Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Age from Melbourne, Victoria, Australia • Page 16

Publication:
The Agei
Location:
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Issue Date:
Page:
16
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

16 THE AQE THURSDAY 23 JUNE 1994 Letters to the Editor Edited by JOHN MESSER Access Age i Wisdom thin in search for school 'super models' Lie back and think of engines I don't want the Grand Prix at all. instead of showing the car to be the blight that it is, the Grand Prix glorifies the car as a great, throbbing, power-sex toyj Then when the race is finished, we can all lie back and have a cigarette. Rod Watson; Ocean Grove. Cruise control Mr Brumby says Melbourne does not get enough cruise ships. Well, 1 wonder why? Mr Brumby's colleagues closed Beach Road, demolished Centenary Bridge and pulled the plug on the bayside project.

1 Bill Phillips, Port Wong label Paul Moncur (226) is wrong when he labels Mr and self-esteem in the curriculum, and also to help teachers and school counsellors recognise early signs of problems so that appropriate referrals can be made. While there are a number of factors that may contribute to the development of eating disorders in teenagers, there is no doubt that media pressures and the message that "thin is beautiful" have a significant influence. I would urge the Education Department to take a more positive stance on this matter. While they can do little to prevent attempts at recruitment outside school, the schools themselves and the department should be united in outlawing this approach. Mr Hayward's spokesman was quoted in your article as saying that "this could be an exciting area to be involved With mental health services for young people already stretched beyond their limits I think this is excitement that we could do without.

Caroline Clarke, Clayton. from Dr Caroline Clarke, adolescent physician and president, Victorian branch, Australian Association for Adolescent Health I was alarmed to read the report in "The Age' (186) regarding the school "super model" search. 1 was particularly concerned that this appears to be unopposed by the Education Department. People involved in the field of adolescent health are well aware of the increasing numbers of young people, particularly females, who are developing eating disorders such as anorexia and bulimia nervosa. A recent VicHealth funded survey found that strict dieting and binge eating were very prevalent among girls at secondary schools.

Eating disorders can have serious short and long-term consequences on the mental and physical health of young people. Health professionals are working with schools at various levels to try to address issues such as body image Brumoy and Mr ueidnch anti-Grand Prix. Both have: expressed support for the race. The issue at stake is: the desecration of Albert Park. Shall we hold the race; at Heathmont or at the Docklands? Mr Brumby' suggested the latter, an excellent proposal.

Jed South The house wins Tell me again Mr Kennett. We can't have a GP tracki at the docks because it is polluted. We can have casino at Southbank which is also polluted. I'm; confused. Melvin Patch, Croydon.

Site for sore eyes In sue years there were three Formula One races in a park 120 years old. This does not make it a sacred site tor motor sport (226). What an absolute nonsense to suggest it does. Russell Barnler, Middle Park. Coode-abeens Until Coode Island is relocated and the land, which is a wasteland, is rehabilitated, there won't be cruise ships at Victoria dock.

Not to mention disruption of major fish and vegetable markets. Codswallop Mr Brumby. Judy O'Connor, Gunbower. Shush power It's ironic that the Shadow Minister for "having to know Mr Birrell, has now become the Minister for "tell them John Miller, Darraweit Guin. The ugly truth women and a wide range of personal response to the Pope's recent teaching to many, matters of great sensitivity and deeply held belief.

In all justice, as a leader of one of these orders, cannot pretend to speak on these issues for all my brethren without their assent, nor can the executive of ACLRI, for them or for me. But, with considerable regret at publicly taking issue with my friends of the executive, I can and should write this letter particularly for those who feel themselves unconsulted, and even misrepresented to their bishops. goss Collings, Box Hill. Open inquiry needed on police shootings from Alan H. Goldberg, QC, president, Victorian.

