The Local Paper. Lilydale and Yarra Valley Express Edition. Wed., Apr. 21, 2021

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LILYDALE & YARRA VALLEY EXPRESS EDITION Local and Independent. Not associated with any other publication in this area.

Phone: 1800 231 311.

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‘The Local Paper’ is published by Local Media Pty Ltd

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21, 2021

Premier Division starts this Saturday ■ Premier Division football and netball in the AFL Outer East competition starts this Saturday (Apr. 24). In the Premier Division: Beaconsfield v Narre Warren, Doveton v Wandin, OlindaFerny Creek v Upwey-Tecoma, Woori Yallock v Cranvourne. Pakenham has the bye. One Premier League match was played last

Saturday (Apr. 17) as a season curtain raiser. Narre Warren 18.15 (123) defeated OlindaFerny Creek 5.11 (41). In Division One, first round matches started last Saturday (Apr. 17): Berwick Springs 12.16 (88) d Belgrave 9.11 (65), Monbulk 12.5 (87) d Officer 12.9 (81), Mt Evelyn 15.13 (103) d Emerald 7.14 (56), Seville 17.13 (115) d

Gembrook-Cockatoo 10.13 (73). Healesville had the bye. Division One Reserves results: Belgrave 15.10 (100) d Berwick Springs 4.7 (31), Officer 7.10 (52) d Monbulk 4.9 (33), Mt Evelyn 14.99 d Emerald 6.6 (42), Seville 13.11 (89) d Gembrook-Cockatoo 4.5 (29). Division One Under 19: Gembrook-Cockatoo 11.6 (72) d Healesville 10.8 (68), Officer

YARRA RANGES SHIRE GASTRO OUTBREAKS

● Yarra Ranges Shire has the third most gastro outbreaks cases on the outerMelbourne fringe. Health authorities say there have been 15 outbreaks locally, and official Dr Druce Bolam is urging extra care with handwashing and hygiene. See P9

FIREWOOD Murray River Redgum Yes! ... We Deliver. P: 1300 87 87 25 E: yarravalley@ brazzen.com.au

12.10 (82) d Monbulk 1.1 (7), Emerald 12.20 (92) d Mt Evelyn 2.5 (17), Olinda-Ferny Creek 9.9 (63) d Narre Warren White 5.5 (35. Wandin had the bye. Division Two: Yea 14.11 (95) d Broadford 7.8 (50), Powelltown 14.11 (95) d WartburtonMillgrove 11.10 (76), Alexandra 15.11 (101) d Yarra Glen 11.16 (82), Kinglake 12.9 (81) d Yarra Junction 9.13 (67).


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Killingworth Hill Cafe & Whisky Bar 36 Killingworth Rd, Yea Open 11am-6pm Friday-Sunday Gift Vouchers Available

Cosy open fire. Today’s Menu Charcuterie Boards: Your choice of a meat platter, cheese platter, or fish platter all accompanied with fresh home grown and made produce, for example, vegetables, gluten free pesto’s, chutneys, nuts, etc,

RECENTLY AWARDED YEA’S BEST PUB AND BAR BY RESTUARANT GURU

All Products Home-Made. Soups (Winter Only). Tarts, Quiches and Sweets as per Specials Board. Beef and Guinness Pies. Sausage Rolls. Great Range of Cocktails and Mocktails Available. Teas and Coffees Don’t forget our Famous Devonshire Tea We strive for excellence, we do not rest until our best is better We guarantee our products 100%. If unsatisfactory, please advise staff who will replace or refund immediately

Are you arranging a gathering of friends, family or for a club? The team at Killingworth Hill Café & Whisky Bar will happily host your party Why not call us to discuss your requirements and make a booking?

Killingworth Hill Cafe & Whisky Bar Phone: 0455 266 888 www.killingworthhill.com.au

BOOKINGS ESSENTIAL


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The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021 - Page 3

ALPINE RURAL FENCING Alpine Rural Fencing specialises in rural farm and equine fencing, in any application, quality is our 'key', and adaptation to local surroundings our speciality.

DO IT ONCE, DO IT RIGHT Call Kirk on 0447 132 320 anytime to discuss your requirements. Professional, Quality Fencing and Prompt Installation Every Time! Email: kirk@alpineruralfencing.com.au Mobile: 0447 132 320


Page 4 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021

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The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021 - Page 5

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Yea Newsagency 74 High St, Yea Phone: 5797 2196

Bob Cat & Tipper Hire COVID Special at $100 per hour combo. Minimum 4 hours. Excluding materials and tip fees.

