The Local Paper. Southern Cross Weekly Edition. Wed., Sep. 11, 2024

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Local News

St Bedes scare

■ A 17-year-old boy was arrested after a gun threat involving St Bede’s Mentone campus was posted on social media last Wednesday (Sep. 4). The school was locked down for 75 minutes.

The Hampton boy published an image of a gun, with a non-specific message that may have been perceived as a threat to a teacher.

“I’m unloading mags on my teacher,” said the post alongside an image of the 9mm Glock 18 pistol.

The boy was later released from custody and given a caution.

Cheltenham fire

■ Fire Rescue Victoria crews responded to a house fire in Benkel Avenue at Cheltenham at 1.16pm pn Monday afternoon, September 2, following multiple calls to Triple Zero Crews arrived on scene within five minutes to find a single storey brick home well alight.

FRV crews donned breathing apparatus and entered the burning house with hose lines to attack the fire which by now was well alight.

All occupants were able to evacuate safely from the home without injury, with a search of the premises ensuring no persons were inside.

A neighbouring home under threat from the fire was protected from fire spread by FRV crews.

Cause of the fire is not yet known but will be investigated.

Victoria Police and Ambulance Victoria were on scene to support firefighting activities.

Hinch’s choice

■ Former Melbourne City Councillor Beverley Pinder was to be the running mate of Derryn Hunch in his bid to be Lord Mayor, broadcaster Derryn Hinch has revealed.

Ms Pinder has announced that she is standing for election for Port Phillip Council in the October poll.

Councils enter caretaker mode this month ahead of the elections.

STONNINGTON COUNCIL vs STATE GOVERNMENT

■ Stonnington Council says that is “deeply concerned that the State Government is not listening to the community in relation to its proposal for the Chadstone Activity Centre

Stonnington first raised its concerns with the State Government in April and the Council says that is disappointed that Spring Street’s draft plans have ignored both Council’s evidencebased submissions and those of the local community.

“Stonnington has worked hard to facilitate housing supply in appropriate locations, acknowledging the critical need for housing,” said a Council representative.

“Council’s draft Housing Strategy draws on five years of community engagement and its rigorous methodology forms a comprehensive evidence-based approach to meeting the growing demand for housing.’

Stonnington CEO Dale Dickson said: “Our officers walked every street of Stonnington to understand the context, constraints and opportunities facing housing in our city.

“Our draft housing strategy provides the Government with an evidence-based solution that already facilitates sufficient capacity to meet their own targets – in appropriate locations and with the community’s involvement.”

“Council was only advised of plans for the 800m catchment area the day before the Government made its draft plan public.

“:The 800m catchment will result in unacceptable lifestyle and amenity impacts for hundreds of residents within the expanded activity centre boundary.”

The City of Stonnington maintains that the State Government’s planned level of development around the Chadstone Shopping Centre: ■ fails to clearly separate the design and structure of the proposed activity centre from the surrounding residential areas, which should look and feel different to maximise liveability for residents ■ fails to provide a measured approach in line

with the local neighbourhood character or consider the diverse mix of needs required by the community

■ fails to respond to the heavily car-reliant location and lack of rail services to the centre, noting that bus connections and levels of service are limited

■ does not recognise that the Chadstone Activity Centre is markedly different from the other nine Activity Centres in the pilot program and that there is a barrier to movement, with pedestrians either needing to walk through the centre and the car parks, or having to go around ■ provides no details on master planning – that is, how the Activity Centre will become a liveable precinct with access to community infrastructure, open space and better transport options, beyond the delivery of housing.

“The level of change proposed in this catchment—and the streamlined approach potentially removing the opportunity for any public consultation and appeal—is unprecedented.”

Southbank incident:

7 Finks charged

■ Detectives from the Echo Taskforce have charged seven patched members of the Finks Outlaw Motorcycle Gang following an incident where motorcycles were illegally driven along the footpath of Southbank Promenade

With assistance from the VIPER Taskforce and East Gippsland Crime Investigation Unit, 11 search warrants were executed early last Wednesday morning (Sep.4) at residential addresses in Clyde North, Safety Beach, Dallas, Wy Yung, Springvale, Mount Martha, Harkness, Rosebud, Keysborough as well as two clubhouses in Cranbourne West and Brunswick East

Seven men were taken into custody and interviewed by investigators, including:

■ A 32-year-old Safety Beach man, who police will allege is an officer bearer

■ A 44-year-old Dallas man, who police will allege is a World member

■ A 27-year-old Wy Yung man

■ A 34-year-old Springvale man, who police will allege is an officer bearer

■ A 34-year-old Mount Martha man, who police will allege is a national president

■ A 41-year-old Rosebud man

■ A 33-year-old Keysborough man

They were all charged with reckless conduct endangering serious injury and drive/ride on path.

The 41-year-old Rosebud man was also charged with possess cannabis.

All were bailed to appear at Melbourne Magistrates’ Court on November 21.

Police seized seven Harley Davidson motorcycles, a small amount of cannabis and Finks OMCG vests.

Dickson, Stonnington Council CEO

Local News Crossland eyed Greens seat

■ City of Yarra Mayor Cr Edward Crossland had his eye on the State Parliament Upper House Northern Metropolitan seat being vacated by Samantha Ratnam.

Also competing for the Upper House vacancy was Merri-bek Councillor Angelica Panopoulos.

Ms Ratnam, who is Greens leader in Victoria, is vacating her seat in a bid to win the Federal seat of Wills, centred around Coburg.

There were six other candidates: Apsara Sabaratnam, Metic Golbasi, Dash Nehring, Emily Corcoran, Anasina Gray-Barberio and Tara Bennett.

Damage update

■ Works to prevent localised flooding in Third St, Black Rock are currently in the construction phase.

Bayside Council says hese works involve a significant upgrade of the stormwater discharge network, meaning the system will be able to remove water from the area faster when intense rainfall occurs.

The new stormwater storage system has a capacity of 855,000 litres. This means rainwater can be discharged in a controlled manner to the existing drainage network.

Bayside Mayor, Cr Fiona Stitfold , thanked residents for their patience during this comprehensive upgrade.

● Jacinta Allan, State Premier

?The Suburban Rail Loop has been given a mention in State Parliament by Premier Jacinta Allan: “: Our government is getting on and delivering the Suburban Rail Loop, which will forever change the way Victorians move around our city and state. I have already mentioned the train connection to Deakin University Burwood and Monash University Clayton. I should acknowledge the great work of the member for Clarinda as well. He works very, very hard. By 2026 there will be tunnel-boring machines in the ground. There will be 4000 Victorians working on this project as we get on and deliver a project that is not just a transport project; it is a project that is going to deliver the opportunity for 70,000 homes around those six new station locations, exactly in the right place, exactly where Victorians want to live – good, affordable, livable homes connected to good, strong public transport.”

✖Two years have passed since the Ombudsman’s investigation report and the public housing complaints system remains broken, says Prahran MLA Sam Hibbins. “Public housing residents in the Prahran electorate regularly contact my office about a range of issues, be they maintenance requests or security concerns, but a key source of frustration is a lack of a clear pathway for their issues to be reported, escalated and, if necessary, resolved. They are encouraged to call their local housing office, but when they do, it is so underresourced that the calls often go unanswered or unreturned with requests not being followed up, leaving residents feeling frustrated and helpless and often reaching the point where their health and safety are at risk. The Ombudsman has subsequently released a progress report noting that the Victorian Government has not yet taken any clear action to implement the recommendations,” Mr Hibbins said.

?Glen Eira Council has endorsed its comcerms to the State Government in a ubmission on Moorabbin and Chadstone Draft Plans. The Council has called for more transparency. “While we know we need to address the current housing crisis, one of our big concerns we have is how quickly the Activity Centre Program is progressing. There is not much time to consider the drafts or follow where they’re light on detail.”

Age journalist Annakia Smethurst said the Northern Metropolitan pre-selection being conducted over one week has been viewed by some Greens observers as “a fight between longerserving branch members motivated by social justice and environmental concerns, and younger, more activist members united by LGBTQ and trans right policies.

“All members [interviewed by The Age] agreed the party’s new guard would overwhelmingly support Sabaratnam - who also has a factional power base in the Multicultural Greens - or Nehring who sat on the Greens international disciplinary body.”

■ Ms Gray-Baberio won the pre-selection.

Vale ex-Lord Mayor Ivan Deveson

■ Ivan Deveson, a former City of Melbourne Lord Mayor, has died at age 90.

He served in the top civic psoition between 1996 and 1999.

Mr Deveson passed away on Saturday, August 31.

Current Lord Mayor, Nick Reece, said Mr Deveson had a ‘get things done’ approach.

Former Victorian Premier Jeff Kennett described Mr Deveson as “very polite”, serving for his community - “for them, not self”.

He had led Nissan Australia, the Seven Network, with 30 years at General Motors.

He was raised in Coburg, and had studied at RMIT.

Mr Deveson was named Victorian of the Year in 1991, and he received an Order of Australia for service to the automotive industry and business. He is survived by wife of 6 years, Mary Ellen Deveson.

Kinder providers suffer

■ Brighton MLA James Newbury says the State Government’s kindergarten policy is having a detrimental effect on providers based in metropolitan Melbourne

“We know that the first years of life are the most important for learning and development,”

Mr Newbury told State Parliament.

“Sessional kindergarten offers quality preschool education to both threeand four-year-old children.

“Bayside’s community kindergartens recently met to talk about the future of services in our community and the need for council to communicate better, improve delivery of infrastructure upgrades and improve long-term strategic planning.

“The group also discussed the importance of a sustainable funding model. Adequate funding will ensure that our kindergartens can continue to provide high-quality services.

“For Melbourne kinders, the cost of rent and overheads is greater than the government’s funding model, and by blocking providers from seeking support from parents to fill the shortfall Labor is risking the medium-term viability of quality Melbourne,” MrNewbury told his fellow Parliamentarians

“We reviewed a number of drainage design options in response to resident feedback and chose to embark on a comprehensive program of works that will help protect homes in the event of severe weather,” Cr Stitfold said.

● ● ● Ivan Deveson
● ● ● James Newbury, Brighton MLA
Edward Crossland, Yarra Mayor
● Sam Hibbins, Prahran MLA

Artwork supplied by client

CITY OF DAREBIN ELECTIONS ADVERTISEMENT

CARJACKING REPORT AT SEYMOUR

■ Mitchell Crime Investigation Unit detectives are investigating a carjacking in Seymour on Saturday morning (Sep. 7).

Officers have been told a man stole the victim’s car on Anzac Avenue about 11am.

The man took off in the victim’s white Toyota Corolla and investigators are making enquiries to locate him.

The registration of the Toyota is AWC651 and it was last sighted in Flemington

The victim, a 77-year-old Seymour man, was taken to hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.

The investigation remains ongoing.

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Fringe Festival

■ This year’s Melbourne Fringe Festival program showcases circus, dance and physical theatre by Australian and international movers and makers, nationally acclaimed, and cutting-edge emerging outfits including Dancenorth Australia, Head First Acrobats, One Fell Swoop, YUCK Circus and Karma Dance present new work at the festival which runs from October 1-20.

Some highlights include: Temple of Desire New dance-theatre from Karma Dance, featuring 16 dancers trained in the classical Indian dance form Bharatanatyam , in a meeting of eastern spirituality and queer sexuality. This 3000-year-old artform is decolonised, subverted and queered-up in a spectacle where pleasure and joy are celebrated as pathways to liberation. Directed by Govind Pillai, it explores culture, tradition, colonial loss, and gendered oppression in a work that is steeped in tradition. October 4-5, Malthouse - Beckett Theatre. Wayfinder

A kaleidoscopic collision of dance, music and visual art, presented by Dancenorth Australia. Set on a custom-made inflatable stage, the dancers move to a soaring composition by three-time Grammy nominated Australian band Hiatus Kaiyote working with sound artist Byron J. Scullin. Presented as part of Melbourne Fringe's Fringe Encore at Geelong Arts Centre. October 25-26, Geelong Arts Centre. Escalate

Virtuosic juggling, innovative lighting and relentless energy collide in this pioneering new show from Throw Catch Collective. Australia’s best jugglers rip through an explosive hour of entertainment, pushing the boundaries of their art with a unique eye for musicality and timing, effortlessly blending rhythm and movement with juggling. October 9-20 , Circus Oz Godz

Winner of the Melbourne Fringe People's Choice Award 2022, Head First Acrobats return with this smash hit event that uniquely combines storytelling, circus and physical prowess, elevated to god-like proportions. Follow Greek gods like Cupid and Hercules as they perform gravity-defying stunts, true tests of heroic strength and muscularity, and surprise comic twists. Godz is currently touring Australia and the UK in preparation to tackle the heights of the West End and Las Vegas. October 9-26,Circus Oz

By a Thread Seven acrobats use 30 metres of rope as their apparatus, tying, wrapping up and connecting each other as they perform spectacular aerial acrobatics to explore ideas of risk and trust. The actions of one acrobat affect and implicate the movements of others, in a mesmerising negotiation of cause and effect, featuring virtuosic acrobatics and intricate choreography .resented by One Fell Swoop Circus, the cast includes Shona Morgan who represented Australia at the Beijing Olympics. October 11-12 , Gasworks Arts Park

YUCK Circus

YUCK Circus returns with a brand-new show that winds back the clock to the early 2000s. Audiences can expect Backstreet Boys, Britney , and big throwback energy, mixed with high-flying acrobatics and awardwinning comedy. October 17-20, The Ukiyo Girl’s Notes

A genre-pushing work from Taiwan that is equal parts performance art and contemporary dance, Girl's Notes takes its cues from a 1990s Taiwanese book instructing women on how to behave. Artist SU Pin-Wen and pianist LIN Mai-Ke take dance into conceptual realms as they interrogate contemporary gender politics, power dynamics, nudity and their experience with the female body. Girl's Notes is a part of Fringe Focus Taiwan, a program that shines a spotlight on the innovative art coming out of one of Asia’s most creatively inspired centres. October 11-12, Melbourne Recital Centre - Cheryl Threadgold

Talk is cheap, gossip is priceless

EDWARD SCISSORHANDS

■ Matthew Bourne’s dance production of Edward Scissorhands has been well-received by audiences globally since its premiere in 2005.

Based on the classic Tim Burton movie and featuring the music of Danny Elfman and Terry Davies, Bourne and his New Adventures Company return to this witty, bittersweet story of an incomplete boy left alone in a strange new world.

Directed and choreographed by Matthew Bourne, and filmed live in March 2024 at the Wales Millenium Centre, Cardiff, the film opens in a castle high on a hill, where Edward lives, a boy created by an eccentric inventor.

When his creator dies, he is left alone and unfinished with only scissors for hands until a kindly townswoman invites him to live with her suburban family.

Can Edward find his place in the well-meaning community which struggles to see past his curious appearance to the innocence and gentleness within?

Distributed by Sharmill Films, Edward Scissorhands will be screening in select Australian cinemas from September 27 for a limited time.

Tickets are on sale now: sharmillfilms.com.au/live-events-on-screen/ edward-scissorhands-matthew-bournesdance-version-of-tim-burtons-classic/ - Cheryl Threadgold

Why Can’t Women Be Like Men?

■ Cross-disciplinary creative Grazia Marin will debut her stage play Why Can’t Women Be Like Men? on September 26 and 29 at Chapel off Chapel, Prahran.

Directed by Olivia Staaf, with themes of love, loss, religion, sexuality, pleasure and pain, this dramedy stars Amelia Dunn, Veronicka Devlin, Lisa Sharpe and Piera Dennerstein.

At a pivotal point in all their lives, four women come together to celebrate a birthday. As the bubbly flows, the façades fall away and expose the many ways in which each woman’s life is anything but ‘normal’.