Council for Civil Liberties Although we have the coroner's findings on the Sader shooting in 1988 we do not know what the position is in 1994. The chief commissioner says that the police have "already introduced a number of positive Having regard to incidents of police Religious Institutes has expressed its dismay at the Pope's recent apostolic letter" concerning the debate about the ordination of women, by itself writing to the bishops of Australia (The Age, 166). Her belief is quite reasonable, given the text of this letter to the bishops, but in fact it is not from ACLRI. It does indeed bear the names of the 16 members of the executive of ACLRI, but the executive has not been commissioned by the conference to write this letter, nor do the statutes of the conference authorise the executive so to speak without consultation. Therefore, it cannot fairly claim to represent the views of the leaders of "the 170 religious still less the "more than 1 1,000 who belong to (these) religious This, of course, in no way calls into question the propriety, indeed the desirability, of these 16 or any others from communicating with the bishops on matters of grave concern.

But it is not the role of the executive per se. Among Catholic nuns, brothers and priests there is, in fact, a wide range of conscientious opinion concerning the issue of ordination of shootings earlier this year the community is entitled to know what the positive changes are. The council has been critical of policies and procedures of the Victoria Police but it casts no aspersions upon, nor makes allegations against, the integrity of the chief commissioner. It is important that the community be able to have confidence in its police force and the cause of any erosion of that confidence must be identified and rectified. That is why the Victorian Council for Civil Liberties believes that an open, independent investigation into police shootings is still required in 1994.

Alan H. Goldberg, Melbourne. Premier intends to reveal Prix costs from Judith Griggs, chief executive Melbourne Grand Prix Promotions PtyLtd Your editorial 'The price of the Prut' (21 June) does not take proper account of the following facts. The international fee payable for the rights to stage the Grand Prix at Albert Park forms part of the operating expenses for the event which we aim to recover through revenue-generating areas such as ticket sales and sponsorship. If commercial confidentiality on the contract fee is breached, the risk is that the Grand prix could be lost to Melbourne and Australia.

The Premier has publicly stated his intention to provide cost and revenue information on the Grand Prut to the public. Judith Griggs, South Melbourne exposed for what they are politically callous. Mr Kennett's oft-repeated words, that he is acting for all Victorians, just don't ring true. Isobel Tipping, Warragul. Old and new regrets about a school from Tony C.

Trumble Away down here in the south of Tasmania, values are measured differently on the sea by wind strength and by the swell of the sea, on land in the timber areas by rainfall and even by snowfall. Here matters are considered with natural wisdom, where life sometimes is lost and serious injuries result at sea or in the bush. Here I have found a peace of mind to ease the 50-year-old boyhood memories of Melbourne Grammar School. Twelve fear-filled years. Five years ago I made my first contact with the school since then.

There were modern and fresh outlooks at the school I was told, so I went there and was shown around the school by the present headmaster who, so sadly, is leaving shortly ('The Age', 176). I was delighted by the improvements and supported without hesitation the proposal for full coeducation at the school. Those "few old boys" mentioned in the article caused a resolution of the school council for developing plans for coeducation to be rescinded, and a natural and healthy development was crushed. I am one of the old boys who deplores that insolent action against the legal controlling body of the school (how was it and who continues actively to support the coeducation proposal throughout Melbourne Grammar School. Tony C.

Trumble, Brooks Bay, Tasmania. Wider say needed on water frontages from Charles Sherwin, rural projects officer, Victorian National Parks Association A string of government and independent reports have identified annual grazing licences as responsible for the long history of degradation of public land along Victoria's inland water frontages. How then can Wally Shaw (216) believe that longer licences with essentially the same A park protest statue right over the top from Phillip Somerville Please allow me to indulge in a little light raillery over the Grand Prix. Some letter writers to 'The Age' have suggested that a statue be built to commemorate the Albert Park protesters or "Yappies," (Young Affluent Park Protesters In Expensive Surrounds), as they're affectionately known. At last! An opportunity for a genuine Melbourne landmark of truly international standard.

I humbly submit the following proposal. A huge Kim 11-sung sized, "Statue of Liebensraum, made in the image' of (ohn Brumby, towering astride the lake, its left arm raised pointing north-westward to the docklands and further on towards Malaysia, (the yappie's preferred site). A footbridge linking the island would enable public access via stairs, to an observation deck inside its great empty head. At the base of the monolith, an inscription thus: "Give me your whining, your greedy. Give me your vocal minorities and I will make an issue of them!" Surely this would be a fitting monument to all the neo-Victorian crypto-fascist, stick-in-the-Albert Park-mud, fin-de-siecle pedalling wowsers who have worked so tirelessly to illiberate us.

