date: Sun Jul 5, 2009 7:19 am
Subject: Power saving | Energy conservation | Environment | Warren Yates - Sent using Google Toolbar
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Power saving | Energy conservation | Environment | Warren Yates

AS ENERGY bills rise by 20 per cent, meet the man who pays nothing for electricity to power his four-bedroom house.

Warren Yates even managed to score a $10 credit from EnergyAustralia for selling electricity back to the grid - he is believed to be the only person in NSW to have done so - after covering his roof with a three-kilowatt solar power system.


#17749 From: Philip Golan <phil_g_98@...>
Date: Sun Jun 28, 2009 6:14 am
Subject: Microsoft hikes Win7 prices for Australia - Operating Systems - Sent using Google Toolbar
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Microsoft hikes Win7 prices for Australia - Operating Systems

Australian buyers of Microsoft's upcoming Windows 7 operating system will pay between AU$50 and AU$150 more in real terms than US residents for the software, the company revealed this morning.

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