J.T.B. Asphalt 0417 548 649


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The Local Paper Community Media Since 1969 Contact Us Phone: 1800 231 311 Email: edit or@L ocalP aper editor@L or@LocalP ocalPaper aper..c om.au Web: w w w.L ocalP aper ww .LocalP ocalPaper aper.. com.au Mail: PO Box 1278, Research, Vic 3095 Our T eam Team Editor: Ash Long Features Editor: Peter Mac Columnis ts: L en Bak er tt Bis settolumnists: Baker er,, Ma Matt BissettJohnson, R o b FFo o e n a n d e rr,, J u l i e Ro Houghton, Mike McColl Jones, Peter Kemp, Aaron Rourke, John Rozentals, J i m S h e r l o c k , TTee d R yyaa n , C h e r y l ood. Thr eadgold, K hreadgold, Keevin TTrrask, G Gaa vin W Wood. Honorary Reviewers: J u l i e t Charles, Martin Curtis, Sherryn Danaher Danaher,, Pet er Gr een, LLyn yn Hurs t, K eeble eter Green, Hurst, Kaa thryn K Keeble eeble,, Beth Klein, Ai Diem Le, Deborah Marinaro, David McLean, Graeme McCoubrie, Maggie Morrison, Jill Page, Elizabeth Semmel. Logistics: S a m F i o r i n i ( A l l D a y Distribution), Maurice Golden, Haydn Gr egson, Gr aeme Ha wk arry Gregson, Graeme Hawk wkee, John PParry arry.. Credit Management: M i c h a e l Conway OAM, Fast Action Debt R ec ov ery eco ery,, 040 04022 142 866. Deadlines Free Classified Ads: 5pm Fridays Paid Classified Ads: 5pm Fridays Display Ads: 5pm Fridays Trades Guide: 5pm Fridays Editorial: 5pm Fridays Sport: 9pm Saturdays Melbournewide REGIONAL DIVISION Dindi Local (Murrindindi): Acheron, Alexandra, Buxton, Castella, Cathkin, Caveat, Cheviot, Dropmore, Eildon, Fawcett, Flowerdale, Ghin Ghin, Glenburn, Gobur eldene Gobur,, Haz Hazeldene eldene,, Highlands, Homewood, Kanumbra, Kerrisdale, Killingworth, Kinglake, Kinglake C e n t rral, al, Kinglak oriella, Kinglakee W Wee sstt , K Koriella, Limestone, Maintongoon, Marysville, Merton, Molesworth, Murrindindi, Narbethong, Pheasant Creek, Rubicon, Ruffy tr eek, TTaggerty aggerty erip Ruffy,, SStr traa th Cr Creek, aggerty,, TTerip Terip hornt on, TToolangi, oolangi, TTrr a w ool, erip,, TThornt hornton, Woods PPoint, oint, Y ar ck and Y ea. Yar arck Yea. Lily dale and Y arr a V alle y Lilydale Yarr arra Valle alley Express Edition: Chirnside Park, Chum Creek, Coldstream, Dixons Creek, Don V alle ernsha w, Glady sdale Valle alleyy, FFernsha ernshaw Gladysdale sdale,, Gruyere, Healesville, Kilsyth, Launching Place, Lilydale, Millgrove, Mooroolbark, Mount Dandenong, Mount Evelyn, Powelltown, Seville, Seville East, Steels Cr eek, TTarr arr a, TToolangi, oolangi, Upper arra, Creek, arraa w arr F erntr ee Gully andin Eas t, W andin erntree Gully,, W Wandin East, Wandin North, W arburt on, W arburt on Eas t, Warburt arburton, Warburt arburton East, Wesburn, W oori Y allock, Y arr Woori Yallock, Yarr arraa Glen, Yarr ellingbo and Y ering. arraa Junction, Y Yellingbo Yering. Mitchell Shire Edition: Beveridge, Broadford, Bylands, Clonbinane, Dysart, Forbes, Glenaroua, Heathcote Junction, Hilldene, Kilmore, Kilmore East, Kobyboyn, Moranding, Northwood, eedy Cr eek, Se ymour P uck apun uckapun apunyyal, R Reedy Creek, Seymour ymour,, Sugarloaf Creek, Sunday Creek, Tallar ook, TTar ar allarook, arcc ombe ombe,, TTrra w ool, TTyyaak, U p p e r P l e n t yy,, W Waa l l a n , W Waa n d o n g , Wa terf or d PPark, ark, Whit eheads Cr eek and erfor ord Whiteheads Creek Willowmavin. • PENINSULA-FRANKSTONGREA TER D ANDENONG GREATER DANDENONG DIVISION Cranbourne Sun Edition: Cranbourne, Devon Meadows, Doveton, Endeavour Hills, Eumemmerring, Hampt on PPark, ark, LLynbr ynbr oook, LLyndhurs yndhurs t, Hampton ynbroook, yndhurst, Pearcedale. Dandenong Advertiser Edition: Bangholme, Dandenong, Dandenong North, Dandenong South, Keysborough, Noble Park, Springvale. Frankston Edition: A s p e n d a l e , Bonbeach, Carrum Downs, Chelsea, Edithvale, Frankston, Frankston North, Frankston South, Karingal, Langwarrin, Langwarrin South, Mentone, Mordialloc, Sandhurst, Seaford, Skye. Mornington Peninsula Post Edition: Arthurs Seat, Moorooduc, Mornington, Mount Eliza, Mount Martha, Safety Beach. Southern Peninsula Edition: Blairgowrie, Boneo, Cape Schanck, Capel Sound, Dromana, McCrae, Portsea, Rosebud, Rye, Sorrento, St Andr oot gar ook. Andreews Beach, TToot ootgar garook. Wes ort E dition: Balnarring, esttern P Port Edition: Baxt er ern, Crib PPoint, oint, Flinders, Baxter er,, Bitt Bittern, Hastings, Main Ridge, Merricks, Point Leo, Red Hill, Red Hill South, Shoreham, Somers, Somerville oint, TTyyabb Somerville,, SStton onyy PPoint, abb.. • SOUTHERN CRO S S WEEKL Y CROS WEEKLY DIVISION Bayside Times Edition: Beaumaris, Black Rock, Brighton, Brighton East, Chelt enham, Cr omer on, Cheltenham, Cromer omer,, Dendy Dendy,, Hampt Hampton, Hampton East, Highett, Moorabbin and Sandringham. Bor oondar a W eekly E dition: Boroondar oondara Weekly Edition: Camberwell, Glen Iris, Glenferrie South, Hawthorn, Hawthorn East. Glen Eira Standard Edition: Bentleigh, Bentleigh East, Brighton East, Carnegie, Caulfield, Caulfield East, Caulfield North, Caulfield South, Coatesville, Elsternwick, Gardenvale, G l e n H u n t l yy,, H o p e tto oun G dens, Gaa rrd McKinnon, Murrumbeena, Ormond, Patterson and St Kilda East. Kingston Standard Edition: Braeside, Cheltenham, Clarinda,