Long may they go jump in the lake! Phillip Somerville, South Caulfield. Swing lower, sweet Cadillac from Isobel Tipping The Kennett Government demonstrates its singular lack of compassion when it can contemplate spending unknown millions of dollars on a race track for a once-a-year race, and in the process ruining a lovely, fringe-city park. While the Government focuses on such extravagant enterprises, the state education system seems headed for disintegration, patients are shoved out of hospitals prematurely, without adequate community supervision during their convalescence, and homeless kids need shelter. Hardheaded politicians who take no account of the damage occurring to the fabric of our society must be conditions will help conserve public land? Mr Shaw points out that the Victorian Farmers Federation has the same understanding as Jennifer Lees (156) of the need to restore the environmental condition of Victoria's inland waterways and quite rightly applauds the efforts of farmers in Landcare and tree planting schemes. He fails to mention, however, that the problems of rural land degradation and biodiversity decline are far from solved.

The sad situation where people with concerns about inland waterways are at each other's throats should not arise. Perhaps the needs of farmers can be reconciled with conservation imperatives and requirements for efficient public administration of licences. This reconciliation will not be possible unless the needs of farmers, conservation advocates and administrators are all considered in developing, proposals for changing the current' system of water frontage licensing. The current proposal to hand inland waterways to farmers under 99-year agricultural licences for a small, easy to administer, one-off payment was clearly developed without consideration of the need to protect the environment. To propose the entrenchment of an historically destructive system of waterway management without consulting river management authorities, conservation groups or the broader community is to limit Victoria's options for inland waterway restoration.

The current proposal is clearly the result of close collaboration between the Department of Conservation and Natural Resources and the VFF. While such community participation in the development of public land management policy is commendable, rational policy will only result when this principle is extended to all interested parties. Charles Sherwin, East Melbourne. Church dissenters represent themselves from Father Ross Collings, OCD, regional vicar, Discalced Carmelites Your columnist l.ynne Cossar has been led to believe that "the Australian Conference of Leaders of The feature on violence and crime in Melbourne ('The Age', 206) stunned us. We were presented with an island of reality in a sea of ignorance.

Shocking, yes but you have to acknowledge the problem before you can cleanse it. Jaye Delaney (15) and Keelan Gallogly (15), Vtarrnambool. The human touch Martin Flanagan's story, The Pupil is the Tutor of the Child ('The Age', 226), was moving and inspiring. Congratulations to 'The Age' for making it front page material. Such stories help us to recapture a vision of humankind as it can be.

A welcome refreshing change from the cynicism of politics. Noel McBean, Camberwell. Red herring check Melbourne Parks and Waterways have been having a picnic along the Yarra bank at Richmond. Residents at Loys paddock and staff at the children's farm have got the message that they should accept the Kroposals or the minister will intervene. But ave been forced to show plans for Herring Island at 378 Cotham Road, Kew at 5.30 Thursday night (236).

Joe Hill, Richmond. Chemically unencumbered? In Deepdene on Saturday, Melbourne Water will auction the site of a just-demolished service station, At least six or more old leaky petrol tanks have been removed. A perfect example of an unregistered toxic site? Now unquestionably safe? Will developers care? And home buyers know? 1 Nicholas Notes on niceness next Interesting but obvious reading about partners'' annoying habits Age', 226), but how about a return article of the lovely things the other one Claire Rabid transit 100 YEARS AGO LONDON. Mr Balfour, leader of the Opposition, in addressing a large meeting of Nonconformists, said that probably momentous changes would occur in the next two decades. He believed that socialism was doomed to failure, because it did not include the essential principle of fair profit to the ablest and best among individuals.

Without such incentive, the Utopian theories of dreamers would never be realised. 'The Age', 23 June 1894. 50 YEARS AGO PEARL HARBOR. Admiral Nimitz. Commander in Chief of the U.S.