But should it have to be? And who defines what is normal?

A fictionalisation of the culmination of over two decades in psychological practice, Why Can't Women Be Like Men? is a dramedy that explores the sexuality and intimate relationships of cross-generational characters.

The play is based on the writer’s many years of research and experience in the area of female sexual issues, undertaken when practicing as a psychologist.

She concluded that the diagnosis of female sexual disorders was mostly based on research into male sexual functioning and was therefore a cultural construction.

“The play aims to show audiences that women function differently to men, and that women do not have to comply with the expectations of others. For all four characters in the play, their sexuality is controlled by outside forces. By the end of the work, the characters begin to develop a greater sense of self and move toward personal freedom. The play aims to give women permission to be themselves,” says playwright Grazia Marin.

Performance Dates: Thursday, September 26 at 7.30pm and Sunday, September 29 at 2.30pm Venue: The Loft at Chapel Off Chapel, 12 Little Chapel St, Prahran

Bookings: https://chapeloffchapel.com.au/ show/why-cant-women-be-like-men/ - Cheryl Threadgold

Hadestown

■ Singer-songwriter Anaïs Mitchell’s acclaimed, multi award-winning West End and Broadway musical Hadestown will premiere in Melbourne at the Her Majesty’s Theatre in May 2025., presented by Opera Australia and the Jones Theatrical Group. “Melbourne audiences embrace musicals

like no other city and in return musicals delight in performing here due to the rousing receptions and support that they receive.

“Hadestown will be no exception. Creator and writer Anaïs Mitchell is such an extraordinary talent and her musical is magical, bold, exciting and full of love and promise,” said Suzanne Jones of Jones Theatrical Group Hadestown won eight Tony Awards when it opened on Broadway in 2019, including Best Score and Best Director and is still playing to packed houses five years later.

Originating as Anaïs Mitchell’s indie theatre project, along with her artistic collaborator, Rachel Chavkin, Hadestown was transformed into a genre-defying musical that blends modern American folk music with New Orleans-inspired jazz to reimagine the sweeping ancient tale of Orpheus and Eurydice. The hit musical also won a Grammy Award for Best Musical Theatre Album.

Following two intertwining love stories — that of young dreamers Orpheus and Eurydice, and that of King Hades and his wife Persephone — Hadestown invites audiences on a hell-raising journey to the underworld and back.

Mitchell’s beguiling melodies and Chavkin’s poetic imagination pit industry against nature, doubt against faith, and fear against love. Performed by an ensemble of actors, dancers, and singers, Hadestown invites audiences to imagine how the world could be.

The creative team for Broadway features Tony Award winner Rachel Hauck (set design), four-time Tony Award nominee Michael Krass (costume design), two-time Tony Award winner Bradley King (lighting design), Tony Award winners Nevin Steinberg and Jessica Paz (sound design), Obie Award winner and Chita Rivera Award winner David Neumann (choreography), Liam Robinson (music direction and vocal arrangements), Tony Award winners Michael Chorney and Todd Sickafoose (arrangements and orchestrations), Ken Cerniglia (dramaturgy), and Whitley Theatrical (casting).

Casting announcements will be made in the coming months.

www.hadestown.com.au

- Cheryl Threadgold

■ Design Fringe, a free event for the Melbourne Fringe Festival 2024, will be presented until October 20 at Linden Art, 26 Acland St, St Kilda.

Melbourne contemporary designers responded to the exhibition theme: 'We have shared bread and salt.'

Designers were asked across disciplines how design can foster meaningful connections and build community.

Special events include a tour of Linden New Art on October 5 between 11am and 4pm, led by Linden New Art's Curator, who will guide visitors through the works that make up the 2024 Design Fringe exhibition.

On October 12, join a relaxed conversation with Linden New Art's Curator and this year's Design Fringe Designers, whose work offers critical and progressive ways for us to reimagine our societies, politics and ideals.

The designers will explain how their works address the exhibition theme, what inspires them and the materials and techniques they use. Visitors are welcome to ask questions.

A Design Fringe Tactile Tour will be held on October 19 at Linden New Art, designed specifically for people who are blind or vision impaired.

An experienced accessibility guide will take participants on this tactile tour - piece by piece - into every nook, cranny, curve and corner of the Design Fringe exhibition.

For further details about about Design Fringe and to book for this free event, visit https://melbournefringe.com.au/event/design-fringe/

- Cheryl Threadgold

Iphigenia in Splott

■ You know something astonishing has occurred when an audience, collectively, rises to their feet at the end of a performance and gives a standing ovation.

Such was the case when Jessica Clarke concluded her return performance of Gary Owens's Iphigenia in Splott, on the Red Stitch stage.

It was a well earned accolade.

Owens’s play is brilliantly constructed. Effie steps off the stage and challenges the audience directly.

She is a self confessed ‘skank’ but we will weep for her plight by the end for, like her Greek namesake of mythological tragedy, she is sacrificed so others might live comfortably.

The work moves elegantly between the stages of Effie’s life; dissolute, hopeful, in love, desperate and forlorn.

It is the audience, then, who must question just how harshly we viewed her when the play began.

Clarke’s performance is extraordinary. She is all the characters in the storyline; her grandmother, her boyfriend, her lover.

But it is in the transitions between the emotional stages of Effie’s life that we witness the heart-rending trauma of Effie’s life. Clarke has us weeping for the character she has brought to life in all its entirety bringing out the comedy, the pity and the tragedy.

A simple change of lighting is offered to provide the suggestion of a change of tone – a change Effie indicates by adjusting the light switch on the wall. And the prospect of the sea is teased out by a flickering suggestion of the glass on an otherwise non-descript set.

That suggestion alone is heart rending in its own right for the sea is but a mile away from where Effie lives and she has never seen it before.

The fact that Effie lifts the roof (literally and figuratively), shows the gravity of her accomplishment holding up, as it were, the world so that others can live ignorant of her sacrifice. Set and lighting should be congratulated with the soundscape being a constant presence of mood. (Jacob Battista, Sophie Woodward, Rachel Burke,Daniel Nixon). Gary Abrahams has teased out the transitions and employed the sparse set for best effect given there is only a table and chair on stage.

The fact is, when you have a play with this intensity, little else is needed. This is a mustsee play.

Performance Details: Until September 22 - Review by David McLean

● ● ● ● Ashley Shaw and Liam Mower in Edward Scissorhands.
Photo: Kaasam Aziz

Local Theatre Observations

■ Essendon Theatre Company: Chapter

VOLITION AT ST KILDA Shows

Two (Neil Simon) Until September 14 at Bradshaw St. Community Hall, 9 Bradshaw St., Essendon (enter via Buckley St.). Director: Matthew Freeman. Bookings: 0406448368 or essendontheatrecompany. com.au

■ Theatrical: A Chorus Line, Until September 22 at the National Theatre, Carlisle St., St Kilda. Director: Tahra Cameron; Choreographer: Louise Panagiotidis; Musical Director: Gabriel Taburet. Bookings: theatrical.com.au

■ Williamstown Little Theatre: The Father (Florian Zeller) Until September 21 at 2-4 Albert St., Williamstown. Director: Div Collins. wlt.org.au/book-tickets

■ Nova Music Theatre: Brigadoon September 13 – 22 at The Round, Nunawading. Bookings: novamusictheatre.com.au

■ 1812 Theatre in association with Redfox3 Theatre Company: Coherence (by James Ward Byrkit) Until September 14 at the Lowe Auditorium, 1812 Theatre, Rose St., Upper Ferntree Gully. Director: Justin Stephens.

■ Eltham Little Theatre: Veronica’s Room (by Ira Levin) Until September 21 at the Eltham Performing Arts Centre, 1603 Main Rd., Research. Director: Drew Mason. Bookings: 0411 713 095.

■ Lilydale Athenaeum Theatre: Clue: on Stage (adapted from screenplay by Jonathan Lynn), Until September 21 at the Lilydale Athenaeum Theatre, Castella St., Lilydale. Director: Katie-Jane Amey. Bookings: lilydaleatc.com

■ Gemco Players: The Hull Roamer (a workshop performance of a new sci-fi musical) September 27, 28 at 8pm, September 29 at 2pm at the Gem Theatre, 19 Kilvington Drive, Emerald. Bookings: www.gemco players.org

■ Beaumaris Theatre: Radio Theatre Returns to Beaumaris. October 5 at 7.30pm and October 6 at 2.00pm at Beaumaris Theatre, 82 Wells Rd., Beaumaris. $20 per person. Cabaret Style, BYO nibbles and drinks. Proceeds to Beaumaris Theatre. Seven radio plays written by Bayside U3A writers performed by local actors. Concept/presenter: Joy Meekings. Producer/director: Cheryl Threadgold. Bookings: Trybooking.

■ CPP Community Theatre: Hello Dolly! October 11, 12, 17, 18 at 8pm, October 12 at 2pm and October 19 at 5pm at Mahon Theatre at Aquinas College, 46 Great Ryrie St, Ringwood. Director/Choreographer: Tamblyn Smith; Musical Director: Charlotte Black. Bookings: https://cppcommunitytheatre. com.au/ For all ticket enquiries, please email: tickets@cppcommunitytheatre.com.au (In consideration of other patrons and cast, children under the age of three will only be admitted to the theatre for the matinee performance.)

■ LOTS Theatre (Legends of the Skies): Celebrating the 90th anniversary of the 1934 MacRobertson Trophy Air Race, October 2427 incl. Matinees at the Casey Hangar Theatrette, Moorabbin Air Museum, First Ave., Moorabbin. Artistic Director: Maggie Morrison. Bookings essential. Trybooking. - Cheryl Threadgold

Auditions

■ Strathmore Theatrical Arts Group (STAG): The Cripple of Inishmaan (by Martin McDonagh) September 10 – 12 at the Strathmore Community Theatre, 50 Loeman St., Strathmore. Director: Matthew Freeman. Group auditions. Irish accents highly encouraged. Prepare monologue from play. Further details: stagtheatre.org

■ Malvern Theatre Company: The Appleton Ladies Potato Race (by Melanie Tait) September 22 7pm – 10pm, September 23 7.30pm – 10.30pm at Malvern Theatre, 29 Burke Rd., Malvern. Director: Helen Ellis. Audition bookings: Helen Ellis, ellisproductions@me.com

■ Mordialloc Theatre Company: Holmes and Watson (by Jeffrey Hatcher) October 6 at 7pm, October 7 at 7.30pm at Unit 8, 417419 Warrigal Rd, Cheltenham. Director: Amy Calvert. Audition bookings and enquirikes: aj267@outlook.com or call 0432 804 803. - Cheryl Threadgold

■ In what was a marvellous example of the creativity of the next wave of Melbourne theatre makers, Volition had a short season at Theatre Works' Explosives Factory space in St Kilda.

The show consisted of two halves, The Volition Project and The Volition Experiment, each acting as a counterpoint to the other.

Both were based on the theme of a reality TV game show but took different approaches to unpacking and critiquing such shows.

Experiment was lighter in touch, relying upon sarcasm and slapstick to critique. In contrast, Project was a bleaker piece which laid bare the depths reality TV can sink to.

Created under the aegis of Theatre Works' Early Career Artist Program, both casts devised and wrote the two shows working with Belle Hansen (Project) and Steven Mitchell-Wright (Experiment) as their directors, mentors and cocreators.

Both shows involved a series of short skits which ranged in style from the naturalistic to the absurd, from being improvised to using scripted texts.

Ten performers made up the cast of Project: Ella Le Fournour; Jasper Jordan; Kasey Barratt; Ozzy Breen-Carr; Hugo Gutteridge; Charlie Morris; Paolo Bartolomei; Eleanor Golding; Ryan Henry; and Senuki Thotahewage.

A smaller cast of six performed Experiment: Sarah Frencham; Rosa Ablett-Johnstone; Liam Crevola; River Stevens; Murdoch Keane; and Amir Yacoub. All 16 were wonderful in their zestful energetic and committed performances, displaying an impressive range of acting skills.

Hansen as director and co-creator of Project, along with Mitchell-Wright who did likewise for Experiment , should both be proud of the works they have produced in conjunction with the two casts. They both have a great eye for what makes for marvellous spell-binding theatre that entertains while also provokes.

Derailed by poor group dynamics, group-devised shows often do not produce great theatre. Not so with Volition as it was a shining example of how superb and daring such shows can be.

For further information about the event: https://bit.ly/tw-volition

- Review by Peter Murphy

Whitehorse

Showtime

■ There are only a handful of theatre companies, whether professional, amateur or community, that can boast of 60 continuous years of performance, and that credit goes to Whitehorse Showtime having just closed their 60th season at the recently opened The Round Theatre, Nunawading

A showcase for Scouting and Guiding in the Mount Dandenong region it has been a constant example of what young performers, writers, musicians, theatre technicians can achieve, in fact some thousands over the journey of 60 years.

At the beginning, commencing after the 7th Australian Jamboree at Dandenong in 1965, a nucleus of Scouts and Leaders led by Rod Savage , organised the very first Whitehorse Showtime, loosely based on the successful Melbourne Gang Show

An all-male cast, they delighted audiences for many years and with changing times, involvement was open to Guides and girls who joined Scout Groups.

And so this year with a cast of over 90 and twice as many off stage using the theme ‘Still Spinning At 60’ - Side A, followed the trials and tribulations of ‘Sapphire Sounds’, a vinyl record store struggling to stay in business.

With their locally-written script they tried all ways to make money by dance, song, comedy and drama, particularly with a Sausage Sizzle, a Radiothon and an Auction.

The flip Side B, while continuing with ‘Sapphire Sounds’ dilemma, also took us back in time, reflecting on highlights of the past 60 years of performance.

Quite an achievement considering they performed on line during two years of the pandemic.

Producer Leanne Fraser and Youth Producers Mitch Bell and Liam Teunissen headed a cohesive production well served by the band, lighting, sound and all aspects of the staging teams. All made excellent use of the state of the art facility provided at The Round Theatre. Their final words “We look forward to 60 more”.

- Review by Graeme McCoubrie

MIFF Awards

■ The Melbourne International Film Festival has unveiled its 2024 MIFF Award winners, presenting over $250,000 in prize money across a suite of five categories.

The flagship Bright Horizons Award, presented by VicScreen and amounting to $140,000 – making it one of the most lucrative film prizes globally – was awarded to a film by an outstanding filmmaker on the rise. This year’s winner was Universal Language directed by Matthew Rankin Award Winners

Bright Horizons Award presented by VicScreen. Universal Language directed by Matthew Rankin

Bright Horizons Special Jury Award. Flow directed by Gints Zilbalodis

Blackmagic Design Australian Innovation Award. Jaydon Martin, Flathead – directing

The Uncle Jack Charles Award in collaboration with Kearney Group.April Phillips, kajoo yannaga (come on let’s walk together) – director, lead artist

Intrepid Audience Award (joint winners). Voice co-directed by Krunal Padhiar and Semara Jose Left Write Hook directed by Shannon Owen

MIFF Schools Youth Jury Award, presented by Collarts. Alemania directed by Maria Zanetti.

Sam Jacob, CEO, Collarts said: "At Collarts, the Australian College of the Arts, we believe that stories change the world, and that creativity is vital. We provide students with industry-leading opportunities to learn, including our partnership withthe biggest film festival in the southern hemisphere.”

“We’re thrilled to have MIFF as a longterm creative partner, and to be presenting the 2024 MIFF Schools Youth Jury Award, which provides mentorship to the Youth Jury members, and a prize of $10,000 for the winning film."

The MIFF Awards were also a chance to celebrate some of this year’s breakout talent and crowd pleasers on the eve of the festival’s final day of in-cinema activity for 2024.

