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Review / ‘Blonde’ moment turns to triumph!

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"Legally Blonde" star Mikayla Williams as Elle Wood.

“Legally Blonde” star Mikayla Williams as Elle Wood.

OMG, you guys! What a triumph!

Presented in Canberra so soon after the national tour, this challenging musical about a bright young woman with blonde hair and a penchant for pink, who enrols into Harvard to win the man of her dreams, receives an exuberant production by Free Rain Theatre.

Superbly cast and imaginatively staged by director Derek Walker, this high-energy production is a delight from start to finish.

As the delightful blonde Elle Wood, Mikayla Williams is real star material. Her singing, dancing and acting are exemplary and it is difficult to look at anyone else when she is on stage.

She receives great support from Dave Evans, excellent as Emmett, and Jenna Roberts, in an outstandingly comedic performance as the hairdresser, Paulette. Damon Grebert-Wade, as Warner, is a bit colourless, but reveals a fine singing voice.

Brian Cavanagh brings exactly the right authority to the sleazy lecturer, Callahan. Zack Drury steals all his scenes as the guy with the box, and Vanessa de Jager, Laura Dawson and Kirrah Amosa excel as the vivacious Greek chorus.

Michelle Heine’s classy choreography is performed with confidence and panache, and the enthusiastic ensemble, outfitted in Fiona Leach’s excellent costumes, provides the myriad of other characters who inhabit Steve and Susie Walsh’s multi-level, free-flowing set.

Some unsolved sound-balance problems meant that Nicholas Griffin’s excellent band often swamped the singers on opening night. No doubt this will be corrected. Don’t miss this one.

 

The post Review / ‘Blonde’ moment turns to triumph! appeared first on Canberra CityNews.


The return of the pleasure dome? Andrew Barr calling for industry interest

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Andrew Barr-10

TREASURER Andrew Barr is calling for registrations of interest in new office accommodation in Civic for the chosen ones of the ACT Public Service.

“This project represents a great opportunity for developers and property owners to participate in a new phase of the city’s development,” Andrew said.

“The main criteria for eligibility to participate in the ROI are that the accommodation must be located within a 10 minute walk of the Legislative Assembly and is able to provide 40,000 square metres of office space.”

The post The return of the pleasure dome? Andrew Barr calling for industry interest appeared first on Canberra CityNews.

Police investigating Chisholm blaze

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ACT Policing has commenced an investigation after a house in Gibbons Street, Chisholm was extensively damaged by fire this morning (Sunday, July 6).

Around 6.00am, ACT Fire and Rescue attended the location and extinguished the fire. No persons were inside the home at the time of the fire.

The crime scene has been handed over to ACT Policing Criminal Investigations for further investigation.
Anyone who may have information that could assist police in their investigation is asked to contact

Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or via act.crimestoppers.com.au. Information can be provided anonymously.

The post Police investigating Chisholm blaze appeared first on Canberra CityNews.

Indigenous flag flying proudly over City Hill

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SHANE Rattenbury, in his capacity as Minister for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Affairs has raised the indigenous flag over City Hill to mark the official start of NAIDOC Week celebrations in Canberra.

The theme for NAIDOC Week 2014 is ‘Serving Country: Centenary and Beyond’ and was selected by the National NAIDOC Committee to honour all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander men and women who have fought in defence of our country.

The post Indigenous flag flying proudly over City Hill appeared first on Canberra CityNews.

Suspected dog poisoner caught in Bonner

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police

ACT Policing is seeking further witnesses or information relating to incidents of dog baiting after a 42 year-old Bonner man was arrested for animal baiting/poisoning on Friday (July 4).

Around 6pm the male offender was seen walking past the rear entrance of a Bonner residence and removing a number of meat balls, believed to contain Ratsak, from a small plastic bag before throwing them into the rear yard.

The owner of the residence noticed her dog sniffing one of the meat balls at the bottom of the back step and a cluster of other meat balls scattered throughout the backyard. The dog did not consume any of the meat balls and was unharmed.

The male offender was seen a short time later walking up an adjacent street where he was apprehended by police and taken to the ACT Watch House. He was charged with one count of ‘Lay poison for domestic animal/bird’.

The 42-year-old Bonner man will appear in the ACT Magistrates Court on July 25.

The meat balls seized by police have been forwarded to AFP Forensics for analysis.

Around 8.50pm on Friday, July 4 two people attended the Gungahlin Police Station to report a similar but separate incident of ‘dog baiting’ that occurred on June 17. Further police enquiries are being conducted into that allegation.