Pacific Fleet, announced today that the United States Fifth Fleet, in a surprise attack on the Japanese Ground Fleet off the Philippines, sank or damaged 14 enemy units. The vessels destroyed were a large Japanese aircraft carrier and three tankers, and possibly a destroyer. 'The Age', 23 June 1944. ONE YEAR AGO The State Government yesterday suspended the troubled Camberwell Council and appointed as administrator, Mr Des Bethke a local government consultant and former chief executive of the City of Melbourne. The Minister for Local Government, Mr Hallam, said he had virtually no choice but to suspend the council because: "it is very clear that government has broken down in the City of 'The Age', 23 June 1993.

1ST An hour to go eight miles from Fairfield to the oy public transport. The Met could introduce steam and horse to speed it up or shall I ride a bicycle. Letters should be no more than 300 words. Shorter letters will be preferred. All letters must be signed and the writer's name and address clearly written.

(A box number is not sufficient.) Telephone numbers should be provided so that letters can be verified. A letter may be edited for reasons of space or clarity unless the writer specifies that it must be published in full. Bob Fairfield. Access letters must be SO 670 1601 Lines are open between 8 am and noon, 1 pm and 4 pm weekdays. tseUWiMlAVllfeH 1989: Ansett Airlines of Australia (PHqST' Award 1989: East West Airlines tions) Limited pilots Award 1989: Ansett Airlines of Australia (Pilots) Award 19J COUNTY COURT Courts 1-2 223 William StrMt Courts MB Lonadale Street Practice Court (Court 6, Judge Shillrto.

10.30). A welcome for His Honor Judge Mclnemey will be nek) today at 10.00 am in the Eighth Court. 5th Floor. From PAGE 12 Sabra Mohamad. Morrlssey Peter Michael.

(Ct. 15, Judge Hart, 9.45) Trial: Klvi Anton Kevin (Pt. (Ct 16. Judge Duggan, 9.45) Trial: Dlnatale Jack. Totino Eik.

Centra Gaetano (Pt. (Ct 19. Judge Duon. 10.15) Trial: Craven Glen Andrew (Pt. (Ct.

20. Judge Higgins. 9.30) Adjourned Bond: Jones Stephen Marti. Further Ptea: Johnson Merit. (Ct.

21. Judge Villeneuve-Smtth, 10.15) For Sentence: Lee David Anthony. Trial: Wigley Eric James (Pt (Ct. 25. Judge KeorvCohen, 9.45) Trial: Rule Kenneth Ronald Leslie.

COUNTY COURT STATE CORONER'S UH-lUk MELBOURNE Monday, 11th July (Melbourne Coroners Office, 10.00 am) Muir. Tuesday, 12th Jury (Melbourne Coroner's Office at 10.00 am) Muir. Wednesday, 13th Jury, 1994 (Melbourne Coroner's Office at 10.00 am) Walls. Thursday. 14th Jury.

1994 (Melbourne Coroner's Office at 10.00 am) Walls. Friday. 15th Jury. 1994 (Melbourne Coroner Office at 10.00 am) Walls. (Sale Coroners Court at 10.00 am) Besley.

INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS COURT OF AUSTRALIA, 451 Little Bourke Street. Melbourne. Court 7, Justice Keefy. 10.15 am: (Industrial Notice of Motion List) Raymond John Taylor Janome Sewing Machine Co (Aust) Pty Ltd. AUSTRALIAN INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS COMMISSION Laval U-39, SO CoWna Street, (Before the Registrar, Ground Floor.

223 William St 10.30). McGregor v. Prince Henry's Hospital. Royle. Dalton.

Luchow. ippollto, Oldfield. Petrik. Chan and Le. BulWws.

Slmeonl-dts. Shiilabeer. Mclachlan. Hudson and O'Donneil. aide ran and Hicks, Gangell.

Loprccoto: (Court 9. 11th Floor. Before Registrar Harold. 9.45.) IngOn and Colombo. Kulevski.

Chrysanthou. Bradley and Latham. Stamec and Aiello. Pemb-shaw. Williams.

McDonald. Brown. Johnston. Cameron. Bamett and McArthur.