This year’s winners join the 2024 MIFF Shorts Awards class, including Grand Prix winner Nebojša Slijepcevic for The Man Who Could Not Remain Silent, with the shorts-format award winners announced in a special standalone ceremony at ACMI.

With her Bright Horizons Jury duties officially in completion, Oscar-winning costume designer Deborah L. Scott hosted an intimate masterclass at The Wheeler Centre on the festival’s last day, sharing insights from her illustrious career overflowing with iconic wardrobe moments, from Marty McFly’s orange vest in Back to the Future and the complicated costumes of Pandora in Avatar to Elliott’s red hoodie in E.T: The Extra-Terrestrial and the historical accuracy required on the set of Titanic. - Contributed

Verdi’s Requieum

■ One of the classical music world’s most dramatic choral works, Verdi’s Requiem, is set to delight audiences at Melbourne Town Hall in September.

It is being staged by the Melbourne Bach Choir and accompanied by the Zelman Symphony, both conducted by Rick Prakhoff Prakhoff has assembled a fine group of soloists in soprano Belinda Paterson, mezzo soprano Miriam Gordon-Stewart, tenor Tomas Dalton and bass Christopher Hillier. Belinda Paterson has just returned from Germany, where she was acclaimed for her performance as Klytaemnestra in Richard Strauss’s opera Elektra. Verdi’s Requiem has been described as the most operatic of all requiems, and often considered too operatic to be performed in a liturgical setting, but it comes into its own when performed in a concert setting such as Melbourne Town Hall

As he did in his operas, throughout his Requiem, Verdi uses vigorous rhythms, sublime melodies, and dramatic contrasts to express the powerful emotions in the text.

Enjoy this performance of Verdi’s Requiem on Saturday, September 14, at 7.30 pm at Melbourne Town Hall by visiting trybooking.com for tickets.

- Julie Houghton

More Auditions

■ The Mount Players: The Importance of Being Earnest (by Oscar Wilde) October 19, 20 at 10.00am at the Mountview Theatre, 56 Smith St., Macedon. Director: Vicki Smith. Audition bookings: Vicki Smith, stagestruck58@me.com

■ The Basin Theatre Group: Home, I’m Darling (by Laura Wade) October 20 at 2pm and October 22 at 7pm at The Basin Theatre, Doongalla Rd., The Basin. Director: Bob Bramble. Audition bookings: bobbramble2013@gmail.com

- Cheryl Threadgold

And Then There Were None

■ From the producers of the hugely successful Agatha Christie’s The Mousetrap comes a new production of Agatha Christie’s bestselling crime novel of all time, And Then There Were None, opening at Melbourne’s Comedy Theatre in February.

Ten people are lured to a solitary mansion on an island off the English coast, when a storm cuts them off from the mainland. The true reason for their presence on the island soon becomes horribly clear.

First adapted for the stage in 1943, this new production directed by Australian theatrical icon Robyn Nevin (The Mousetrap) is a gorgeously grim thriller.

John Frost for Crossroads Live presents And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie. Comedy Theatre, Melbourne from February 2025. - Jessica Bendell

● ● ● ● Belinda Paterson
● ● Host Zan Rowe with with Justin Kurzel and Warren Ellis.

The Local Paper

In association with the Established September 14, 1969 Online weekly. Print copies fortnightly.

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

ABOUT US

Incorporating the traditions of the Southern Cross (Est. 1871), Camberwell Free Press (Est.1927), Collingwood, Fitzroy and Carlton Courier (Est.1948), The Clarion (Est. 1980)

The Local Paper is published weekly online and printed fortnightly and circulates in local editions:

• Bayside Advertiser

• Boroondara Weekly

• Glen Eira Standard

• Kingston Standard

• Port Phillip Times

• Stonnington Weekly

• Yarra Times

Phone: 1800 231 311, 9489 2222, 9439 9927, 0450 399 932, 5797 2656.

Office: 30 Glen Gully Rd, Eltham, Vic 3095 (same address for 30 years) Mail: PO Box 1278, Research, Vic 3095

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Kemp, Art Rob Foenander, Music

Features Editor: Peter Mac

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

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

Logistics: Tyler Sandiford, Tim Granvillani, Erica Koldinsky

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Ash on Wednesday

New facilities at Dingley

■ Works on Hawthorn Football Club’s new elite training facilities have begun. Seve Dimopoulos, Minister for Tourism, Sport and Major Events, last week joined Hawks’ players, Hawthorn Football Club CEO Ashley Klein and club president Andy Gowers at the Kennedy Community Centre in Dingley to tour the project.

Backed by a $15 million State Government investment – with additional funding provided by the Federal Government, Hawthorn Football Club, Kingston City Council and the AFL –works on the new oval and training facilities started in February and are on track for completion in 2025.

In addition to being Hawthorn’s new AFLW home ground oval, there will also be a dedicated match day pavilion with a 500seat grandstand, team change rooms, umpire change rooms, media facilities, coaches’ boxes and a function space.

The new facility will also house the state-of-the-art Harris Elite Training andAdministration Facility for both Hawthorn's women’s and men’s teams, an additional oval, a gymnasium, indoor training facility and recovery facilities.

The project will provide community spaces for clubs and groups across southeast Melbourne – allowing the Hawks to expand their important work addressing mental health and social inclusion.

The latest invest-

Long Shots

ment is part of the State Government’s focus to level the playing field for women and girls in sport.

More than $100 million has been invested to help upgrade Australian football facilities across the state, including providing elite facilities for all 10 Victorian AFLW clubs which will also benefit the wider community.

“It’s great to see the progress of the Hawks new home base – the centre will not only be a state-ofthe-art facility that will help both their teams to reach exciting new heights, but it will also be a community asset that all of south-east Melbourne will benefit from,” Mr Dimopoulos said.

“We’re backing the growth of AFLW by investing in worldclass facilities so Victorian clubs and their local communities can foster the next generation of elite talent in the game.”

Hawthorn Football Club CEO Ashley Klein said: “ The Kennedy Community Centre will transform our football club into the future, whilst also serving as home for the entire Hawthorn family, including the local community.”

“Working closely with the Victorian Government, we are proud to be building a home that features equal high-performance facilities for our men’s and women’s programs, as well as providing valuable recreational spaces for the southeast community to thrive,” Mr Klein said.

Local Photo Flashback

‘Poor citizen’

Grammar School has been accused of being a poor corporate citizen, as its fight with Malvern Campus

neighbours about noise and traffic.

The Local Paper

Online weekly. Print copies fortnightly.

In association with the Established September 14, 1969

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

BAYSIDE

Incorporating the traditions of the Southern Cross (Est. Feb. 27, 1871), Bayside Advertiser

Bayside comprises Beaumaris, Black Rock, Brighton, Brighton East, Cheltenham (part), Hampton, Hampton East, Highett (part) and Sandringham. Bayside is home to more than 105,580 people, living in approximately 41,091 homes.

BOROONDARA

SOUTHERN SECTION

Incorporating the traditions of the Boroondara Weekly, Progress News, Camberwell Free Press (Est. 1927) Boroondara southern area comprises the southern part of the municipality including Ashburton, Camberwell, Glen Iris (part), Hawthorn and Hawthorn East. Boroondara City is home to more than 176,632 people, living in approximately 69,419 homes.

GLEN EIRA

Incorporating the traditions of the Southern Cross (Est. Feb. 27, 1871), Glen Eira Standard, Carnegie Courier, Elsternwick Advertiser, Caulfield Advertiser Glen Eira comprises Bentleigh, Bentleigh East, Carnegie, Caulfield, Caulfield East, Caulfield North, Caulfield South, Elsternwick, Gardenvale, Glen Huntly, McKinnon, Murrumbeena and Ormond, and parts of the suburbs of Brighton East and St Kilda East. Glen Eira is home to more than 155,123 people, living in approximately 59,815homes.

KINGSTON

Incorporating the traditions of the Kingston Standard, Moorabbin News, Moorabbin Standard, Chelsea Mordialloc Standard Kingston comprises Aspendale, Aspendale Gardens, Bonbeach, Braeside, Carrum, Chelsea, Chelsea Heights, Cheltenham, Clarinda, Clayton South, Dingley Village, Edithvale, Heatherton, Highett, Mentone, Moorabbin, Moorabbin Airport, Mordialloc, Oakleigh South, Parkdale, Patterson Lakes and Waterways. Kingston is home to more than 167,228 people, living in approximately 67, 617 homes.

PORT

PHILLIP

Incorporating the traditions of the Southern Cross (Est. Feb. 27, 1871), Emerald Hill Times, Sandridge Times, St Kilda Times Port Phillip comprises Albert Park, Balaclava, Elwood, Melbourne (part), Middle Park, Port Melbourne (part), Ripponlea, South Melbourne, Southbank (part), St Kilda, St Kilda East (part), St Kilda West and Windsor (part). Port Phillip is home to more than 100,863 people, living in approximately 57,867 homes.

STONNINGTON

Incorporating the traditions of the Southern Cross (Est. Feb. 27, 1871), Stonnington Weekly

Stonnington comprises Armadale, Glen Iris, Kooyong, Malvern, Malvern East, Prahran, South Yarra, Toorak and Windsor. Stonnington is home to more than 114,340 people, living in approximately 54,181 homes.

YARRA

Incorporating the traditions of Collingwood Carlton Fitzroy Courier (Est. 1948), Richmond Times Yarra comprises Abbotsford, Burnley, Carlton North, Clifton Hill, Collingwood, Cremorne, Fitzroy, Fitzroy North, Princes Hill, Richmond. Yarra is home to more than 99,622 people, living in approximately 44,033homes.

Caulfield
(Glen Iris)
● ● Ashley Klein, Hawthorn FC CEO
Cheryl Threadgold, Local Theatre Julie Houghton, The Arts Kevin Trask, Entertainment Aaron Rourke, Film
Ted Ryan, Horse Racing Len Baker, Harness Racing Matt

JACK AND MILLIE

■ Essence Theatre Productions presents Jack and Millie as part of the Melbourne Fringe Festival from October 15-20 at the Bluestone Church Arts Space, Footscray

Created and performed by Alaine Beek , joined by performers Ross Daniels and Phil Cameron-Smith, Jack and Millie is based on the author's breast cancer journey, and brings a unique comic perspective to the stage.

'Jack' is portrayed as Millie's cancer - her inner thoughts, her courage, fear and (often funny) human frailties.

The piece enables audiences to delve into the world of receiving a life threatening diagnosis.

Performed in a non-natural style, the play is stripped back to a minimalist set with three actors - Phil Cameron Smith as 'Jack', Alaine Beek as 'Millie' and Green Room award-winner Ross Daniels portraying the multiple characters that fill Millie's world.

Critically acclaimed, 'Jack and Millie' has been studied by hundreds of high school students in 2022 (listed on VCE drama curriculum) and toured through Victoria and into NSW Event Details: October 15 - 20

Venue: Bluestone Church Arts Space, Footscray

Bookings: melbournefringe. com.au - Cheryl Threadgold

Tom Moran is a Big Fat Filthy Disgusting Liar

■ Writer/performer Tom Moran presents his Melbourne Fringe Festival show Tom Moran is a Big Fat Filthy Disgusting Liar from October 2-6 at 7.15pm/6.15pm at the Festival Hub: Trades Hall - Meeting Room in Carlton. Directed by Davey Kelleher and produced by Lisa Nally, Tom Moran's show is now on tour in Australia following sell-out shows at the Dublin Fringe, the Edinburgh Fringe Festival and the Abbey Theatre

A self-proclaimed people-pleaser and an expert in empathy, Tom really struggles with the truth. Full of compas-

sion and humour, he explores identity, family dynamics and having a very flexible relationship to the truth.

Tom begs the question in his 'completely true' solo show: “If I never lied again and was just myself, would any of my loved ones still love me?”

Event Details: October 2 - 6 at 7.15pm and 6.15pm

Venue: Festival Hub: Meeting Room at the Trades Hall, Cnr Victoria and Lygon Sts., Carlton.

Further details and bookings: melbournefringe.com.au - Cheryl Threadgold

The Killer

■ (MA). 125 minutes. Now streaming on Netflix.

John Woo returns to the film that put him on the international map in 1989, and although not in the same league, the remake is surprisingly, if forgettable, mild fun.

The new film is set in Paris, and the role originally played by Chow Yun-fat is now played by Nathalie Emmanuel, this time named Zee, an infamous assassin whose world is turned upside down when a hit goes wrong, with bystander Jenn (Diana Silvers) being accidentally blinded during all the carnage.

Zee’s boss Finn (Sam Worthington) demands that Jenn be eliminated, but she does the opposite, protecting the injured singer from others that also wish her dead.

All this mayhem draws the attention of honest cop Sey (Omar Sy), who eventually teams up with Zee to defeat a gallery of criminals and killers.

The Killer 2024 is needlessly overlpotted, protracting what should be a more streamlined story, resulting in an overlong running time.

These subplots are overly familiar and predictable too. Emmanuel is acceptable, but lacks the charismatic presence of Chow, while Sy offers another likeable performance.

Woo seems more reflective in his approach to the material, and appears more interested in blending the Paris setting with the multiple chases and violent confrontations.

Woo does provide a couple of enjoyable action set-pieces, especially in a hospital (reminiscent of Johnnie To’s 2016 action/thriller, Three) and the big final shoot out, which takes place in a church and cemetery. A remake of The Killer has been on the table for three decades (I was definitely excited when it looked like Walter Hill was set to direct, back in the 90’s), but I admittedly had low expectations with the film that has finally eventuated. Woo may not be in top form (and I feel he agreed to do this so he could fund Silent Night, a daring experiment that deserves a lot more love and attention), but he shows obvious affection towards the story that made him a global sensation, helping make this more entertaining than it deserves to be.

For those who have not seen the 1989 original, search it out now; it is one of the most incredible, and influential, action films ever made.

RATING - ***

Strange Darling

■ (MA). 96 minutes. Now showing in selected cinemas.

Ultra stylish, well-acted and cleverly structured thriller is a knowing homage to film-makers such as Brian De Palma and Quentin Tarantino.

The less you know about the film’s details the better, but suffice to say that it involves a serial killer, currently focusing on their latest victim, who is trying to escape by any means necessary.

Gorgeously shot on film by actor Giovanni Ribisi, with a striking score by Craig DeLeon and perfect editing by Christopher Robin Bell, this is an audio/visual blast, while writer/director J.T. Mollner plays with structure in the same way Pulp Fiction did.

The performances are first rate. Willa Fitzgerald and Kyle Gallner as victim/pursuer are terrific, with excellent support by veterans Barbara Hershey and Ed Begley Jr. Strange Darling is certainly selfknowing film-making, but Mollner shows genuine love for the medium, creating something both exciting and memorable.

RATING - ****

A Nightmare On Elm Street

■ (MA) (1984). 91 minutes. Limited season in selected cinemas September 12.

Wes Craven’s iconic horror movie celebrates its 40th anniversary, and fans have the chance to see it on the big screen, via a 4K restoration.

Its dream vs reality scenario has definitely influenced many filmmakers over the decades, while Robert Englund delivers a deliciously intense performance, giving audiences one of the most famous movie monsters of all-time.

I remember seeing this at the cinemas during first release, and there were a number of scenes that were scary or suspenseful.

Many sequels of varying quality followed over the years (Dream Warriors and New Nightmare are the two worth tracking down), plus a truly awful remake, but the original remains the best.

RATING - ****½ - Aaron Rourke

Aaron Rourke
● ● Alaine Beek, Ross Daniels and Phil Cameron Smith in Jack and Millie.
● ● Tom Moran. Photo: Owen Clarke.

■ We all have our favourite film actors but I always enjoyed watching Cameron Mitchell in the films.

The first time I really noticed him was when he played Gordon MacRae's friend in the musical Carousel

Cameron McDowell Mitzell was born in Dallastown, Pennsylvania, in 1918 and was the fourth of seven children.