Police are urging any members of the community who have any information relating to ‘dog baiting’ to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or www.act.crimestoppers.com.au. Information can be provided anonymously.
Under the Crimes Act 1900, a person shall not lay any poison that endangers, or is likely to endanger, the life of any domestic animal or bird. Maximum penalty: $1 000, imprisonment for 6 months or both.

The post Suspected dog poisoner caught in Bonner appeared first on Canberra CityNews.

Stunning video of Canberra in Hyperlapse

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THE incomparable Josh Chaffey has created a stunning hyperlapse video of Canberra.

He posted it to YouTube with this note:

Back in April while I was in Canberra on business I set about shooting my first hyperlapse.

With only a few exceptions* I shot everything in a week between the 6th and the 14th of April. This was a period of seasonal change; It wasn’t the nicest weather the capital has to offer, but it’s what I had to work with.

I shot some 40 sequences and over 7872 frames. This is the end result.

LOCATIONS (in order of appearance):
========================================­========
Commonwealth Avenue Bridge
Lake Burley Griffin
Captain Cook Memorial Water Jet*
Russell
Black Mountain Tower
Commonwealth Avenue Bridge
Lake Burley Griffin
Russell Offices
National Carillon*
Parliament House
National Museum of Australia
National Library of Australia
ActewAGL House
Northbourne Avenue
Canberra Centre
New Acton Nishi Apartments
Oushi Zokei, Dream Lens for the Future – Northbourne Avenue
Diamonds – National Gallery of Australia
Old Parliament House
Black Mountain Tower
Captain Cook Memorial Water Jet
National Museum of Australia
Old Parliament House
Aboriginal Tent Embassy
National Gallery of Australia
Diamonds – National Gallery of Australia
National Library of Australia
Russell
Garema Court*
New Acton Nishi Apartments*
Parliament House*
Mount Ainslie
National Library of Australia

MUSIC:
========================================­========
The soundtrack to this video is an edit of the ABC News Theme as remixed by Pendulum in 2010.
You can get it on iTunes here: http://bit.ly/1qVyAIy

The post Stunning video of Canberra in Hyperlapse appeared first on Canberra CityNews.

How we can reinvigorate the Australian Federation

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By Vince FitzGerald, Australian National University

WHEN our two major levels of government work in partnership, our Federation can function well. The standout period for cooperative federalism was the Hawke/Keating term of government, producing the National Competition Policy, the east coast power grid, a national rail agreement, harmonised regulation and consumer standards, and mutual recognition of many policies and occupations.

More recent examples are the Intergovernmental Agreement on Reform of Commonwealth–State Financial Relations (1999), the National Reform Agenda (2008), the Intergovernmental Agreement on Federal Financial Relations (2011), and the National Disability Insurance Scheme.

Notwithstanding those successes, the post-World War II drive to centralise power in Canberra has made the Federation increasingly unbalanced. The division of roles and responsibilities has blurred and much overlap and duplication has been created. Political and administrative accountability has become unclear and significant inefficiency and shortcomings in service delivery have resulted.

Pushing from both sides

Despite its far greater command over revenues, the Commonwealth tends to push its financial problems onto the States – as it seeks to do in the recent budget. And the States, too, are not above a little cost-shifting to the Commonwealth.

The direct consequence has been proliferation of Commonwealth payments and involvement in areas of State responsibility. Ten years ago, there were fewer than 100 of these partnership agreements (as they are now known) – still too many – but since then (as noted by the Commission of Audit) the number has grown to 144. Each ties payments to priorities and conditions set by the Commonwealth, and most involve excessive red tape and reporting requirements.

While there are some legitimate grounds for a (limited) Commonwealth role in ensuring nationally consistent services, politics – not just policy – is a driver. There is an increasing desire by Commonwealth politicians to “tag” benefits to particular groups in the community as federally provided.

In the best cases, national partnership agreements delivering extra dollars to core service areas like health and education can lead policy without imposing uniform delivery mechanisms, spurring enough competition among the States to provide innovation in service delivery.

But the Commonwealth, particularly the Commonwealth bureaucracies involved, have increasingly sought to control, prescribe and micro-manage, often down to very detailed operational levels.

These burdensome compliance demands often create tension between levels of government rather than promoting cooperation, bloating bureaucracy at both levels. They typically lack incentives or frameworks for pursuing efficiency, and they blur political and administrative accountability.

Ingredients for successful reform

Yet there have been periods of successful cooperative federalism in the past – as noted earlier, during Hawke/Keating term of government. So what can we learn?

Firstly, we should forget the occasionally heard proposals that we should get rid of the States and adopt a unitary form of government (with some kind of regional underlay). It won’t happen.