Warren and Oavtes. Gatt. Atakan. Noye and Hunter. Cole.

Greenfield and Nugent, Wallace and Paterson. James. Pefovw. Yarmouth. Davey.

Srblnovski. Gate. Oi Palma, Taylor and Buckley, Aguilar and Mangan. Aguilar and Boules, Eastwood. Maclean and Deak, Nihil I and Roddy.

Falckh. McDonald. FAMILY COURT OF AUSTRALIA duction) Award 1973 and the Pulp and Paper Industry (Maintenance and Services) Agreement 1973 re wages and working conditions. For Settlement of Order. (Court 6, Level 37.

Senior Deputy President Polltes, 10.0.) CNos 20361 of 1992 and 60354 of 1993: Electrical Trades Union of Australia and State Etec-triclly Commission of Victoria and another and S.118A application by SfCV that the A5U have the right to exclusively represent its employees. Nos 60187, 601B8 and 60189 of 1994: S.170MA applications by State Energy Commission of Western Australia and others for Certification of Agreement, No 60191 and 60192 Of 1994: S.170MA application by State Energy Commissioners of Western Australia and others for certification of agreements. No 60158 of 1994: State Energy Commission of Western Australia Salaried Officers Award 1989 re fixed term contracts. (Court 4, Level 38, Deputy President Harrison. 3.30.) No 31S88 of 1993: Vie Roads and Australian Municipal.

Administrative, Clerical and Services Union and another re employment protection pack-, age. Part Heard. (Court 7, Level 37. Deputy President Wlliams, 10.30.) No 30477 of 1994: Australian Stevedores and Maritime Union of Australia re termination of 55 employees. For Report.

(Court 4, Level 38. Deputy President Drake, 10.0.) No 31387 of 1994: City of WSlllamstown and ASU re bans on emptying of 240 litre bins. Part Heard; (10.30.) No 31056 of 1993: Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees Association and Pharmacy Guild of Australia re Log of Claim wages and condition. For Directions. Nos 30908, 31423 and 32297 of 1993: The Salaried Pharma-cfsts Association and Pharmacy Guild of Australia and others re Log of Claims wages and conditions.

Part Heard; (11.0.) No 31608 of 1994: Australian Liquor, Hospitality and Miscellaneous Workers Union and Tempo Cleaning Services re dismissal of Paula Glavcrc. (Court 12, Level 33, Commissioner Nolan, 2.30.) No 31568 of 1994: Brambles Australia Limited and Construction. Forestry, Mining and Energy Union re accident Involving company crane (For Conference). (Court 12, Level 33, Commissioner Palmer, 9.30.) Not 31467. 31468, 31469, 31470 and 31471 of 1994: An sett Wa (Pllott) Award 1989; An sett Air Freight (Pikrta) Award toria) Limited against a Finding of Dispute issued by Deputy President Acton on 19 April 1994 in No 32525 of 1993 re wages and conditions (Log of Claims).

(Court 3. Level 38. Vice President Mclntyre. 10.30.) No 30348 of 1994: Australian Liquor. Hospitality and Miscellaneous Workers Union and Tempo Cleaning Services re hours of work of cleaners at Dandenong TAFE.

For Report Back. (Court 2, Level 39, Senior Deputy President Mac Bean. 9.0.) Nos 21497 of 1990 and 22266 of 1991: The AWU-FIME Amalgamated Union and Allen Bros Asphalt Limited and others re making of new WU-FIME Asphalt Award covering the southern State (Vic. Tas. SA).

Part Heard: (4.15.) Nos 30668, 21763, 30666 and 30667 of 1993: S.lll(lXb) application by Wesley Vale Engineering pry Ltd and others for a new award covering operations at North Forest Products' Tamer. Triabunna and Mas-sey Greene Export Woodchlp Mills, S.lll(lHb) application by the Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union and others for a new award covering Tamer, Triabunna and Massey Greene Export Woodchlp Mills; and S.113 applications by North Broken Hit! Ltd and others to vary the Pulp and Paper Industry (Pro (Court 26. Judge NUon, 10.30). Weston V. Johnson Excavations and another (part heard).