His father was a minister of religion. In his teenage years Cameron studied acting and was advised to change his surname to Mitchell if he was going to be a professional actor.

Cameron attended the Theatre School of Dramatic Arts in New York City whilst working as an usher and dishwasher to pay the bills.

He had his break on Broadway in a play titled Jeremiah in 1939 and also in the cast was another struggling young actor named Cornel Wilde.

Cameron served as an Air Force Bombardier during World War IIand after the war he resumed his acting career.

In 1945 he made his screen debut in the film What Next, Corporal Hargrove?

He was cast as ‘Happy’ in the original production of Arthur Miller's play Death of a Salesman and reprised the role in the 1951 film. He provided the voice of Jesus Christ in The Robe in 1953 but did not appear in the credits.

During the early 1950s Cameron Mitchell was busy in films such as Les Miserables, How

Whatever Happened To ... Cameron Mitchell

To Marry a Millionaire, Hell and High Water and Love Me or Leave Me

He was married three times during his lifetime and was a father to seven children. In 1956 he played ‘Jigger Craigin’ in the musical film Carousel and sang in two songs That Was a Real Nice Clambake and Stonecutters Cut It On Stone

Cameron was a guest star in many television shows such as The Untouchables, Wagon Train and Bonanza. In 1962 he narrated the series The Beachcomber

Cameron Mitchell is probably best remembered for his role in the western television series The High Chaparral in which played the happygo-lucky ‘Buck Cannon’.

Cameron Mitchell was offered the part of ‘Buck’ following an airline flight to Tucson where he sat next to the series creator David Dortort and his wife.

Cameron Mitchell was a working actor all his life and appeared in more than three hundred films and television shows during his career. He made some great films and some "shockers".

Some critics described him as uninterested whilst on screen and some of his B -grade films were considered by fans to be so bad that they were good. I always thought he had a great screen presence.

His 12 hobbies included poker, golfing, family, animals, reading the Bible, fishing, traveling, playing basketball, soccer, philosophy, car racing and cooking.

Cameron Mitchell was a heavy smoker and died of lung cancer at the age of 75 in 1994 in Pacific Palisades, California. He is buried in Desert Memorial Park in Cathedral City, California. Several of his children have followed in their fathers footsteps to become actors.

Kevin Trask Kevin can be heard on 3AWThe Time Tunnel - Remember WhenSundays at 10.10pm with Philip Brady and Simon Owens. And on 96.5 FM

That's Entertainment - Sundays at 12 Noon. www.innerfm.org.au

THE HUXLEYS TAKE TOP PHOTOGRAPHY AWARD

The Huxleys Bad Sports – Wai Tang Commissioning Award

The Huxleys are the recipients of the 2023 Wai Tang Commissioning Award and will present a new body of work during the 2024 Bowness Photography Prize exhibition season. They responded to the commission with a new body of work that has all the hallmarks of the humour, wot and outrageousness we know and love them for.

For The Huxleys Bad Sports (2024) reflects upon the ostracisation you can feel when growing up in a country that values sporting achievements above all else.

It can be a real struggle especially when you are a creative, shy queer kid searching for kindred spirits.

A love of music, art, fashion and the dark underworld is perceived to be your eventual artistic salvation.

Bad Sports seeks to capture the alienation of, humour and abstraction the Huxleys experienced growing up in this sunburnt country from the larrikans looking for a fair go, a guernsey and a winning streak.

For the uncoordinated and uncooperative queer person, the struggle is real.

Exhibition opens September 1 and closes November 10.

MAPh – The Australian Home of Photography

860 Ferntree Gully Rd. Wheelers Hill

Town Hall Gallery

Pattern Recognition

is a major exhibition at Town Hall Gallery exploring the intentions and motivations of artists who continually engage a theme, subject, or visual style throughout their creative process.

The human brain’s ability to identify patterns and repeat symbols allow us to visually match what we see with the information we already know, finding structure, cementing knowledge, and gaining further understanding.

The allure of returning to, reconsidering, or reframing our understanding speaks to our minds ability to interrogate and motivate.

The Arts

with Peter Kemp

Expressed through purposeful and continued use of colour and pattern and form, pattern and repetition, motif and subject, Pattern Recognition features artists who have dedicated their practice to exploring and evolving a particular concept or enduring preoccupation.

Exhibition closes Saturday October 26.

Nostalgic – by Bradley Flood

Step back in time and immerse yourself in the sentimental charm of a bygone era in Nostalgic, a community exhibition by local artist Bradley Flood

From the richness f oil paints to the versatility of acrylics, the works on display will captivate your senses and transport you to a world of timeless beauty.

Playing homage to the simple aspects of home and community life, captured on canvas, Nostalgic is a celebration of the past, present , and future, bridging the gap between generations.

Exhibition closes Saturday September 28.

Town Hall Gallery

360 Burwood Rd, Hawthorn

At Burrinja

Calming the Storm Within –Megan Archer

Megan’s work is raw and confi-

dent. Working with multimedia in her first solo exhibition, the artist invites us on her journey and celebration of an ongoing tumultuous relationship with Schizoaffective disorder, one of the most misunderstood, complex mental health issues in society today. It stigmatises and isolates 0.5 per cent of Australians who have it.

Inspired by visions and auditory waves of hallucinations’ during episodes of psychoses, Archer produces a vibrant tapestry of colours and shapes, some with human-like figures and faces emerging from the canvas, others landscapes featuring creaturelike hands.

These paintings are not just visual experiences, they are emotional voyages that challenge the viewers to reflect on the depths of their own psyche.

Exhibition closes Sunday October 13.

Burrinja Gallery

351 Glenfern Rd, Upwey - Peter Kemp

Tolarno Galleries

■ Tolarno Galleries is presenting Georgia Spain’s third solo exhibition, Why Not, What If, Could It Be?

Winner of the 2021 Sir John Sulman Prize, Georgia Spain, makes her debut in the medium of sculpture, bringing together paintings alongside sculptural assemblages.

Embracing ambiguity, humour and material transformation, Spain’s surreal, semi-figurative sculptures look as though they might have just stepped out of the vigorously expressive canvases that surround them.

In a way they have, for they are comprised of an assortment of detritus found in Spain’s studio, including the very materials – rags, cardboard, bits of wood and other objects – used to make the many layers of marks in each painting.

The process began when Spain was in the middle of painting and found herself nursing a strong desire “to get off the flat surface of the canvas”.

Phone: 9654 6000.

Wrestler Sid Vicious dies

■ Sid, originally christened Sid Eudy, later to be known on the pro wrestling circuit as Lord Humongous, Sid Justice and Sycho Sid. Those identities morphed into Sid Vicious in 1993. Sid, the six foot nine-inch giant, wrestled on WrestleMania events until retirement. A real entertainer, Sid died of cancer, aged 63.

Radio station under pressure

■ There is a rumour in circulation that a niche digital broadcasting station is experiencing severe financial pressure. We will refrain from nominating the station , other than to say July salaries are said to outstanding. Latest ratings were a disaster, and listeners are hearing a re-run of old segmentsgenerally things are crook. Hope a White Knight investor can save the day.

Brooke Shields cleans closet

■ When Hollywood actress Booke Shields married Andre Agassi in 1971 she wore a hip hugging wedding dress , and from that day onwards the dress hung in a wardrobe. Then along came her daughter's high school graduation, out came Mum's bridal dress and from all reports daughter looked a stunner.

Nine’s bean counters are busy

■ Nine Entertainment stumpted up $77 million for exclusive rights for the Paris Olympics which is included in the total package of $305 million to include coverage of Los Angeles Olympics 2028, and Brisbane 2032 . To date Nine has banked $ 160 million in advertising and subscription revenue from the Paris Games

Trump in trouble

and

● ● Cameron Mitchell
■ Abba is the latest in a very long list of major vocalists
groups who have issued cease and desist legal documents against Donald Trump. All concerned
With John O’Keefe
● Sid Vicious

Broome Beach Resort welcomes all guests to this relaxing retreat, situated at Cable Beach in the magnificent Western Australian coastal town of Broome.

Within a short leisurely stroll to the iconic Cable Beach, Day Spas, restaurants, cafes and bars, Broome Beach Resort is the ideal 4½ star family resort.

Set amongst lush, tropical gardens, each of our fully selfcatering, air-conditioned 1, 2 or 3 bedroom apartments are well appointed and feature full kitchen and laundry facilities, a spacious open plan dining and living area, a private verandah and free WIFI and FOXTEL. Free off-street parking is also available for in-house guests' vehicles.

•Long-term agreements

•Close to everything Broome has to offer

•Set amongst tropical landscaping

•Body Corporate salary of over $129k

•Well-appointed two-bed, one-bath unit with large office and storeroom on the one title. Available for $560,000

•Located in one of Western Australia’s most sought after destinations

•Property inspections are by appointment only

$381,153. PRICE: $1,143,459

Across Observer

1. Promotion & advertising

6. Job path

11. Double bike

15. Messenger

20. Jump

21. Laughing scavenger

22. Labyrinth

23. Resumé, curriculum ...

25. Victory cup

26. Of sound mind, compos ...

27. Holy city

29. Letter

32. Forbidden activity (2-2)

34. Neither ... nor that

36. Careworn

39. Pre-Soviet emperors

41. Talks wildly

43. Roof overhangs

46. Lessens

48. More recent

49. Lion's neck hair

51. Stack

52. School principals

55. Love excessively, ... on

56. Louts

59. Awkward

61. Deities

62. Body fluid lump

63. Baby night bird

64. Anger, raise someone's ...

67. Favours

68. Shaggier

70. US coin

71. Odour

72. Perfume sampler

73. Lithe

74. Enthused

75. Red blood cell deficiency

77. Letter cross-stroke

78. Desires

79. Unmask

82. Lettuce side dishes

86. Widen (pupils)

87. Famous volcano

89. Illegal passengers

92. Former

94. African antelope

96. SE Arabian sultanate

98. Sets (table)

100. Smells strongly

101. Slightly open

103. 60s pop dance (2-2)

105. Become more active (3,2)

106. Symbolic picture

108. Brass instrument

111. Wordless play

112. White ants

114. Cannier

116. Citrus peel

119. German Mrs

120. Walkway

121. Non-com (1,1,1)

123. Was in debt to

124. Shrill bark

125. Name one by one

126. Vortex

127. Chair wheels

130. Came first

131. Wasted time

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

138. Spoils

139. ... out a living

141. Countries' pennants

144. Economise, scrimp & ...

146. And so on

147. Infantryman, ... soldier

148. Crazy

149. Bread bun

150. Exercise club

151. Retained

152. Swallow up

153. The B of NB

155. Soviet Union (1,1,1,1)

157. Numerals system

158. Enclosure

160. Futuristic fiction (3-2)

161. Unsuitable

162. Ultra-virile

163. Which

165. Building block

166. Jug rim

167. ... Baba & The 40 Thieves

Across Down Down

168. Mexican dip 169. Dispatch by post

171. Suspect's defence

172. Naval rank, chief ... officer

175. Rare pleasure 176. ... & hearty

179. Dried grape

180. Asian sauce bean

182. Knuckle of veal stew, ... bucco

184. Magazine subscriber 185. Cramped (space)

186. Perish

188. Sir ... Coward

189. Chest bone

190. Ancestry diagram, family ... 191. Wheel-shaft projection

193. On cloud ... 194. Swaggering walk

196. Fashion guru, Christian ... 197. Christmas carol, ... In A Manger 198. CDs, compact ...

200. Declare approval of

205. Olympic Games body (1,1,1)

207. King's title, Your ...

210. Resettlement

211. Bludgeoned

212. Pull heavily

213. Indian garment 214. Slimy substance

216. Red-rind cheese

218. Steer

219. Tibetan oxen

220. Employees

224. USA (5,3)

227. Snout

229. Abominable snowman

230. Antlered beast

231. Mutilates

232. Isolated

233. Towards interior of

235. Plentiful

237. Require

239. Wood-trimming tool

241. Of warships

244. Relaxation routine

246. Waffles

249. Child's guessing game (1,3)

252. Press down (4,2)

254. Toppled (over)

256. Group of six

258. Stuns

259. Sea rhythms

260. Foot arches

263. Queen's dog

264. Jogger

265. Ludicrous failure

267. Flowing away

270. Marmalade fruit

271. Spins

272. Mental stress

273. Leakage

274. Map book

277. Small car

279. Ready money

281. Circular

284. Ayes & ...

286. Security lapse

288. Rev counters

292. Measure of distance

294. Composer's work

295. Islands

298. Illumination

300. Orchestra section

301. Hymn, Ave ...

303. Hoisted (flag) (3,2)

306. Idolise

308. Engage (gears)

309. Lazily

311. Thug

314. Spanish friend

315. Salt, ... chloride

316. Conforming, ... the line

317. Without company

318. Filled pastries

319. Unruly children

320. Bug

321. Preaches

322. Phases

323. Electronic payment for goods

324. Tearing into strips

1. Cripple

2. Salesmen

3. Singer, ... Presley

4. Bury

5. Scottish valley

6. Short sleep

7. Kitchen garment

8. Uncovered

9. Corresponded in sound

10. Swiss lake

11. Most submissive

12. Convent

13. Utters

14. Pulped

15. Confines, ... in

16. Frill

17. Public profile

18. Festival

19. Street

24. Tennis ace, ... Lendl

28. Cries like crow

30. Ayatollah's land

31. Pace

33. Makes speech

35. Pressure line on map

37. Enlarge

38. Widespread

40. Wonkiest

42. Prickle

44. Single-celled organism

45. Respect

47. Donkeys

48. Proximity

49. Tiny fish

50. NSW industrial city

53. Tarmac surface

54. Bliss

57. New Zealand Rugby Union team (3,6)

58. Immersed

60. Into that place

63. Aperture

65. Regrettably

66. Eyelid inflammation

68. Group of cattle

69. Writer, ... Blyton

76. Stretchy tape

79. Smash into

80. Snake poison

81. Royal racecourse

83. Up & about

84. Grant

85. Watch covertly

88. Compass point

90. ... & ahs

91. Current units

93. Study of zodiac

95. Moist

97. Become beached, run ...

99. Music style, rock ... (3,4)

100. Sudden attack

102. Denim trousers

104. Yields, ... in

107. Prison rooms

109. Raise (livestock)

110. Region

111. Mongrel dog

113. Originate

115. Female calves

117. Tinted

118. Mirth

121. Journalists

122. Admitted guilt (5,2)

127. Undemanding (job)

128. Disjoin

129. Refits

132. Magician's chant

133. Bloodsucker

134. Military overthrow, coup ... (1'4)

135. Makes acquaintance of

136. Torvill or Dean (3-6)

137. Able

138. Organised for action

140. Communal bedroom

141. Burned unsteadily

142. Disbelievers

143. Portable weapons (5,4)

145. Closing tactics

151. Food-preparing room

154. Chilly

156. Remains

159. Also known as (1,1,1) 164. Afflict

169. Pancake topping, ... syrup

170. Aggravated

173. Lobe ornament

174. Cigar leaves

177. Ram star sign

178. Abrasive paper

181. Actor, Laurence ... 183. Substitute (5-2)

187. Listing down

192. Music colleges

195. Raise standard of 199. Treated badly (3-4)

201. Police informer

202. Debauched party

203. Delete

204. Milk coffee style, ... latte

206. Hi!

207. Intended

208. Model, ... Macpherson

209. Serving platter

213. Wiry-haired dog, ... terrier

215. Rich

217. Earth's satellite

221. Browned off (3,2)

222. Grind down

223. Polluted air

224. Expends, ... up

225. Terminate

226. Execute (law)

228. Entertainingly

234. Enlivening (7,2)

236. Mooches

238. Dine

240. Spot

242. Fan

243. Scotsman's pouch

245. Work clothes

247. Stupid

248. Concentrated scent

250. Autocue

251. Mounts

253. Actor, Robert De ...

255. Pigmented eye membrane

257. Great ages

258. Eagerly expectant

261. Higher in rank

262. Banishes

265. Girl

266. Actor, Will ...

268. Brazilian dance, ... nova

269. Affable

275. Filled tortilla

276. In present state (2,2)

278. Singer, ... Cole (3,4)

280. Side of sofa

282. Oh dear!

283. Starkers

285. Slight

287. Caresses with lips

289. Nuclear devices (1-5)

290. Distress signal

291. African disease fly

292. Small insects

293. Unknown author

296. Baby wrap

297. Long films

299. Phantom

302. Beatles drummer

304. Love

305. Plumbing trap pipe (1-4)

306. Heat up

307. Crowd sound

308. Sponges

310. Root vegetables

312. Cab

313. Phoned

Henry’s In Cash

■ In Cash is a journey through the music of Johnny Cash Australian outlaw country founding-figure and brooding baritone Henry Wagons will lean into the deep mythology and sound of the American Recordings Albums with his band The Tennessee Studs, re-creating the sonic depth, poise and ominous force of those songs, as if you were sitting with Johnny Cash in the control room, says a media release. Saturday, September 21 at the Athenaeum Theatre

Storytellers

■ Casey Radio 97.7fm presents its next Storytellers concert on October 6 in its new venue at the Cranbourne Bowls Club Melbourne award-winning, indie-folk singer-songwriter Cate Taylor will present a delicately crafted show of beautiful songs with a performance style that is authentic and engaging.