Hence, the starting point for negotiating roles and responsibilities is that the states must be treated as the sovereigns that they are, with clearly defined sovereign areas of jurisdiction.

Other ingredients required for successful reform are:

  • commitment to rational, evidence-based policy in the national interest, with purely political considerations marginalised;
  • leadership and demonstration of trust;
  • open communication, and
  • commitment to sharing of resources, including revenues, responsibilities and expertise, to achieve efficient outcomes.

Reforms to the Federation (presumably via a new Intergovernmental Agreement rather than constitutional amendment) must be based on:

  • Mutual recognition of sovereignty
  • National interest
  • Subsidiarity
  • Efficiency
  • Accountability.

Working together

There is substantial scope to reduce overlap and duplication, identify the areas where both major levels of government do need to be involved and to cooperate, and clearly define respective roles and responsibilities.

There are a number of areas where joint involvement of both levels of government appears inevitable, and desirable. The most obvious are: health; transport and transport infrastructure (at least on inter-state or national routes); other major infrastructure (e.g. power grids, rail networks, broadband), and the environment, including climate related issues, major river systems.

There are instructive models overseas for determining respective roles in these areas, in the US, Canada, post-war Germany and in the suggestions in the report of the Australian Advisory Committee on Intergovernmental Relations.

How should agreement on roles in shared areas be approached? A reformed Federation would incorporate a new model of partnership agreements embodying agreed outcome objectives and arrangements designed as a true partnership model, with mutually balanced obligations and contributions. There should be sharp clarity around which each role is exercised, who is responsible and accountable for what.

There should be an emphasis on efficiency, flexibility, and minimising administrative burdens, a major focus on dynamic improvement, stimulated by diversity and a degree of competition across states in policy design and in delivery solutions.

Ideally, the Commonwealth should provide leadership on broad national policy directions, minimum national standards, national consistency where important (especially in business regulation) and the provision of funding.

States should tailor services to local needs, coordinate delivery and drive policy and delivery innovation. Local government should also concentrate on delivery of services and delivery innovation.

Have the tax debate

But no reform will last without tackling the cause of the march to centralism: the vertical fiscal imbalance (VFI). The 2014 Commonwealth Budget’s squeeze on future Commonwealth contributions to health (especially hospital) and education funding via the states is apparently designed to encourage the states to press for an increase in the GST.

I think that is inevitable, whether it comes from the states or, more likely, the Commonwealth and whether it involves broadening the GST base or increasing the rate, or ideally both. (Compensation to those most affected such as pensioners and low income working families is critical.)

The National Commission of Audit’s proposal for the States to again share the personal income tax base is not new, but it is in my view a very good one. It is the only constitutionally (relatively) secure way to reduce the VFI substantially and to protect the new balance for the future.

It should be in the GST debate. Either extending or raising the rate of the GST will help resource the States (if the additional proceeds go to them), although it will again increase the VFI ‒ whose adverse effects are exacerbated by the distortions of our extreme horizontal fiscal equalisation (HFE) system (but that is a topic for another day).

There are various ways for the States to share the income tax base so total income tax doesn’t rise, and that the ATO still administers a single income tax return and collection system. Each State or Territory would receive:

  • a flat percentage (say 10%) of each resident’s above-threshold income, or
  • simply a given percentage of total income tax paid by each resident,
  • plus scope for the State or Territory to surcharge/discount on its own responsibility.

State politicians would thus have to take responsibility and political accountability for raising their own revenue (at the margin). And States should also agree to better manage and improve yield from their own existing tax bases, notably the best one they still control alone: payrolls.

The Commonwealth would reduce grants (and the extent of its involvement in many areas) ‒ and even take back some (or perhaps even all?) of the GST proceeds, to the extent of net additional funds that States and Territories achieve from the income tax (ignoring surcharges or discounts).

It is to be hoped that the present Commonwealth Government’s White Paper review of the Federation approaches its task on the basis of key reform principles implied by those lessons from past successes.

This is an edited extract of a paper presented at the Melbourne Institute’s 2014 Economic and Social Outlook Conference.

The Conversation

Vince FitzGerald is a member of The Conversation’s board of directors.

This article was originally published on The Conversation.
Read the original article.

The post How we can reinvigorate the Australian Federation appeared first on Canberra CityNews.

Dealing with the happy memories of a disgraced Rolf Harris

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rolf harris

By Amanda Harris, Australian National University

WHEN entertainer Rolf Harris was convicted of 12 cases of indecent assault there was first shock from his many fans in Australia and overseas, then a sense of disbelief that a man who won the hearts of millions could have got away with the abuse for so long.