(Court 27. Judge Ostrowskl. 10.30). Shandiey v. Hall (application) (part heard): Karanfikjvskl and another v.

Stanchev (part heard). (Court 28, Judge Neesham. 10.30). Barrera v. U.

Simon Builders PL (part heard). (Court 29. Judge Stott 10.30). PapasijiS v. Sahhar (part heard).

(Court 30, Judge Oavey, 10.30). Carter v. Fraser (part heard). (Court 31, Judge Campbell. 10.30).

Tlmpaul Nominees PL v. John E. Whtte Agencies and others (part heard). (Court 32. Judge Morrow, 10.30).

Profile Security Serv PL and another v. Belemonte-Luna (part heard). (Court 32. Reserves, 10.30). Tarn-worth Amber v.

Fabian Manor PL and another (adjournment application): Ang-llss v. McCould and another (mention); Kltoria PL v. Purdy Klrkham PL and others (priority): Maher v. Maher (priority): Franklin Printing Group Pt v. Chelmer I no PL: N.A.B.

v. Koukourlkas; Sollman v. State of Victoria: Impaya Maroun; Ellis and another v. Van Der On. (Court 33.

Judge Meagher. 10.30). Grbavac v. Hart (part heard). port, Tlndal Child Support.

(Court 5. Dissolution List. 2.15) Weaver). Neal, Falrweather. Benka, Boulter.

Hitchen, Sciberras. Godndge, Belsham. Horn an, Pagenstecher. Fothergill. Shaw.

Goldsmith, Sinclair, Bransgrove. COUNTY COURT Crime (Ct. 1. Judge Dee. 10.30) Trial: Hammer Robert Leonard (Pt.

(Ct 2, Judge McNab. 10.30) Adjourned Bond: Ralph Gregory Roy. (Ct. 3. Judge Byrne.

10.15) Tnal: Cunningham Robert William (Pt. (Ct. 4. Judge Smith. 10.30) To Plead: Gibson Scott Lindsay.

(Ct. 7, Judge Strong. 10.0) For Sentence: Jukov Michael. (Ct. 8.

Welcome for Ms Honour Judge Mclnemey. 10.0). (Ct. 8. Judge Walsh.

11.0) Trial: Allen Peter John, (Pt. (Ct. 9. Judge Fricke. 10.0) For Plea: De Csontos David Joief.

Tlmperio Antonio. (Ct. 10, Judge Hassett. 10.45) Watson. Peter Malcolm (Pt.

(Ct. 11, Judge Ross, 10.0) thai: Goldman Michael (Pt. (Ct. 12. Judge R.

P. Lewis. 9.45) Trial: Angus Steven John (Pt. Hd). (Ct.

13. Judge Williams. 10.30) To Plead: Zanv pase Adrian Mark. (11.30) Trial: Baxter Darren Charles (Pt. (Ct.

14. jjeurtajnOOfentence re oaiiy travel allowance, (l.o.) No 40159 of 1994: Skywest Airlines Pty Ltd and Ms D. Mendei and another re wages and conditions (Log of Claims. Heard). (Court 9.

Level 34. Commission- er Grimshaw. 9.30.) No 30155 of 1994: Mr Kevin Johnson and fl. E. Wa-" ters re alleged unlawful termination (For Report Back or Reference).

(11.0.) No 31679 of 1994: Transport Worked Union and Comet Transport Ballarat re' Job security. (Court 10. Level 34, ConV' mlssioner Lewln. 10.0.) No of 1994: Australian Liquor, Hospitality" and Miscellaneous Worker Union and City of Box Hill and another re probable retrenchment of union members (Part" Heard). (2.30.) No 31418 of 1994: Australian Municipal, Administrative1' Clerical and Services Union and City or Morwelt re redundancies.

(Court 13, Le el 33. Commissioner Oldmeadow. 9.30.1 No 21445 of 1994: S.170MA.S Bp- plication for Certification of (single business) Port Phillip Wool Pro- Continued: RAGE 17 FAMILY COURT OF AUSTRALIA 970 Bourka Street, Melbourne (Court 4. 4th Floor. Before The FuH Court.