Accompanying Cate for this show will be Amla on fiddle and flute. Tickets at Trybooking

Nick’s new album

■ Further down the line is the new album from Nick Charles

This is Nick’s 10th solo album in a stellar career that has seen 13 US tours and him winning every conceivable award and accolade in Australian roots and blues music including Port Fairy Folk Festival Artist of the Year and the Age Blues album of the year.

- Rob Foenander

Paladino, Paulini and Piterman

■ The place to be this New Year’s Eve is with the Australian Pops Orchestra at Hamer Hall.

Some of Australia's favourite performers including Silvie Paladino, Paulini and Josh Piterman are joining John Foreman and the Australian Pops Orchestra for The New Year's Eve (& The Day Before) Gala Concerts on December 30 and 31.

This spectacular gala event, now in its 41st year at Hamer Hall, is packed with orchestral classics, traditional anthems, Broadway hits, all performed by a glittering line up of star performers.

Led by John Foreman, the Australian Pops Orchestra will again ignite the Hamer Hall stage in a stunning display of musicianship, celebration and laughter alongside the Dana Jolly Dancers’ choreography.

“The Australian Pops New Year's Eve Gala has become a Melbourne tradition. This year it is particularly special with not one but two performers - Silvie Paladino and Josh Piterman - who have graced the West End stages joining us along with the magnificent Paulini, who starred in Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat,” said John Foreman.

“They will be singing songs from musicals we know and love including Sunset Boulevard, The Phantom of the Opera and Les Miserables all backed by a magnificent 60-piece symphony orches-

Crossword Solution No 16

tra and fabulous dancers, resulting in a show that's uplifting, fun, and will send you into 2025 in the best way possible.”

This year's concerts will pack in more music and laughter than ever and include three performances –The Day Before on Monday December 30 at 2pm, New Year’s Eve matinee on Tuesday December 31 at 2pm and New Year's Eve on Tuesday December 31 at 8pm.

Audience members attending the New Year’s Eve 8pm performance can also purchase an add on ticket for a pre-show party that includes interval drinks and/or a ticket for a special after-show fireworks balcony party after the show with drinks, nibblies and one of the best views of Melbourne's fireworks.

For over 40 years, the Australian Pops Orchestra has presented a unique blend of popular classical and contemporary music to Australian audiences. They have performed alongside many of the world’s favourite singers including Luciano Pavarotti, Dame Kiri Te Kanawa, Peter Allen, Andrea Bocelli, Dame Joan Sutherland, Sir Cliff Richard, Ray Charles and many more. John Foreman’s Australian Pops Orchestra presents The New Year's Eve (& The Day Before) Gala Arts Centre Melbourne, Hamer Hall. 8pm, Tuesday, Decmeber 31. www.ticketek.com.au - Contributed

PATH O V M NCO E L R OWED YELP E T N ENUMERATE WHIRLPOOL E E E CASTERS A N S N WON F S L O DAWDLED U E E BSIDE MARS EKED FLAGS B E E

Observations with Matt Bissett-Johnson

Observations with Matt Bissett-Johnson

● ● ● ● Silvie Paladino

Melbournewide

CARLTON

You’re The Man

■ La Mama and Monstrous Theatre's season of Paul Mitchell’s hard-hitting exploration of family violence, You're The Man, is playing at La Mama Courthouse, Carlton until September 15.

Directed by Theresa Borg, designed by Filipe Filihia, with music by Simon Mason, Paul Mitchell’s new play is a story about the terrible damage caused by family violence and the journey to restoration of hope.

Seventeen-year-old Liam spends days locked in his room attempting to process the violent death of his brother at the hands of his father. What could lead Liam to rejoin the world beyond his bedroom door?

You're The Man is ultimately a story of hope. It challenges justifications men make for their behaviour, seeks paths of healing for victim-survivors, and shows the tenderness and strength possible in renewed masculinity.

You’re The Man is now on sale at lamama.com.au/whats-on/winter-2024/ youre-the-man/

Woman charged

■ Major Collision Investigation Unit detectives have charged a woman following a fatal collision in Warburton last Thursday (Sep. 5).

Emergency services were called to reports a cyclist had allegedly been struck along Surrey Rd about 11.15am.

The cyclist, an 81-year-old Mooroolbark man, was treated at the scene but could not be revived.

The driver of the car, a 30-year-old Warburton woman, was charged with dangerous driving causing death.

She was bailed to appear at the Melbourne Magistrates’ Court on September 11.

GREATER GEELONG

Fraud alleged

■ Detectives from the Financial Crime Squad late last week arrested a second man as part of their investigation into reports of suspected fraudulent activity targeting a Geelong based not for profit organisation genU

The 74-year-old Leopold man was arrested in Geelong on Thursday (Sep. 5). He was interviewed by police and subsequently released pending further enquiries.

Last month police executed a warrant at a residential address in Newtown

A 57-year-old Newtown man was interviewed on August 1 and subsequently released pending further enquiries.

The matter was initially reported to police by the organisation and an investigation commenced in February 2023, after they identified suspicious activity relating to accounts being wrongfully charged to the organisation.

The report was then assessed by police and an investigation commenced.

The activity is alleged to have occurred over about five years and involves several million dollars.

Detectives have obtained financial and business records from the organisation and these continue to be forensically assessed.

Investigators are keen to speak to anyone who may have knowledge of the matter and those responsible.

This information can also be provided to police anonymously.

PARKDALE

9 units attend

■ Fire Rescue Victoria responded to a structure fire at 1.40pm on Friday (Sep. 6) on Lower Dandenong Rd, Parkdale, after callers to Triple Zero reported a house fire.

Firefighters arrived on scene within three minutes to find two brick units, 20m by 20m each, fully involved with exposure to multiple units at the rear of the property.

A total of nine primary appliances, including two aerial appliances, responded to the incident. The incident is not being treated as suspicious.

TWO DOZEN RETAIL THIEVES ARRESTED

■ A new retail theft team has arrested two dozen of Melbourne’s most prolific alleged retail thieves in a little over a month.

The operation, called STAND, was launched in the Melbourne and Yarra council areas in July to target violent, aggressive and intimidating behaviour towards retail staff.

It sees a dedicated team of police work daily with major and independent retailers to identify thieves who threaten safety and hold them to account.

The ongoing operation has already led to 24 thieves being arrested – eight of them arrested twice.

There have been 478 charges laid, and around $97,000 worth of stolen goods seized.

This includes luxury perfumes, designer clothes and high-end skincare products.

Those arrested have allegedly stolen more than $200,000 worth of goods from CBD, Richmond and Collingwood stores this year alone.

Stolen items are typically on-sold for profit.

Key arrests include:

■ A 36-year-old man who was arrested on July 24 for allegedly stealing almost $100,000 worth of luxury clothes, handbags and beauty products from high end stores in the CBD over the last six months. When confronted by staff, the man allegedly became aggressive and verbally abusive. During search warrants, police located allegedly stolen luxury perfumes, designer clothes, high end skin care products and bedding. The Footscray man was charged with 41 offences including 35 counts of theft, handling stolen goods and dealing with the proceeds of crime. He was remanded to appear before Melbourne Magistrates’ Court on September 6.

■ A 33-year-old man who was arrested on July 16 for allegedly stealing more than $3300 worth of products from supermarkets and liquor stores in the Richmond area. When approached by staff, the man would allegedly become verbally aggressive and physically intimidating. The Richmond man was charged with 15 counts of shoptheft was remanded until August 5.

■ A 45-year-old man who was arrested on August 20 for allegedly stealing almost $10,000 worth of goods from CBD clothing and liquor stores between July and August this year. Police will allege the man spat at retail staff when approached and would verbally threaten them with injury if they tried to intervene. The Prahran man was charged with 45 offences including aggravated assault, unlawful assault, shop steal, criminal damage, loiter with the intent to commit an indictable offence, assault with a weapon and threats to inflict serious injury. He was remanded to appear before Melbourne Magistrates’ Court on September 2.

■ Wodonga Police are investigating a theft of a boat and trailer in West Wodonga on Sunday, September 1.

Statewide

■ A 27-year-old man who was arrested on August 29 after he allegedly stole more than $2000 worth of food and other products from multiple convenience stores in the CBD between July and August. When confronted by staff on July 29, the man allegedly armed himself with a large pair of scissors before taking off on foot. The Richmond man was charged with eight counts of shop steal and bailed to appear before Melbourne Magistrates’ Court on October 3.

As part of the operation, police have been using an online platform to engage regularly with 23 retailers who have multiple stores across the CBD

The platform – designed to streamline communication –means retailers can notify STAND directly when a nonurgent incident occurs.

The notification instantly provides police with important information such as CCTV and descriptions of offenders.

On top of responding to incidents, the STAND team has proactively attended more than 58 stores to engage with retail staff and deter theft.

This includes independent retailers who too are a priority of STAND

Operation STAND launched on July 15 and will remain ongoing in the Melbourne and Yarra areas.

Operation STAND Police Commander, Superintendent Brett Kahan said: “Retail theft might sound like a victimless crime, but that couldn’t be further from the truth.

“Retail staff have long been dealing with intimidating, aggressive and violent behaviour and it was time we took a stand against it.

“Because of STAND, 24 prolific and allegedly violent retail thieves have been arrested and we have more closely in our sights. To the people who think they can steal and use intimidation tactics to get away with it, know that your time is up, and you will be held to account.

“Everyone deserves to feel safe at work, so we will continue to run this operation until that is the case.”

NORTH CAULFIELD Fatal collision

■ Major Collision Investigation Unit detectives have charged a man following a fatal collision in North Caulfield earlier this year.

It is alleged a pedestrian was struck by a vehicle near the intersection of Lumeah and Balaclava Rds about 12 Noon on Sunday, February 25.

The pedestrian, a 94-yearold Caulfield North woman, died at the scene.

The driver, a 24-year-old Clyde North man, was interviewed by police and released pending further enquiries.

Investigators have since charged the man with dangerous driving causing death and careless driving.

He was bailed to appear at the Melbourne Magistrates’ Court on September 9.

WEST GATE

Closures

■ The West Gate Tunnel Project will soon be one step closer to improving travel times between the city and Melbourne’s west, constructing an extra lane on the M80 entry ramp as the next stage of works to widen the West Gate Freeway from eight to 12 lanes.

Until 5am Monday, September 23, crews will undertake asphalting and other construction works on the ramp from the M80 Ring Road to the West Gate Freeway citybound – constructing an extra lane on the entry ramp.

Significant delays are expected, and drivers are advised to allow an extra 45 minutes travel time as motorists detour via Boundary Rd, Little Boundary Rd and Grieve Parade . Alternatively, they can take a later detour by making a U-turn at Kororoit Creek Rd along the Princes Freeway

It is understood the offender drove a car to a residential property on Condamine St about 12.53am.

The offender hooked the victim’s boat and trailer onto the vehicle and drove off.

The victim, a 78-year-old Wodonga man, arrived at the property at 8am and was shocked to discover his boat was no longer parked on his front lawn.

The boat is a white Stessco Skipper 429 with registration VB795. The registration of the trailer is B38245.

Investigators have released an image of the boat, along with CCTV footage of the incident and the vehicle which they are hoping to identify.

SEBASTOPOL

Ramming attempt

■ Police have arrested a man after an alleged attempted ramming of a police vehicle and subsequent pursuit in Sebastopol.

Officers caught sight of an allegedly stolen silver Toyota Hilux on Raglan St, about 1.45am.

The Toyota allegedly attempted to ram a police vehicle.

The driver allegedly failed to pull over and a pursuit was initiated.

The Toyota allegedly continued travelling at a fast rate of speed, and at times on the wrong side of the road, along Pleasant and Rippon Sts

The Toyota allegedly rammed a set of metal gates at a property on Grant St before the vehicle rolled on Jenkins Drive

Officers moved in swiftly and arrested a man. No one was injured.

A 28-year-old Delacombe man was in police custody and was to be interviewed.

Police allege that the Toyota Hilux was stolen from a Haddon address.

JAN JUC

Surfer rescued

■ Air Wing officers winched a surfer to safety after he failed to return to shore at Jan Juc on Saturday, August 31.

It is believed the surfer and four other mates were surfing off Jan Juc beach and attempted to return to shore when the male surfer began to struggle against the conditions just after 11am.

The surfer, a 21-year-old man was pushed to the rocks located near the Jan Juc carpark where he managed to climb up on a rock.

Police were called and winched the St Leonards man to safety.

Thankful for a tow back to shore, the man was uninjured and in good spirits when he was reunited with his mates about an hour after calling for assistance.

GROVEDALE

Driver charged

■ Major Collision Investigation Unit detectives have charged a man following a crash in Grovedale

Police have been told a Holden Commodore wagon crashed into a pole on Torquay Rd about 3.15pm on Friday (Sep. 6).

A male passenger in the car was taken to hospital with life-threatening injuries. The driver, a 29-year-old man from Charlemont, has been charged with dangerous driving.

The stolen boat

SCORES FROM WEEKEND MATCHES

Amateurs

■ Premiers. Collegians 12.12 (84) d Fiotzroy 11.6 (72). Old Xaverians 13.7 (85) d Old Scotch 11.10 (76). Old Melburnians 12.9 (81) d St Bernards 11.14 (80). University Blacks 11.11 (77) d University Blues 8.12 (60). Oldf Brighton 13.7 (85) d St Kevins 12.12 (84).

■ Premier Reserves. Fitzroy 21.13 (139) d Collegians 3.4 (22). Old Scotch 14.5 (89) d Old Xaverians 8.11 (59). Old Melburnians 12.6 (78) d St Bernards 10.13 (73). University Blacks 9.5 (59) d University Blues 6.11 (47). St Kevins 8.14 (62) d Old Brighton 9.5 (59).

■ Premier B. Old Haileybury v De La Salle. Old Trinity v Old Geelong.

■ Premier B Reserves. Old Trinity v De La Salle. Old Ivanhoe v Old Geelong.

■ Premier C. Old Carey 15.6 (96) d Hampton Rovers 11.11 (77). Parkdale Vultures 12.15 (87) d AJAX 5.13 (43).