Both his fans and his victims are affected by his fall from grace – though the impact is far greater on those he abused and there may be further charges to come as others prepare to speak out about the fallen entertainer.

But as we have heard in the recent reports emerging from the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, there has been a historical tendency to not want to hear about child sexual abuse, or to turn a blind eye and pretend it is not happening.

It is confronting to think that children are being abused and harmed. It brings up a lot of difficult emotions in people, from disgust and horror through to the fear that the same things might happen to them, their child or their grandchild.

And sometimes it touches on a long, buried memory that this has already happened to them.

We know from the research that when a child is not believed or listened to when they disclose abuse, it is likely to be more traumatising for them.

This can lead them to feel shame and that there is something inherently wrong with them, that adults can not and do not want to keep them safe.

We know the sexual and physical abuse of children can have a huge impact on their mental health, physical health and wellbeing across their lifespan.

It is certainly likely that the media coverage of the trial and conviction of Rolf Harris is likely to have brought up strong emotions for many people, as well as a sense of relief and validation for those who have finally had their stories heard and believed.

The public’s response

Bearing this in mind, it is interesting to reflect on how the public responds when a celebrity is accused and found guilty of abuse.

Of course, Rolf Harris is the most prominent case at the moment, but there is also the recent case of former Hey Dad! star Robert Hughes in Australia and entertainer Jimmy Savile in the UK.

And stories have been emerging of others within the entertainment industry who may have committed abuse.

What impact has this had on the community as a whole? On those who have enjoyed being entertained by these celebrities over the years? If we look at the response on social media to Rolf’s conviction, it certainly seems that people are shocked, dismayed and angry.

We also saw this after the revelations about Jimmy Savile. Many of the public became very angry and directed this towards the BBC, where Savile had done much of his work.

About 49% of respondents in a survey said that they had less trust in the BBC than they did before news of this broke.

The celebrity idol

People often build an emotional connection to celebrities. They may idolise or idealise celebrities, especially those who present themselves as caring, trustworthy, funny and family oriented.

The positive memories and emotions we have of our favourite celebrities often become intertwined with phases of our life, such as our childhood. People often form what is called the “ideology of intimacy” with celebrities, a feeling that we are somehow a part of their life and they are a part of ours.

Sometimes they may also represent a person that we strive to be – funnier, better looking, with a more interesting life!

So when we discover that they have abused their trust, and that behind their façade they were living a much more sinister truth, it is natural to feel shock and disbelief and to make attempts to reconcile that with the image that we once held.

For many people the revelations about Rolf Harris’s abuse of young girls will forever taint the work that he has done. Many will no longer listen to his songs, or view his artworks in the same light. The story about Rolf has changed.

Thanks for the memories … now what?

This doesn’t mean that our the memories of the happiness we may have originally felt when we listened to Rolf and his wobble board need to change.

These happy memories were formed in a time when we were not aware of what was really going on, when we thought that Rolf was just another entertainer.

It is not us who have committed these crimes, or covered them up. We have all been deceived by a man who, it seems, was an expert at deception and betrayal.

We do not need to feel guilty about the happiness that he once brought to our lives and do not need to try to push these memories out of our minds. Rolf is the one who needs to carry all the guilt in this situation.

As was noted in a recent publication about institutional abuse, the issue of child sexual abuse is not new. Children have been abused at around the same rates worldwide for a very long time.

It is brought to the front of our attention when this has been perpetrated by a celebrity or in an institution. But we know from a lot of research now that the sexual abuse of children is most often done by family members or close friends.

Rather than feeling that the world is less safe when we hear about such cases in the media, we should be grateful.

Maybe we have finally reached a point where child sexual abuse will no longer be covered up by families and institutions.

What happened in the UK after Jimmy Savile was that more and more people came forward to tell their own stories of abuse.

This can only lead to better outcomes for all of us: better outcomes for those who can now come forward, to be heard and be believed, and better outcomes for all children, when the perpetrators of abuse have fewer shadows to hide in.

So rather than feeling betrayed when a celebrity such as Rolf Harris is found guilty of such crimes, we should take hope that it may lead to justice for other victims.

If the victims of such high-profile celebrities can have their cases heard, believed and prosecuted, then maybe others will be believed too – whether their abuse is by another celebrity or someone closer to home.

The Conversation

Amanda Harris does not work for, consult to, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has no relevant affiliations.

This article was originally published on The Conversation.
Read the original article.