Justices linrjenrnayer. Firm and Kay. 10.0. 1 Smitn. Peters (Eustace-(Casteura: (Court 2.

4th Floor. Before Justice Fredenco. 10.15.) Joseph. Martin. Cleaver.

Russell. Dignum. Croft. Apap. SowinsM.

Sarup. ElMaghraby, Fleigner and Haycraft: (Court 7. 6th Floor. Before Justice Smithers. 10.0.) Mytes McLean: (Court S.

6th Floor. Before Justice Haw. 10.0. 1 Halilaj. Nardo: (Court 6.

6th Root. Before Justice Graham. 10.0 Christotorou, Brooks. (Court 1. 4th Floor.

Before Judicial Registrar Ramsden. 10.0.) O'Oonnell: (Court 10. 11th Floor. Before Registrar Edney. 10.0 Bosak.

Tantuccio. Mara-Uta and Camillerl. Slavin, Amphlett, McPherson. Claridge. Evans and Morris-sey.

fteev Kelly and An ana. Sankan and Ayoubi. Jones. Clayton. Clowes, M'Zungu and Lynch.

Bonllla. Salnvonczyk and Har-lun (11.30.1 Searte. Turzat, Basca. (Court 34. Judge Just.

10.00). Me-tfc v. MMI-Swtuertand Insurance: Ward v. CrC Workers Comp (Vic) Ltd (Practice Court Application): Michalopoulos v. V.W.A.

and another (Practice Court Application): Grant v. MMI-Switzerland Work-era Comp (Vic) Ltd and another (Practice Court Application). (Court 35, Judge G. D. Lewis.

10.30). Rylance v. CIC Workers Comp (Vic) Ltd (part heard): Coombs v. The Coombs Frigrlte PL and another (Practice Court Application) (part heard). (Court 35, Reserves, 10.30).

Smith v. GIO Workers Comp (Vic) Ltd: Marguglio v. Switzerland Insurance Aust. Ltd and another; Dwyer v. V.W.A.; Meisels v.

V.W.A. (Court 2. Judge McNab. 10.30). Wright, Andrew John: Milauo, Lulgi: Se-drak, Maged; Tarn Hoai Luong: Coffey, Robert Michael; Bishop, Natasha Kather-Ine.

(Court 5. Judge Mullaly, 10.30). Breach of an Intensive Correction Order and Suspended Sentence Dowries, Angeto John. Atkinson, Damn; McGaw, Patrick Thomas: Runic, Aaron: Mueller, Manfred: Gardiner, Samual Kenneth; Allison. Gerard William.

(Court 14. Judge Curtain. 10.30). Margetts, Roy; Mohe-key. Kathleen (part heard).

(Court 18, Judge Kelly, 10.30). Breach of a Com-munrty Based Order Hudson, Leslie. S3 RoMmon Street, Danaaneng (Court 4. Justice Wllciek. 10.0) Far-ragher, Wynd.

(Court 1. Judicial Registrar Nikakis. 10.0) Simmons. iCourt 5. Enforcement Lists.

9.45) CSA Abraham. CSA Hewitt. CSA Be ant. CSA WerbiUky. Harnngton Deputy Registrar.

(Court 3. Level 38. Full Bench. Vice President Mclntyre, Deputy President Drake, Commissioner Palmer, 2.0.) No 31173 of 1994: The Federated Brick, Tile and Pottery Industrial Union of Aus- tralia and Australian Building Ceramics and others Appeal by Boral Bricks (Vic The Frequent Flyer program with more frequent flights. -y 1 So whether you travel frequently around Australia, or around the world, it makes sense to fly with the airline that gives you more choice.

Australia's most frequent flyer. Qantas. No other Australian airline flies to more places, more often than Qantas. And as a Qantas Frequent Flyer, that means you have more choice and more flexibility when it comes to flying on business. Of course, it also means you have scores of opportunities to earn frequent flyer points, all on the one airline.

THE AUSTRALIAN AIRLINE nt r-t-t.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Age
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Age Archive

Pages Available:
1,291,868
Years Available:
1854-2000