■ Premier C Reserves. Parkdale Vultures 9.11 (65) d AJAX 6.6 (42). Hampton Rovers 8.13 (61) d Old Carey 8.11 (59).

■ Division 1. Parkside 9.12 (66) d UHS-VY 8.11 (59).

■ Division 1 Reserves. West Brunswick 9.11 (65) d Ormond 8.9 (57).

■ Division 1 Thirds. Old Xaverians 8.13 (61) d St Kevins 8.9 (57).

■ Division 1 Under 19. St Bernards 13.20 (98) d Old Haileybury 6.10 (46).

■ Division 2. Brunswick v South Melbourne Districts.

■ Division 2 Reserves. MHSOB v St Marys Salesian.

■ Division 2 North Thirds. Old Xaverians 6.9 (45) d Old Carey 4.6 (30).

■ Division 2 South Thirds. Mentone Panthers 14.10 (94) d De La Salle 5.8 (38).

■ Division 2 Under 19. University Blues 12.7 (79) d Parkdale Vultures 5.10 (40).

■ Division 3 Reserves. North Brunswick 7.16 (58) d Power House 7.5 (47). Richmond Central v St Johns.

■ Division 3 Under 19. Ormond v Preston.

■ Division 4 Under 19. Caulfield Grammarians 12.15 (87) d De La Salle 6.5 (41). St Marys Salesian 16.8 (104) d Beaumaris 10.8 (68).

Eastern

■ Premier Division Seniors. Balwyn 8.5 (53) d East Ringwood 7.8 (50).Rowville v South Croydon.

■ Premier Division Reserves. East Ringwood 6.0 (46) d Blackburn 5.8 (38).Vermont v Rowville.

■ Premier Under 19.5. Blackburn 11.8 (74) d East Ringwood 7.7 (49). Vermont v Berwick.

■ Division 1 Seniors. Park Orchards 12.3 (75) d Beaconsfield 9.13 (67).

■ Division 1 Reserves. Montrose 9.12 (66)

d Park Orchards 4.4 (38).

■ Division 1 Under 19.5. Surrey Park 7.9 (51) d South Belgrave 7.7 (49).

■ Division 2 Seniors. Mulgrave v Croydon.

■ Division 2 Reserves. East Burwood v Boronia.

■ Division 2 Under 19.5. Mulgrave v Waverley Blues.

■ Division 3 Seniors. Surrey Park 12.12 (84) d Donvale 12.10 (82).

■ Division 3 Reserves. Donvale 5.8 (38) d Surrey Park 5.6 (36).

■ Division 3 Under 19.5. Upper Ferntree Gully 9.9 (63) d Knox 8.6 (54).

■ Division 4 Seniors. Scoresby v Whitehorse Pioneers.

■ Division 4 Reserves. Scoresby v Croydon North MLOC.

■ Division 4 Under 19.5. Kilsyth v Blackburn.

Essendon

■ Premier Division Seniors. Pascoe Vale 15.14 (104) d Keilor 10.10 (70). Strathmore

v Greenvale.

■ Premier Division Reserves. Keilor v Strathmore. Aberfeldie v Pascoe Vale.

■ Premier Division Under 19.5. Strath-

more 16.10 (106) d Keilor 7.7 (49). Aberfeldie v Pascoe Vale.

■ Division 1 Seniors. West Coburg 11.16 (82) d St Albans 2.12 (24).

■ Division 1 Reserves. West Coburg 13.8 (86) d Hillside 11.9 (75).

■ Division 1 Thirds. Keilor 10.12 (72) d Strathmore 5.10 (40).

■ Division 1 Under 18.5. Craigieburn 9.11 (65) d Moonee Valley 6.9 (45).

■ Division 2 Seniors. Taylors Lakes v Westmeadows.

■ Division 2 Reserves. Northern Saints 13.12 (90) d Sunbury Kangaroos 8.5 (53).

■ Division 2 Thirds. Avondale Heights 6.6 (42) d Airport West 2.12 (24).

■ Division 2 Under 18.5. Hadfiled 4.9 (33) d Strathmore 4.5 (29).

Morn. Peninsula

■ Division 1 Seniors. Frankston YCW v Mt Eliza.

■ Division 1 Reserves. Red Hill v Frankston YCW.

■ Division 1 Under 19. Frankston YCW v Langwarrin.

■ Division 2 Seniors. Edithvale-Aspendale 11.16 (82) d Chelsea 11.11 (77).

■ Division 2 Reserves. Edithvale-Aspendale 4.11 (35) d Seaford 3.4 (22).

■ Division 2 Under 19. Seaford 8.11 (59) d Edithvale-Aspendale 8.4 (52).

Northern

■ Division 1 Seniors. Heidelberg 10.12 (72) d Montmorency 5.10 (40). North Heidelberg v Greensborough.

■ Division 1 Reserves. Montmorency 14.7 (91) d Greensborough 8.9 (57). Heidelberg v West Preston-Lakeside.

■ Division 1 Under 19.5. Heidelberg 9.8 (62) d North Heidelberg 8.9 (57).

■ Division 2 Seniors. Diamond Creek 18.14 (122) d Whittlesea 3.11 (29).

■ Division 2 Reserves. South Morang 7.10 (52) d Whittlesea 7.2 (44).

■ Division 2 Under 19.5. South Morang 23.12 (150) d Whittlesea 9.10 (64).

■ Division 3 Seniors. Old Paradians 17.8 (110) d Fitzroy Stars 13.17 (95).

■ Division 3 Reserves. Kilmore 9.9 (63) d Mernda 5.7 (37).

■ Division 3 Under 19.5. Banyule 16.9 (105) d Macleod 7.7 (49).

Outer East

■ Premier Division Seniors. Narre Warren 11.7 (73) d Woori Yallock8.0 (58). Wandin 15.11 (101) d Olinda Ferny Creek 4.8 (32).

■ Premier Division Reserves. UpweyTecoma 7.12 (54) d Narre Warren 4.3 (27). Wanbdin 12.8 (80) d Pakenham 5.6 (36).

■ Division 1 Seniors. Seville v Warburton Millgrove.

■ Division 1 Reserves. Belgrave v Seville.

■ Under 19 Boys. Pakenham 9.7 (61) d Narre Warren 5.8 (38). Officer 11.12 (78) d Upwey Tecoma 5.7 (37).

Southern

■ Division 1 Seniors. Cheltenham 7.11 (53) d Dingley 7.10 (52). St Paul’s McKinnon v Cranbourne Eagles.

■ Division 1 Reserves. Dingley 7.14 (56) d Bentleigh 7.9 (51).

■ Division 1 Open-Grade. Springvale Districts 9.6 (60) d Carrum Patterson Lakes 8.7 (55).

■ Division 1 Under 19. Murrumbeena 10.12 (72) d Bentleigh 8.3 (51). Frankston Dolphins v Dingley.

■ Division 2 Seniors. East Malvern 10.9 (69) d Doveton Doves 4.12 (36).

■ Division 2 Reserves. Endeavour Hills 13.9 (87) d Doveton Doves 9.6 (60).

■ Division 2 Open-Grade. Murrumbeena 12.15 (87) d Endeavour Hills 3.8 (26).

■ Division 2 Under 19. Carrum Patterson Lakes 11.9 (75) d Lyndhurst 7.6 (48).

■ Division 3 Seniors. Frankston Dolphins

11.16 (82) d South Mornington 6.11 (47).

■ Division 3 Reserves. Frankston Dolphins 13.11 (89) d Black Rock 8.3 (51).

■ Division 4 Seniors. Hampton 8.12 (60)

d Hallam 5.9 (39).

■ Division 4 Reserves. Hampton 9.6 (60) d Lyndale 9.3 (57).

Western

■ Division 1 Seniors. Werribee Districts 9.8 (62) d Caroline Springs 8.7 (55). Yarraville Seddon Eagles v Hoppers Crossing.

■ Division 1 Reserves. Werribee Districts 6.10 (46) d Yarraville Seddon Eagles 5.9 (39).

■ Division 1 Under 18. Werribee Districts 10.8 (68) d Yarraville Seddon Eagles 9.4 (58).

■ Division 2 Seniors. Sunshine 21.14 (140) d Newport 3.8 (26).

■ Division 2 Reserves. Albion 11.10 (76) d Newport 3.10 (28).

■ Division 2 Under 18. Point Cook Centrals 7.12 (54) d West Footscray 5.13 (43).

Country League

Goulburn Valley

■ Seniors. Echuca 15.17 (107) d Rochester 9.10 (64).Shepparton v Mooroopna.

■ Reserves. Echuca 17.13 (115) d Seymour 2.7 (19). Rochester v Shepparton Swans.

■ Under 18. Echuca 11.8 (74) d Shepparton 9.11 (65). Shepparton v Seymour.

Kyabram District

■ Seniors. Shepparton East 11.6 (72) d Lancaster 10.11 (71).

■ Reserves. Stanhope 8.12 (60) d Lancaster 8.7 (55).

■ Under 18. Violet Town 12.11 (83) d Shepparton East 5.1 (31).

Riddell District

■ Seniors. Wallan 9.8 (62) d Macedon 5.5 (35).

■ Reserves. Diggers Rest 4.8 (32) d Wallan 3.4 (22).

■ Under 19.5. Kyneton 8.8 (56) d Macedon 7.8 (50).

Geelong District

■ Seniors. Thomson 9.7 (61) d East Geelong 7.8 (50).

■ Reserves. East Geelong 6.9 (45) d Belmont Lions 3.7 (25).

Barwon

■ Geelong Seniors. Leopold 11.10 (76) d St Mary’s 11.9 (75). South Barwon v Bell Park.

■ Geelong Reserves. St Joseph’s 10.6 (66) d South Barwon 3.7 (25). Bell Park v Leopold.

■ Bellarine Seniors. Torquay 16.17 (113) d Anglesea 7.9 (51).

■ Bellarine Reserves. Torquay 13.5 (83) d Geelong Amateurs 7.11 (53).

Ballarat

■ Seniors. Melton 12.12 (84) d Darley 6.5 (41). East Point v Ballarat.

■ Reserves. Sunbury 11.15 (81) d Sebastopol 6.6 (42), East Point v Lake Wenedouree.

■ Under 18. Springbank 11.4 (70) d Bungaree 9.12 (66). Buninyong v Daylesford.

Central Highlands

■ Seniors. Bungaree 11.12 (76) d Gordon 6.10 (46). Skipton v Daylesford.

■ Reserves. Buninyong 7.10 (52) d Rokewood Corindhap 6.8 (44).

West Gippsland

■ Seniors. Nar Nar Goon 13.11 (89) d Cora Lynn 10.7 (67).

■ Reserves. Tooradin-Dalmore 5.5 (35) d Phillip Island 3.14 (32).

with Kerry Kulkens

ARIES: (March 21- April 20)

Lucky Colour: Silver

Lucky Day: Friday

Racing Numbers: 8,9,4,5

Lotto Numbers: 1,15,213,34,42,11, You might have to work a bit harder, but the benefits are there, and people need some of your expertise to get things done right. You will be delighted with the work that is well done.

TAURUS: (April 21- May 20)

Lucky Colour: Cream

Lucky Day: Monday

Racing Numbers: 7,4,3,5, Lotto Numbers: 1,14,23,34,42,11, Most seem to be able to achieve the impossible, and there could be more gains than losses. Love relationships bring offers of commitment.

GEMINI: (May 21- June 21)

Lucky Colour: Green

Lucky Day: Wednesday

Racing Numbers: 8,9,4,5 Lotto Numbers: 8,4,5,23,31,22, Most will be charging their batteries, so now is an excellent time to ask for favours from those in a position to further your cause. A love interest could enter your life unexpectedly.

CANCER: (June 22- July 22)

Lucky Colour: Dark Blue

Lucky Day: Thursday

Racing Numbers: 7,8,4,5, Lotto Numbers: 1,14,24,34,45,33, A career or financial break could make this a profitable period. Most will be offered all sorts of things. Choose selectively and watch overdoing the celebrations.

LEO: (July 23- August 22)

Lucky Colour: Violet

Lucky Day: Sunday

Racing Numbers: 6,7,3,4, Lotto Numbers: 3,5,23,31,11,10, Travel can bring a lot of pleasure and a change of scenery to recharge your batteries. Be careful that someone else’s trouble doesn’t make you change your plans.

VIRGO: (August 23- September 23)

Lucky Colour: Blue

Lucky Day: Wednesday Racing Numbers: 7,8,3,4, Lotto Numbers: 2,4,5,6,14,45, A party at your place is possible, and a hectic schedule may affect your social life. Changes are about to occur and could also affect your work situation.

LIBRA: (September 24- October 23)

Lucky Colour: Green

Lucky Day: Monday

Racing Numbers: 7,8,3,4, Lotto Numbers: 1,15,24,28,35,45, You should be able to get all the cooperation you need in your new endeavours. It will mean more responsibility, but there is also a big chance to make a more significant gain than you have made before.

SCORPIO: (October 24- November 22)

Lucky Colour: Orange

Lucky Day: Tuesday Racing Numbers: 7,8,9,4, Lotto Numbers: 1,15,2,334,42,33, Things are moving fast, and you could be making massive changes regarding career advancements. Someone might be instrumental in your good luck without your awareness.

SAGITTARIUS: (November 23- December 20)

Lucky Colour: Pink

Lucky Day: Saturday Racing Numbers: 7,8,3,4, Lotto Numbers: 1,15,23,34,45,5 It is one of those periods in which you must do things yourself to ensure everything is done correctly. You might be pushed into making decisions when you are not ready.

CAPRICORN: (December 21- January 19)

Lucky Colour: Mauve

Lucky Day: Wednesday Racing Numbers: 6,4,7,3, Lotto Numbers: 1,15,23,34,45,5, You should be able to show a few disbelievers how it is done during the next few weeks. Bright new ideas are coming from everywhere, and you can benefit from them.

AQUARIUS: (January 20- February 19)

Lucky Colour: Cream

Lucky Day: Monday Racing Numbers: 7,8,4,3, Lotto Numbers: 1,15,23,34,41,22, If you are prepared to go after the things you need, you will soon get them. Most will be in the mood for love but don’t push aside the known for the unknown.

PISCES: (February 20- March 20)

Lucky Colour: Fawn

Lucky Day: Tuesday Racing Numbers: 1,4,2,3, Lotto Numbers: 1,14,23,34,41,22, Gains on all levels are indicated, so push your luck. Emotional affairs should now settle, and most could find themselves heading in a new direction.

Where to pick up your free copy of The Local Paper

New name for Mordi Aquatic

Local Briefs

■ ABBOTSFORD. IGA. 306-310 Johnston St.

■ ALBERT PARK. IGA. 163 Mills St.

■ AUBURN. Newsagency. 119 Auburn Rd

■ HAWTHORN. 7-Eleven. Cnr Church and Pine Sts.

■ ■ HAWTHORN. 7-Eleven. Cnr Barkers Rd and Glenferrie Rd.

■ ■ ■ ■ HAWTHORN. Ampol. 73 Camberwell Rd.

Assault at Prahran

■ Detectives from Taskforce Echo have charged a second man as part of their investigation into a brawl outside a Prahran night club.

A 43-year-old Hillside man was arrested after a warrant was executed at his home address.

■ AUBURN SOUTH. Newsagency.

289 Auburn Rd.

■ HAWTHORN. Licensed Post Office. 782 Glenferrie Rd.

■ BALACLAVA. Blencowes Milk Bar.

305 Inkerman St.

■ BEAUMARIS. IGA. 6/12 Concourse.

■ BEAUMARIS. Newsagency. 2 Concourse.

■ BENTLEIGH. Bentleigh RSL. 538 Centre Rd.

■ HAWTHORN. Renaissance IGA. 102 Burwood Rd.