[Photo by Mikey, Attribution Licence]

The post Dealing with the happy memories of a disgraced Rolf Harris appeared first on Canberra CityNews.


Because we haven’t forgotten your bad parking needs

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Pictures of people parking badly returns to “CityNews” to brighten and warm your Monday.


First cab off the rank as it were is from Tiny The Cabbie in Weston Creek.

weston creek parking


Regular commenter “GP” has noted that in the Braddon 7/11 X apparently marks a good spot to park.

WP_20140702_002


Meanwhile Rupert of Upper Evatt has a distressing tale from Westfield Belconnen:

This lady swore at me when I took a photo of her parking in a disabled space at westfield belco.

No disabled sticker on the front (I looked as I walked past the car).

She then watched where I parked my car, and parked her falcon behind me so I couldn’t get out for a good 5 minutes or so until the horn honking from other drivers behind her at 5pm on a Friday, got to her!

disabled parking


If you’ve seen someone parked creatively do please take a photo of it and send it to john@citynews.com.au .

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Grattan / Muir’s prepared to help the government if it helps him

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michelle grattan

By Michelle Grattan, University of Canberra

AS senators prepare for tomorrow’s swearing in, Motoring Enthusiast Party senator Ricky Muir’s strong message to the government is that he’s prepared to help it if it helps him.

Muir has a formal alliance with Clive Palmer’s Senate PUPs, but his senior adviser Glenn Druery made it clear today that Muir is seeking to have a positive working relationship with the government.

“We are not here to have a fight,” said Druery, the “preference whisperer” who puts together deals to get micro players elected at upper house elections, including the Senate at the 2013 election. “We are here to get along.

“Help Ricky achieve some good things from time to time – some things he’s interested in – and I believe a good working relationship can be established.

“You are there to do things. Some people call it horse trading. I prefer to call it getting along,” Druery told The Conversation.

Muir (accompanied by Druery) last week had his first meeting with Tony Abbott. After it the Prime Minister described him as “a decent, salt-of-the-earth country Victorian who is going to do his best to make contribution to his state and his country in the Senate”.

Issues on which Muir will be looking for wins include road safety, driver education, and help for displaced car manufacturing workers.

In general, “honey is a much better elixir than vinegar. But there are occasions when a little squirt of vinegar in the face is necessary,” Druery said. There would be issues on which Muir will vote against the government. Although he hasn’t been briefed yet, the crossbench senator is hostile to the Medicare co-payment and the denial of unemployment benefits to people under 30.

Druery warned it would not be appropriate for Muir to be “bullied, harassed or ignored”.

Palmer still has a key balance of power role – when Labor and the Greens are opposed to legislation – even without Muir’s vote. But Muir is considered insurance, especially given the potential unpredictability of Tasmanian PUP Jacqui Lambie (who has described Tony Abbott as a “political psychopath”).

The secretary of the Motoring Enthusiast Party, Keith Littler, has been anxious to emphasise Muir’s closeness to PUP, recently initiating a statement in which Muir said: “Whilst we are prepared to talk with everyone in the government for a best-possible outcome for the motoring community, this shouldn’t be construed as a lack of solidarity with the PUP”.

Muir has put both Littler and Littler’s wife onto his staff.

The new senator’s other staffers include former NSW upper house member Peter Breen, who was helped into his seat in 1999 by Druery’s preference deal. One Muir staffer formerly worked for independent senator Nick Xenophon, another for federal and Victorian Labor MPs.

The government, anxious to deliver as quickly as the new Senate will allow on its pledge to repeal the carbon tax, is set tomorrow to bring the legislation out of a committee, so it can get a vote this week, rather than next.

Palmer confirmed PUP will support the debate being accelerated. “The carbon tax has been discussed for years. People want to get rid of it,” he said today.

In his Sunday message Abbott said the repeal was expected to be voted on this week.

Eric Abetz, the government’s leader in the Senate, said that trying to defer the vote was “the last hurrah of the Labor-Greens majority in the [old] Senate”. The Coalition had said before the election that the very first item of business that it would put to the new parliament was the repeal of the carbon tax. “It therefore is absolutely consistent for us to put it up as the first item for the new Senate.”

Palmer has promised PUP will support the repeal so long as the legislation ensures the savings are passed on in full to consumers.

But after the carbon tax is killed there is likely to be argument eventually about whether in fact the average household has got the full $550 saving promised. Environment Minister Greg Hunt said today: “The average Australian family will receive a $550 reduction over the course of the year, on the advice from Treasury. We are completely confident that that will occur”.

The Palmer show will continue tomorrow when Palmer appears at the National Press Club.

The Conversation

Michelle Grattan does not work for, consult to, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has no relevant affiliations.

This article was originally published on The Conversation.
Read the original article.

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Queanbeyan’s Alexander Eglitis scores a ute at the Stihl Shop!

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ALEXANDER purchased a STIHL grass trimmer from the STIHL store on Canberra Avenue, Fyshwick. While in the store, he entered the draw to win a limited edition VW Amarok Canyon…and won. The car is valued at $30,000.

Alexander said, “I almost didn’t enter the draw but my friend encouraged me to. I’m glad he did, I was going to go to Bunnings but I thought I would drop in to STIHL Fyshwick to get some advice on a grass trimmer.

Frank the store owner said that if I wanted it to last then I should buy a STIHL. It was the best advise I’ve ever been given.”

Frank Morrison, STIHL Fyshwick store owner said “this has been one of the best promotions we have run. There was great interest from our customers who were keen to come in store and make a purchase so they could go into the draw. It was also wonderful to involve other local businesses which we did by partnering with the local Volkswagen dealership. It’s great to see Alexander win. Hopefully he’ll be a loyal customer of our store for life.”

Alexander said that he would be back to get a chainsaw next month when he gets paid!

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Informed argument from buzzfeed as to why Canberra is not great

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BUZZFEED’S Jemima Skelley has been outraged at all the good press Canberra has been receiving lately and attempts to set the record straight.

It’s a shame she’s neither very clever nor funny but if that’s the worst she can come up with we’re doing OK.

Perhaps she lacks a “decidedly hipster underbelly“?

Even the Buzzfeed commentariat seems unimpressed with this effort.

(Link here if you missed it in the opening par)

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Win tickets to ‘Priscilla’s’ 20th birthday screening

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PriscillaToronto

(14.8) Win tickets to 'Priscilla's' 20th birthday party

  • What's to be won?

    To celebrate the 20th anniversary of the movie "The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert", "CityNews" has 10 double passes (valued at $24 each) to the pre-screening birthday party and movie at Dendy Cinemas, on Monday, August 25 (from 5.30pm, for a 6pm film start). There will be prizes for people who dress up, with a best-dressed competition on stage before the film. In 1994 the film won the Oscar for Best Costume Design and cemented several Australian careers including Hugo Weaving and Guy Pearce. To enter, tell us, in 25 words or less, why you'd like to go. Please include your name, address and email details. The judge’s decision will be final.
  • Terms and Conditions

    1. All entrants must be over the age of 18. To enter, log on to citynews.com.au/win and tell us, in 25 words or less, why you'd like to go. Please include your name, address and email details. The judge’s decision will be final. 2. The competition opens on Monday, July 7. 3. The competition closes midday, Monday, August 11. 4. The competition will be judged midday, Monday, August 11. 5. Judging will take place at the offices of CityNews, Level 1, Bailey’s Corner, 143 London Circuit, Canberra ACT. 6. The prize consists of 10 double passes to see "The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert" (valued at $24 each) and attend the pre-screening birthday party at Dendy Cinemas, on Monday, August 25 (from 5.30pm, for a 6pm film start). Winners will be notified by email and listed in the June 19 edition of "CityNews". Prizes can only be collected from the Civic office of "CityNews" and entry is restricted to readers in Canberra and surrounding district. 7. The promoter of the competition is Macquarie Publishing Pty Limited. ABN 23 116 889 813 8. Should any winners be ineligible, or fail to collect the prizes subsequent winners will be judged from the original entries. The winners will be notified by email and details published in the next available edition of "CityNews".

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Kate’s raising funds for kids

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KATE Goodwin, the ACT representative at the national finals of Miss World Australia 2014,  is hosting a “Variety Shopping Extravaganza” fundraising event at the Hellenic Club, Woden, on July 18 2014.

Miss World Australia entrant Kate Goodwin.

Miss World Australia entrant Kate Goodwin.

She says it will feature local businesses coming together under the same roof to provide a night of shopping “plenty of entertainment for all ages”.

The Miss World pageant uses the slogan “Beauty with a Purpose” and raises funds and awareness for children’s charities.

“I was awarded the ‘Beauty with a Purpose’ title for ACT in the preliminary rounds due to my outstanding fundraising efforts for Variety – the children’s charity, which fast tracked me to the national finals.

“Nationals will be held at the end of July in the Hunter Valley, where I will compete in sections including talent, fitness, Q&A, runway and photoshoots.”

Entry to the “Variety Shopping Extravaganza” is $15, at the door, and include a glass of bubbly. There will be raffles and door prizes and the first 200 guests will receive a show bag worth hundreds of dollars. It runs from 6pm to 9.30pm.