■ ■ HAWTHORN WEST. Shell/Liberty Service Station. Cnr Church St and Barkers Rd.

■ MALVERN. BP Food Plus. 1367 High St.

■ With almost 4000 community votes tallied, Kingston Council announcews that Kingston’s new aquatic and leisure facility will be officially named the Mordi Aquatic Centre Building works are set to kick off in coming months after construction company ADCO has been appointed to build the new centre. The Mordi Aquatic Centre name has been unveiled following input from 3990 community members, including 500 young people. The community has been a driving force behind the project with six stages of consultation shaping the project along the way plus key input from the dedicated Community Reference Group Consultation took place via pop-up in-person consultation events, school voting packs, satellite voting stations and a range of promotional activities. Mayor Cr Jenna Davey-Burns said the community is at the heart of the project helping to drive the centre’s ethos of fun, community, connection and sustainability.

Court Lists

Dandenong Magistrates’ Court Criminal Case Listings

He was subsequently charged with affray, common law assault and fail to provide a password.

The man was bailed to appear at Melbourne Magistrates’ Court on October 9.

Police also seized a number of items from his property including a Comanchero Outlaw Motor Cycle Gang nominee vest.

■ MALVERN EAST. Central Park

■ BENTLEIGH. Good Times Milk Bar.

83 Tucker Rd.

Licensed Post Office. 122 Burke Rd.

■ ■ BENTLEIGH EAST. IGA Ritchies Supermarket. 1/16 Heather St.

■ ■ McKINNON. Newsagency. 163 McKinnon Rd.

■ ■ BLACK ROCK. 7-Eleven. 583589 Balcombe Rd.

■ BLACK ROCK. Milk Bar. 187 Bluff Rd.

■ BRIGHTON. Brighton Grocer. 112 Were St.

■ BRIGHTON EAST. Newsagency. 613 Hampton St.

■ BRIGHTON NORTH. Newsagency. 324 Bay St.

■ BURNLEY. Burnley and West Richmond Newsagency. 375 Burnley St.

■ CAMBERWELL. Camberwell Lotto. 741 Burke Rd.

■ ■ CARNEGIE. TSG. 8/119 Koornang Rd.

■ ■ CAULFIELD. Authorised Newsagency. 14 Derby Rd.

■ ■ CHELTENHAM. Bottlemart Express. 174 Weatherall Rd.

■ ■ ■ CHELTENHAM. Newsagency. 332 Charman Rd

■ MELBOURNE. Mitty’s Newsagency. 53 Bourke St.

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.

The arrest follows an incident about 3.45am on August 18 where a number of people were involved in an affray outside a Malvern Rd night club.

■ ■ ■ ■ CHELTENHAM NORTH. IGA. 1/

39 Bernard St.

■ ■ CHELTENHAM NORTH. Licensed Post Office. 35 Bernard St.

■ ■ COLLINGWOOD. Smith St Newsagency. 212 Smith St.

■ ■ EAST MELBOURNE. Coles Express. 1181 Hoddle St.

■ ■ ELSTERNWICK. Mr Pickwick’s Newsagency. 348 Glenhuntly Rd.

■ ■ ELWOOD. 7-Eleven. 2 Ormond Rd.

■ ELWOOD. Jerry’s Milk Bar. 345 Barkly St.

■ ■ ELWOOD. News. 105 Ormond Rd.

■ ■ ELWOOD. Wines. 33 Ormond Rd.

■ ■ GLEN HUNTLY. Glen Huntly Newsagency. 1164 Glenhuntly Rd.

■ ■ GLEN IRIS. 161 Cellars. 161 Burke Rd.

■ ■ GLEN IRIS. BP. 44-56 High St.

■ ■ GLEN IRIS. Foodworks. Level 1/ 1601 Malvern Rd.

■ ■ ■ GLEN IRIS. High St Sub-News and Lotto. 5/35-43 High St.

■ ■ ■ GLENFERRIE. Newsagency. 660 Glenferrie Rd.

■ ■ HAMPTON. Newsagency. 343 Hampton St.

■ ■ HAMPTON. RSL. 25 Holyrood St.

■ ■ ■ HAMPTON. Sebastian’s Food and Wine. 301-303 Hampton St.

■ ■ HARTWELL. Leo’s Fine Food. 2 Summerhill Rd.

■ ■ HARTWELL. Licensed Post Office. 1166 Toorak Rd.

■ ■ HAWKSBURN. Woolworths Metro. 559-569 Malvern Rd.

■ MIDDLE PARK. IGA. 19-21

Armstrong St.

■ ■ MIDDLE PARK. Newsagency. 16

Armstrong St.

■ ■ MOORABBIN. Ampol Woolworths. Cnr South Rd and Chesterville Rd.

■ MOORABBIN. Coles Express. 422 South Rd.

■ MOORABBIN. Hub Lotto. 3/11 Taylor St.

■ MOORABBIN. Wishart Licensed Post Office. 478 South Rd.

■ ORMOND. News. 497 North Rd.

■ PORT MELBOURNE. 7-Eleven. Cnr Crockford St and Pickles St.

■ ■ ■ ■ PORT MELBOURNE. News Extra.

192 Bay St.

■ ■ PRAHRAN. Ampol. Cnr Punt Rd and Commercial Rd.

■ ■ RICHMOND. Tattslotto. 308 Bridge Rd.

■ ■ RICHMOND NORTH. 7-Eleven. 94 Church St.

■ ■ RICHMOND NORTH. Eight 8 Lotto. 276 Victoria St.

■ ■ RICHMOND NORTH. Good Luck Lotto. 347 Victoria St.

■ ■ SANDRINGHAM. 7-Eleven. Cnr Bay Rd and Bluff Rd.

■ ■ ■ SANDRINGHAM. Ampol. 73 Beach Rd.

■ SANDRINGHAM. Newsagency. Shop 5, 34/18 Station St, Sandringham

■ SOUTH MELBOURNE. 7-Eleven. 322-326 Clarendon St.

■ ■ ■ ■ SOUTH MELBOURNE. Ampol. Cnr Kingsway and Bank St.

■ ■ SOUTH MELBOURNE. IGA. 3638 Park St.

■ ■ ■ SOUTH MELBOURNE. Montague Park Food Store. 406 Park St.

■ ■ SOUTH YARRA. 7-Eleven. 187189 Domain Rd.

■ SOUTH YARRA. 7-Eleven South Yarra Station. 167 Toorak Rd.

■ SOUTH YARRA. IGA Xpress. 113115 Toorak Rd.

■ ■ ST KILDA. 7-Eleven. 75 Fitzroy St.

■ ■ ST KILDA. Coles Express. 120134 Barkly St.

■ ■ ST KILDA. The Lott. 160 Acland St.

■ ■ ■ ■ TOORAK. NewsXpress. 479 Toorak Rd.

■ ■ TOORONGA. Licensed Post Office. 1445 Malvern Rd.

Wednesday, September 11 Allen, Zach Anania, Tamara Andrews, Corey Michael Asipi, Sadulla Batten, Craig Beer, Clinton Benjamin, Godeill Bidgood, Anthony Bimnet, Gebrelul Binns, Thomas Blaze, Adam Bristow, Thomas Browning, Keith Burgess, Nicole Burke, Michael John Cameron, Jacqui Combo, Lionel Daily-Dancocks, Henry D'angelo, Dominic Deszcz, Shannon Wesley Faitasi, Andrew Gamage, Sithum Kanchana Gardiner, Jesse Gommers, Joshua Albert Gooren, Dean John Gough, Julian Graham, Jason Leigh Hartshorn, Jena Hennadige, Nidula Ibraimi, Medina Ishaq, Murtaza Jaikol, Elcollin Jeanne, Jacques Jodun, Michael Kalia, Henu Klarica, Ivica Leime, Santo Macfarlane, Patrick Mihajlovsi, Naum Naitorosene, Calvin Nanos, Jimmy Nash, Glen Nguyen, Jason Paraskevas, George Pliatsikas, Alex Pooley, Katherine Justine Popovic, Borislav Pouch, Jikany Pringle, Andrew Puoch, Jikany Puric, Mahir Qazizada, Omeed Reardom, Andrew Reith, Sokphea Safi, Issaq Sarabia, Jason Scott, Anthony Sheridan, David Stringer, Janaya Tekin, Ulas Thomas, Babu Vibote, Matia Wandin, Kane Watts, James Adam Weheragoda, Masachige Wilkes, Todd Williams, Aaron Wilson, Crystal Moorabbin Magistrates’ Court Criminal Case Listings Wednesday, September 11 Arora, Sumit

Azzopardi, Samantha Lyndell Blinoff, Anatoly Clavant, Lachlan ]Crook, Trever Ellis, Narjic Evans, Glenn Galea, Nathan George, Kelly Ann

Grimanis, Stavros Hall-Hanson, Amy Hoarau, Joseph Hooper, Matthew John Ioane, Robin Jackson, Kevin Joore, Jamie Kirley, Hayden Koukoulas, John Linthorne-Walker, Arnica Lu, Xinyi Manuel, Stephen Thomas Naidu, Nikhil Nanayakkara, Teron Olesh, Daniel Patten, Myee Reaper, James Thomas Ritchens, Toni Schroder, Jake Sisnowski, David Smith, Brendan Raymond Sosnowski, David Spyros, Brooke Wolter, Clinton Wood, Nathan Ross Dromana Magistrates’ Court Criminal Case Listings

Thursday, September 12 Ahmadi, Abdul Ali, Justin Bagatella, Alex Michael Blair, Oshen Bradshaw, Angus Scott Ciavarella-Wilson, Kartia Constable, John Cowling, Steven Coyle, Tracey Fenton, Jayde Fowler, Luke Graham, Andrew Scott Greer, David Johnson, Ashleigh Kaur, Sukhpreet Kelso, Adam Lefoe, Daniel Maher, Sasha Mason, Belinda Mcgoldrick, Leigh Mckay, Christine Mckenna, Frank Moore, Simone O'brien, Nathan Leigh Payne, George David Pearce-Casey, Joshua Ragas, Kyle Alexander Schepis, Tiarne Smith, Jade Sparkes, Alley Stern, Kelly Strode, Harry Teare, Nicholas Toull, Corey Wardle, Paul Williams, Ruby Wright, Zac Friday, September 13 Clark, Matthew James Dinsdale, Heather Griffiths-Pozsar, Erica Loosemore, Kirsty Stephens, Samantha

A 39-year-old Tarneit man, who is a patched member of the Comanchero OMCG, was arrested and charged with common law assault, affray, intentionally cause injury, recklessly cause injury, unlawful assault, use threatening words, fail to notify Firearm Prohibition Order registry of change of address and possess prohibited weapon.

The charges relate to the affray on August 18 and also a second incident in Windsor on August 13 where a store security guard was allegedly assaulted.

Police released CCTV of the affray and detectives remain keen to speak to anyone who may have witnessed the incident and can identify those involved. The investigation remains ongoing.

MyStonnington app

■ Local esidents will now have access to even more Council services in their pockets with new features on the MyStonnington app just launched..

Residents have been able to set bin day reminders, view upcoming hard waste collections, catch up on the latest news and access library services.

Now, residents can access the following services through the app:

■ Street sweeping dates In addition to your bin collection dates, you can now find your street’s sweeping schedule - simply by entering your address into our map.

■ ‘In my area’ updates

■ What’s On Stonnington

■ Have my say

The MyStonnington app be can downloaded free on the App Store and Google Play store.

Public open space

■ Yarra Council says that the State Government has increased the public open space contribution rate from 4.5 per cent to 8.65 per cent.

“This means that Council will have a greater pool of funds to improve open spaces in Yarra,” said a representative for the municipality.

“Public open space contributions are payments made by a property developer when land is subdivided to create additional lots.

“These payments are used by Council to create or improve public open spaces that can be used by the entire community, such as parks and gardens.

“With only roughly 20 square kilometres of the municipality being open space , Yarra has the third lowest area of public open space per person among Victorian councils.

“With a growing population and increasing density, it's important that quality open space is within a safe and easy walk of residents and workers.

“In 2016 Council adopted its Public Open Space Requirement Policy to guide how money in collected through the public open space contribution rate is spent.

“Open space projects that meet the criteria outlined in the policy are identified, prioritised and considered through our annual budget process.

Yarra City Mayor Edward Crossland said the Council welcomed the announcement following sustained advocacy.

Sport UNDERWOOD STAKES LATEST

■ If the nominations, so far for the Underwood Stakes to be run at Caulfield on September 14 continues, it is shaping up as a beauty.

Some of the best going around in Australia are likely to compete in the popular Group One race.

The early market has the champion mare Pride of Jenni surprisingly at the big odds of 10/ 1.

Now seven, she is real class and will be hard to beat over the 1800 metres at Caulfield

On the early market with Neds Betting, the favourite is the Sydney galloper, the former international, Via Sistina, who is taking all before her in Australia, she is being quoted at $4.80.

Her trainer Chris Waller has her right on song, and is the one to beat.

She won in great style taking out the Winx Stakes at Randwick, she is racing in great form.

The top Victorian mare, Pride of Jenni, has surprisingly got out to double each way odds, after being out for a bit of a spell.

But the way she races and what she did in the Queen Elizabeth she has got to be hard to beat. She has been outstanding in each win that she has had.

She was a little disappointing in the Memsie, but she will atone.

Then we have Mr Brightside, who as you may recall was just nutted in last year’s Cox Plate at the Valley.

Then he was a good second first up in the Memsie to Caulfield

He’s all class, and has raced against the best at all times in the last couple of years.

He will be punching here and he is being quoted at $ 5. He will be right in this.

Next is the former international mare, Place Du Carrousel, who had excellent form before arriving on our shores.

Now with the powerful Freedman Stable at Flemington, she is starting to hit her straps, and ran a good second to Via Sistina, only beaten a half head at Rosehill in the Group One Ranvet over 1200 metres. One to keep your eye on here.

She will be joined by her stablemate, last year’s Caulfield and Melbourne Cup winner, Without A Fight, returning after a lengthy spell.

The journey here of 1800 metres is just a little bit short for him, but he will run a big race here.

Next is another smart type in the Annabel Neasham trained Fawkner Park, a good winner at Eagle Farm going back to June 15h in the HKJC World Pool Q22

He accounted for a good field and won in fine style, there are big raps on hm

Now a six-year-old, he has got a bit of class about him, one to watch.

The good mare Atishu, with Chris Waller, has had a lot of racing and could be feeling the pinch.

Admittingly she was up in class in the Winx Stakes, but she failed to run on behind Via Sistina, and would need to find something.

One that could surprise here is the good mare, Joliestar, prepared by Chris Waller.

A model of consistency she won in good style at Randwick and is most consistent.

Ted Ryan

She will get in with a reasonable weight and could run the place.

One that has come on is the Peter MoodyCatherine Coleman trained Autumn Angel, going back to April she surprised by winning the

Australian Oaks in fine style at Randwick and is good. Peter and Catherine have a big opinion of her.

She is by a good sire, and racehorse, The Autumn Sun. But I think there are others who may be too strong.

I am sticking with Via Sistina, Pride of Jenni, and Mr Brightside.

Irish mare tackles

■ The good Irish mare, Magical Zoe, after a brilliant win in the Ebor Handicap over 2780 metres at York is coming for the Melbourne Cup.

The win gives the mare and her connections a chance to run in the Melbourne Cup claiming the “Win and Youre In” chance in a great win for her connections and leading trainer, Henry

De Bromhead. De Bromhead confirmed that the mare would run in the Melbourne Cup along with the Willie Mullins Pair, Vauban and Absurde.

Vauban, favoruite for the Cup last year, failed to fire with connections claiming the track beat him last year, but he is going to have another crack again this year.

A versatile performer he las won jumping races over long journeys.