 

 

 

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Canberra renewables shine on ’4 Corners’

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LAST night’s “4 Corners” program on the ABC was good run through the issues surrounding renewable energy in Australia.

What was particularly striking was the amount of time the show devoted to Canberra’s energy schemes.

Both the wind turbines around Lake George and the soon to be commissioned Royalla solar farm were very prominent.

I thought Simon Corbell was looking particularly good in his hard hat.

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Macklin / Concentrating on the things that matter

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ONE of the joys of living in Canberra is the sense of community that puts political differences aside to concentrate on the things that matter. Successive governments from both sides of the aisle have kept that community spirit paramount.

Little wonder the OECD recently declared the ACT the best place to live in Australia, if not the world.

And this week we had a lot to celebrate.

Nick Kyrgios’ fantastic performance at Wimbledon – and the family’s delight – really hit home. Nick is one of the new breed of Australian tennis champs – half Malaysian, half Greek and all Canberran. He and Bernard Tomic personify a fascinating break from the Anglo stars of the past, the Hoads, Rosewalls, Newcombes and Hewitts.

And what a happy coincidence that the new $27 million Lyneham sports centre will allow him to relocate his training from Melbourne while setting Canberra up for a Davis Cup tie.

Mohammed Ali and Chief Minister Katy Gallagher at the Ramadan dinner… nice example of community spirit. Photo by Andrew Finch

Mohammed Ali and Chief Minister Katy Gallagher at the Ramadan dinner… nice example of community spirit. Photo by Andrew Finch

CHIEF MINISTER Katy Gallagher’s decision to join Canberra’s Muslim community to break their fast on the fifth day of Ramadan was another nice example of community spirit. While the Middle East was exploding in the flames of sectarian hatred, Muslims originally from India, Pakistan, Malaysia, Indonesia and Turkey attended the event. You can’t get much more Canberran than that.

AND where else would you find a “Gentleman” as a Government Minister? Mick of the eponymous surname was elevated by Ms Gallagher this week with his portfolio Minister for Planning,Community Services, Workplace Safety and Industrial Relations, Children and Young People and Minister for Ageing.

Coincidentally his Tuggeranong electorate, via its community council, declared itself opposed to the light rail project.  It said the tram line would impose an “excessive cost” on nappy valley while the benefits would be a long time coming. Surprise, surprise.

CANBERRA’S schools are among the recipients of Rolf Harris paintings. And after his precipitous fall from grace, most have removed them from the premises. Chapman Primary, for example, has sent theirs back to the ACT Education Department, the nominal owner, to dispose of as they think fit.

Harris is headed for five years nine months in the pokey – if he survives that long – but I suspect the enthusiasm they brought to his prosecution had much to do with the Brits not being able to make the disgusting Jimmy Saville pay for his crimes.

MAYBE our cold winters are another factor in drawing us together. Lots of families introduced their kids to snow at Corin Forest, but it was not all joy and jingle bells; those twin tragedies of the seven-year-old child buried in a snowfall and the snowboarder frozen to death were timely reminders of our human frailty.

GREAT to hear from Mesdames Giulia Jones and Vicki Dunne that they’ll reveal their plan to save Fyshwick’s scarlet women from their fate next month, despite sex worker Elena Jeffreys spurning their efforts. “Sex work is not a political hobby horse for bored politicians,” she cried. “And sex workers are not Dunne or Jones’ rescue project.”

And after they toured the world in their quest! Oh, the ingratitude!

robert@robertmacklin.com

 

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Cartoon / Dose of Dorin

Gardening / Winter joy of hardy hellebores

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Hellebores… totally frost hardy and will multiply over the years or can be dug up and divided in spring.

Hellebores… totally frost hardy and will multiply over the years or can be dug up and divided in spring.

WINTER flowers are always in demand for colour in the garden and none more so than hellebores or “Winter Rose”.

Although no relation, the name is due to its resemblance to old-fashioned roses.

Hellebores have a huge range of pastel colours from soft pinks to purples. Plus they come in single flowers to semi-doubles and full doubles.

They grow best in well-drained soil and ideally planted under deciduous trees or shrubs for shade in summer.

The largest range I have seen in Canberra is at the Heritage Nursery in Yarralumla, where it is one of their winter specialities.

If you have older, scraggly specimens, it is not too late (although I recommend early autumn) to cut the old leaves to ground level. Apply a good organic fertiliser such as Healthy Earth and then mulch to about 50-75mm deep.

They are totally frost hardy and will multiply over the years or can be dug up and divided in spring. They are the ideal plant to combine with herbaceous peonies, often referred to as the “Queen of Flowers”, also now in stock at garden centres.

HERE’S a perfect recommendation for daphne “Eternal Fragrance” from the largest garden society in the world, the UK’s Royal Horticultural Society, which says: “Tolerant of pruning, it can be used as a low hedge, a specimen plant or grown in a container.

“It is one of the best plant introductions in the last 10 years – described as the first ‘bombproof’ daphne. Sun or part shade with a temperature tolerance of -10c to + 40c”.

It is a hardy variety originating from a cross of two daphne from Italy, and ideally suited to our hot summers. It is also available in a pink form, “Spring Pink”.

Berries of Euonymus japonicus… wonderfully coloured berries as seen here in a Chifley garden at this time.

Berries of Euonymus japonicus… wonderfully coloured berries as seen here in a Chifley garden at this time.

EUONYMUS japonicus was used extensively as a hedging plant in the early days of Canberra, when the government clipped your front hedge!

If you want a really dense, sturdy hedge 2m-3m it is worth considering. This evergreen shrub will withstand hard clipping. Its fluffy white flowers appear in late summer, followed by wonderfully coloured berries as seen here in a Chifley garden at this time.

Unlike other plants such as Pyracantha, birds do not eat the berries. Over the years it has lost popularity in favour of quicker-growing plants such asPittosporum, but without the problems of that plant, which can become very scraggly in a short time. It is still readily available at most garden centres.

LAST week I said that quince trees had been grown for hundreds of years. In the “Life of William Dampier”, second discoverer of Australia, in 1704 he captured a Spanish ship off the coast of Panama. Instead of the expected gold, the cargo included bales of linen and wool plus 30 tons of quince marmalade.

DIARY date: The Horticultural Society’s rose-pruning demonstrations will be held on Saturday, July 19, in the Woodfield’s garden at 1 Spence Place, Hughes, and on Sunday, July 20 at the society’s demonstration garden, corner of Battye Street and Weston Lane, Bruce. This will also include fruit-tree pruning. Both run from 1pm to 4pm and all welcome. There is no charge.

Jottings…

• The sweet scented “Lily of the Valley” can be planted now under deciduous trees for summer shade.

• Prune gooseberries, red and white currants to keep an open-centred bush with 8-10 main branches. Prune last year’s growth of the main stems by half.

• Start pruning wisteria branches back to three nodes or leaf joints.

• Prune apples and pears to maintain an open centre of the tree.

• Do not prune or cut back evergreen shrubs during winter.

The post Gardening / Winter joy of hardy hellebores appeared first on Canberra CityNews.

Failed Senate candidate admits to stealing, calls on Canberrans to do likewise

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Steven Bailey ran at last year’s election to represent the ACT in the Senate for Katter’s Australia Party. He is pictured above trading hats with Senator Katter in Parliament House.

He’s a well known playwright and writer and can frequently be seen around Civic.

So it was with some alarm we saw he posted to facebook, and tagged in a who’s who of local public figures, a call to crime.

“As an act of civil disobedience I occasionally swipe something from them [Coles and Woolworths] and give it to a homeless person; and I encourage others to do the same,” Steven wrote.

It’s certainly going to make for an interesting platform should he run for office again.

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$10,000 donation boosts Eisteddfod

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THE Australian National Eisteddfod has received a donation of $10,000 from Dick Smith Foods, it has just been revealed at Sydney’s Wayside Chapel, where the first round of 37 donations was announced today.

Sylvia Tulloch

Sylvia Tulloch

The contribution is part of the “One Million to Charity” campaign, sees $1m donated to charities nationally in 2014.

President of the Eisteddfod, Sylvia Tulloch, says: “With so many large well known charities competing for votes in the Dick Smith initiative, it was a fantastic achievement for our group of smaller but dedicated supporters to win the $10,000 donation to the organisation.”

According to Ms Tulloch, the funds will be used to support events already planned for the remainder of the year. The donation, she said, would not only ease some of the immediate pressures but also allow the organisation to continue with supporting the development and growth of performers, most of them children based in the Canberra region aims is to foster the growth of confidence and self-esteem in performers.

Each year and average of 5000 people perform at Eisteddfod events and receive feedback from experienced specialists in the field.

The first Eisteddfod sections for 2014, Bands & Orchestras, took place in late May. Coming events include Choirs (August 15-16), Singing (August 26-29), Piano (September 3-7) and Speech and Drama (September 8-10). For all details visit nationaleisteddfod.org.au

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