His stablemate Absurde, who finished seventh last year, will have another crack at the race for trainer, Willie Mullins

There could be another who may join them in Grosvenor Square, prepared by the top man, Aidan O’Brien

Back to Magical Zoe, her trainer Henry De Bromhead feels that she has an excellent chance of winning our Cup or running the place.

The introduction last year of the first ever International Golden Ticket into the Lexus Melbourne Cup via the Ebor Handicap, received an overwhelmingly positive reaction and builds on many years of star performers at York’s Flagship, Sky Bet Ebor Festival progressing to race at the Spring Carnival.

This fabulous global partnership saw Absurde win under Frankie Dettori at York, as mentioned running seventh in the Melbourne Cup last year, Howeverhave they worked out as to how they can win our Cup this year, with Vauban at his second try.

His owner, Rich Ricci, was more than happy with his win, in the Group 2 Lonsdale Cup at York, pleasing his connections.

- Ted Ryan

● ● ● ● Annabel Neasham. Racing Photos.
Brighton Historic Photo Collection
● ● Brighton Beach State School. 1924.
● ● ● ● Brighton. (Valentine Series)
● ● ● ● Brighyton Orphan Asylum. Circa 1880.
● ● ‘Merton’, St Leonard’s College, Brighton. 1969.
● ● Brighton Post Ofice and Exchange. 1917-30.
● ● ● ● Brighton Surgery. New St, Brighton. 1959.
● The Welsh cottages at Brighton, reconstucted as ‘Pen-y-bryn’, the home of Lloyd Tayler, Brighton. Circa 1890
Toorak
Historic Photo Collection
● ● Toorak Post Office, circa 1920s
● ● ● ● Scotsburn, 554 Toorak Road, Toorak. Circa 1937.
● ● Drawing room in Dr Buller Murphy's house, Toorak. 1936.
● ● ● ● Boys at ‘Glamorgan’ school in Toorak, conducted by Miss I. McComas. 1909.
● ● ● ● Toorak Station, early 1900s ● ● ● ● Toorak Village. 1907.
● ● ● ● Toorak Cricket Club. 1920.

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BAR FRIDGE. Rank Arbna. $80. Narre Warren. 0402 483 707 JJ-NN

BEAN BAGS. Two. GC. $15. Gladstone Park. 0406 933 926 HH-LL

BED. Single. Wrought iron. White GC. $20. Surrey Hills. 0410 626 110. HH-LL

BED. Single. Timber bedhead. Including ammtress, sheets, pillows with slips, blankets. Dressing table, side table, with drawers, touch light, chair. All very clean. $120. Ferntree Gully. 9758 8990 HH-LL

BLACKSMITHS VICE. with long leg. OK Cond. $150. Launching Place. 5967 4412. HH-LL

BOARD GAMES. old, in original boxes, Chinese Checkers, Young Talent Time, Pictionary, Monopoly, Backgammon, Contraband, Dukes of Hazzard, Trivia, many more, plus Meccano set, box Lego, plus cards. GC. $300 negotiable. Doncaster. 0419 365 825. HH-LL

CAMPER TRAILER. Tru

Blu. Heavy duty, all terrain. 12V accessory outlet, plus slide out kitchen. Full registered. $4300. Frankston. 9789 9634. JJ-NN

DRYER. Hoover. As new. $150. Narre Warren. 0402 483 707 JJ-NN

DRYER. Simpson. $80. Narre Warren. 0402 483 707 JJ-NN

ENCYCLOPEDIA. World Book. Entire set. Plus World Book Dictionary. $80. Frankston. 9789 9634. JJ-NN

FILING CABINET. $25. Narre Warren. 0402 483 707. JJ-NN

FLOOR MIRROR. Full height, fully framed in lovely polished timber surround. Stand available. As new. $80. Mt Eliza. 0412 830 241. JJ-NN

FREEZER. Kelvinator 350. $200. Narre Warren. 0402 483 707 JJ-NN

GOLF BAG. Callaway Razr. VGC. $250. Rye. 0457 468 264.HH-LL

HORSE RIDING HELMET. Backl on trackl EQ3 Pardus Microfibre sparkle. Medium, adjustable 5658cm, washable liner. New in box. Tried on but never worn, gift/online purchase. Incorrect size. RRP $425. $380 OBO. Post available (+$). Seymour. 0408 704 995.HH-LL

HOUSE. Already cut in half. On blocks, ready to be transported away. Jerilderie. 0447 013 460. JJ-NN

HAY

Good quality. Bales: $6.50 Rolls: $50 Kinglake West 0400 529 469 HH-LL

MATTRESS. Queen size and base. As new. $300. Narre Warren. 0402 483 707.JJ-NN

MORRIS MINOR. 1954. Complete in parts. Body stripped back to bare metal and primed. Comes on a rotisserie. Engine No F5/ 304127. GC. $3500. Homewood. 0418 354 641.HH-LL

OFFICE CHAIR. Pink, whiote spots. ‘Girlie’ $13. Surrey Hills. 0410 626 110. HH-LL

PLANTS. Indoor. Outdoor Trees. Succulents, Ground Cover. Available all year. Noble Park, Dawn, 0407 325 030. JJ-NN

PORTABLE CATTLE YARDS. Approx. 50 head. Hot dipped galvanised, Echuca brand Gribben stockyards. 24 straight panels, 3 gate assemblies. Holding pen behind race. Portable ramp on wheels. All in good cond. Dismantled and packed up. $9500. Phone: 0407 351 443. JJ-PP

RADIOGRAM. 1930s era. Oak wood cabinet. FC. $80. Greensborough. 0406 939 273. HH-LL

RAILWAY MAGAZINES. Bulletin, Aust. Railway History, Railway Transportation, Victorian Rail-Ways, Aust. Railway Enthusiast, Vicrail News. Some in year lots, $15 each. Others loose from $1 each. GC. Cash only. Montmorency. 0415 798 561. HH-LL

REFRIGERATOR

FREEZER. $200. Narre Warren. 0402 483 707 JJ-NN

REFRIGERATOR. 3.6. 380 lt. Metal finish look. Bottom freezer. Has had very little use. Ht: 1730cm, width 70cm, depth 690cm. LG brand. As new. $200. Hastings. 0466 252 967. HH-LL

REGISTRATION PLATES. Personalised. Subaruy. ‘MISUBI’. $1300 ONO. Frankston. 9789 9634. JJ-NN

ROOF RACK. $60. Narre Warren. 0402 483 707 JJ-NN

SHED Roof Trusses Steel. 6.4 long, 1 metre high. Gable 3 of, with legs. GC. $150. Launching Place. 5967 4412. HH-LL

SINGER SEWING MACHINE. Marble top. $30. Surrey Hills. 0410 626 110. HH-LL

0466 252 967. HH-LL

TV CABINETS. $30. Narre Warren. 0402 483 707 JJ-NN

TOWING HITCH for caravan. Lift bar and chain type. Tows up to 3 tonne. GC. $175. Hastings. 0466 252 967. HH-LL

WELLNESS CIRCULATION STIMULATOR. Clare. VGC. $150 ONO. Frankston. 9789 9634 JJ-NN

WOOD TURNING LATHE Includes tools, books and accessories. VGC. $300. Mount Martha. 04076 921 724. HH-LL

CASUAL LABOURER required for a few days work, don’t need to be continuous days. I need help in rebuilding some small bridges and clearing of walking tracks. Cash payment of $25 per hour. Call me to discuss. Yea. 0438 652 784. HH-LL

WANTED TO BUY

ANZ BANK MONEY

BOXES. GC. Negotiable. Mill Park. 9436 8935. HH-LL

FREE ADS ARE NOT ACCEPTED BY PHONE

Free ‘For Sale’ and ‘What’s On ads are available in The Local Paper to private parties and community organisations. There are no charges, no fees and no commissions. All Free Ads are published at the entire discretion of the Editor.

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SOUTHERN CROSS WEEKL WEEKL SOUTHERN CROSS WEEKL WEEKL WEEKLY EDITION Y EDITION Y EDITION Y EDITION

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TABLE-DESK. Large, grayu. $80. Narre Warren. 0402 483 707 JJ-NN

PROPOSAL TO UPGRADE VODAFONE & OPTUS MOBILE PHONE BASE STATION (INCLUDING 5G) ON: LIGHT POLE FACILITY (POLE #1811700), BEACH ROAD, BLACK ROCK, VIC 3193 - RFNSA SITE NO. 3193004

1. The proposed facility consists of the addition of new Optus and Vodafone equipment and associated works as follows (including 5G): Replace antenna mounts with new clamp mounts on existing monopole

Removal of two (2) panel antennas

Installation of one (1) tri-cluster antenna (less than 1.5m in length)

Installation of nine (9) remote radio units (560mm x 308mm x 149mm)

Installation of two (2) GPS

The installation and removal of ancillary equipment including but not limited to transceivers, antenna mounts, feeders, cabling, combiners, diplexers, signage, mha and fibre, reconfiguration of existing equipment on the facility and in the existing equipment shelter

2. Optus & Vodafone regards the proposed installation as exempt under the Victoria Planning Provisions (VPP) based on the description above.

3. In accordance with Section 7 of C564:2020 Mobile Phone Base Station Deployment Code, we invite you to provide feedback about the proposal. Further information and/or comments should be directed to: communityconsultation@ventia.com or Level 1, South Tower, 10 Browning Street, West End QLD 4101 Australia by COB Wednesday, 18 September 2024.

The Local Paper Classifieds

PROPOSAL TO UPGRADE VODAFONE & OPTUS

MOBILE PHONE BASE STATION (INCLUDING 5G) ON 65-67 QUEENS ROAD, MELBOURNE, VIC 3004 RFNSA SITE NO. 3000050

1. The proposed facility consists of the addition of new Optus and Vodafone equipment and associated works as follows (including 5G):

The replacement of six (6) passive antenna mounts with new longer antenna mounts

The removal of six (6) panel antennas

The installation of four (4) panel antennas (no more than 2.7m in length)

The installation of two (2) IPAA panel antennas (no more than 2.0m in length)

The installation of six (6) active antenna units

The installation of four (4) radio remote unit mounts on the main mast pole

The installation of twenty (20) radio remote units

The installation of two (2) GPS

The provision of ten (10) future radio remote units

The removal and installation and of ancillary equipment including but not limited to: transceivers, antenna mounts, feeders, cabling, combiners, diplexers, signage, and other associated equipment on the facility and in the existing equipment shelter

2. Optus & Vodafone regards the proposed installation as a Low-impact Facility under the Telecommunications (Low-impact Facilities) Determination 2018 (“The Determination”) based on the description above.

3. In accordance with Section 7 of C564:2020 Mobile Phone Base Station Deployment Code, we invite you to provide feedback about the proposal. Further information and/or comments should be directed to: communityconsultation@ventia.com or Level 1, South Tower, 10 Browning Street, West End QLD 4101 Australia by COB Wednesday, 18 September 2024.

PROPOSAL TO UPGRADE AN EXISTING TELSTRA MOBILE PHONE BASE STATION IN TOORAK SOUTH WEST

Telstra plans to upgrade a telecommunications facility, 512 Toorak Road, Toorak, VIC 3142 (RFNSA No. 3142003)

1. The proposed facility consists of the following to improve Telstra’s mobile phone network, including 4G / 5G:

Removal of eight (8) existing panel antennas

Installation of six (6) new panel antennas attached and mounted at a maximum height of 45.9m above the existing 44.1m high rooftop (on top of the lift motor room)

Ancillary equipment to be installed including remote radio units, tower mounted (including 4G/5G)

2. Telstra regards the proposed installation as a ‘Low impact’ Facility under the Telecommunications (Low Impact Facilities) Determination 2018, based on the description above. The proposed infrastructure will comply with the ACMA EME regulatory arrangements

3. In accordance with Section 7 of C564:2020 Mobile Phone Base Station Deployment Code, we invite you to provide feedback about the proposal. Further information and/or comments should be directed to: Planning Consultant on behalf of Telstra, via email to planning.vic@servicestream.com.au, phone: 03 9937 6555, via post to Planning Consultant, Servicestream, PO Box 14570, Melbourne, VIC 8001 by 5pm, Tuesday 24 September 2024.

Service Stream Ltd ABN 46 072 369 840 Telstra Ltd ACN 086 174 781 Amplitel Ltd ACN 648 133 073

NOTICE OF AN APPLICATION FOR A PLANNING PERMIT APPLICATION DETAILS

Application reference number: P24/0977

Applicant name: URBAN EDGE CONSULTANTS

The Land affected by this application is located at: 114 BRADFORD ROAD MOUNT MARTHA LOT 9 LP 7096 VOL 8459 FOL 004

The application is for a permit to: DEVELOP A DWELLING (DOUBLE STOREY), A FENCE, AND VARY RESTRICTIVE COVENANT AF952557W AFFECTING THE LAND DESCRIBED AS LOT 9 ON PLAN OF SUBDIVISION 007096 ON VOL 8459 FOL 004 BY AMENDING ITEM (A) (BUILDING ENVELOPES) BY REPLACING BUILDING HEIGHTS FIXED BY AUSTRALIAN HEIGHT DATUM (AHD) LEVEL ‘115.50’ WITH NEW LEVELS.

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.

PART-TIME DRIVER WITH OWN VEHICLE

The Local Paper may soon have a vacancy for a reliable person to take over our bulk bundle deliveries to shops in the Northern Suburbs Edition areas.

This includes Fitzroy, Clifton Hill, Alphington, Fairfield, Northcte, Thornbury, Preston, Reservoir, Keon Park, Thomastown, Lalor, Epping, Wollert, South Morang, Bundoora, Heidelberg, Ivanhoe, Rosanna, Macleod, Watsonia, Lower Plenty, Greensborough, Montmorency, Eltham and Diamond Creek.

This is a position for someone, with their own ABN, to work on a contract basis. The position pays $500 (including GST) each fortnightly round.

This fortnightly job (Febnruary-December) involves picking up bundles at Tullamarine on Tuesday mornings (from 5am), and delivering bundles prior to Wednesday morning to retail outlets.

The position would be ideal for someone who is punctual, relaible and able to work without supervision. A regular sedan vehicle is suitable for the position.

The position involves an invoice sent each fortnightly. Payment is direct to your account, within around 10 business days. Send us an email with your CV. Tell us why you should be our first pick. editor@LocalPaper.com.au

NOTICE OF AN APPLICATION FOR A PLANNING PERMIT APPLICATION DETAILS

Application reference number: P24/0370

Applicant name: PROSSOR TOWN PLANNING

The Land affected by this application is located at: LOT 31 LP 112532 VOL 9068 FOL 651

The application is for a permit to: DEVELOP AN OUTBUILDING AND REMOVE RESTRICTIVE COVENANT K532993 AFFECTING THE LAND DESCRIBED AS LOT 31 ON PS 112532 VOL 09068 FOL 651

The Responsible Authority will not decide on the application before: 18 SEPTEMBER 2024

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.

Business Guide

Boroondara (south), Glen Eira, Kingston, Melbourne, Port Phillip, Stonnington, Yarra

Serving families for over 25 years with a full range of Dental Services 1/97 Cathies Lane Wantirna South 3152 Ph: 9800 2288 cathieslanedental@gmail.com www.cathieslanedental.com.au

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Successful small business operators agree that local newspaper advertising is the most effective way to promote your business to local families. Tell our thousands of readers about the services that you provide. Your messages will be published in The Local Paper’s print editions and digital editions.

The Local Paper’s Ad-visors will help you prepare your ad. You can include logos and photos, as well as the words of your choice. The Local Paper offers a free artwork service for advertisers. Prices start from $20 per fortnight if you take a 22issue pre-paid package for the entire year.

■ 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,

(rural),

Yarra Ranges.

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