Melbournewide Clayton South, Dingley Village, Heatherton, Highett, Mentone, Moorabbin, Moorabbin Airport, Parkdale, Patterson Lakes and Waterw erwaays. Port Phillip Times Edition: Albert P ark, Balacla ood, G ar den City Balaclavv a, Elw Elwood, Gar arden City,, Middle Park, Port Melbourne, Ripponlea, South Melbourne, Southbank, St Kilda, St Kilda East, St Kilda W es t, W indsor Windsor indsor.. Wes est, S t onningt on W eekly E dition: onnington Weekly Edition: Armadale, Glen Iris, Hawksburn, Kooyong, Malvern, Malvern East, Pr ahr an, South Y arr a, TToor oor ak, W indsor Prahr ahran, Yarr arra, oorak, Windsor indsor.. Yarr aT imes E dition: Abbotsf or d, arra Times Edition: Abbotsfor ord, Burnle ollingw ood, Cr emorne Burnleyy, C Collingw ollingwood, Cremorne emorne,, Richmond. • NORTHERN DIVISION Diamond V alle y Ne ws E dition Valle alley New Edition (Nillumbik): Briar Hill, Diamond Creek, Eltham, Eltham North, Greensborough, Lower Plenty and Yarr amba t. arramba ambat. Heidelberger Edition (Banyule): Bellfield, Darebin, Eaglemont, East Ivanhoe, Heidelberg, Heidelberg Heights, Ivanhoe, Macleod, Rosanna, Vie wbank, W es g, iewbank, Waa tsonia, W Wes estt Heidelber Heidelberg, Yallambie allambie.. Northcote Budget Edition: Alphington, Clifton Hill, Collingwood, C rro o x tton, on, Dennis, FFairfield, airfield, Fitzr o y, Fitzro Fitzr oy North, Northc ot hornbury Fitzro Northcot otee , TThornbury hornbury,, Wes esttgarth. Preston Post/Reservoir Times es eserv oir Edition : Eas Eastt Pr Pres estton, Eas Eastt R Reserv eservoir oir,, Keon PPark, ark, Pr es egent, Kingsbury Pres estton, R Regent, Kingsbury,, Reserv oir es es es eservoir oir,, Ruth Ruthvven, W Wes estt Pr Pres estton, W Wes estt Reservoir Whittlesea Post Edition : Bundoor a, Epping, Lalor ark, Bundoora, Lalor,, Mill PPark, Thomastown. • NORTH-WEST DIVISION Brimbank Messenger Edition: Alban deer ooklyn Albanvv ale ale,, Albion, Ar Ardeer deer,, Br Brooklyn (part), Cairnlea, Calder Park, Deer Park, Delahe Delaheyy, Derrimut, Hillside (part), Kealba, K eilor eilor Do wns, K eilor Eas Keilor eilor,, K Keilor Downs, Keilor Eastt (part), Keilor Lodge, Keilor North, Keilor Park, Kings Park, St Albans, Sunshine, Sunshine North, Sunshine W Wee sstt , S y d e n h a m , TTaa y l o r s L a kkee s a n d Tullamarine ullamarine.. Hobsons Bay Edition: A l t o n a , Altona Meadows, Altona North, Brooklyn, Laverton, Newport, Seabrook, Seaholme, South Kingsville, Spotswood, Williamstown and Williamstown North. Hume Observer Edition: Attwood, Broadmeadows, Campbellfield, Clarkefield, Coolaroo, Craigieburn, Dallas, Diggers R Ree sstt , FFaa w k n e rr,, Gladstone Park, Greenvale, Jacana, w Heights, K a l kkallo allo eilor allo,, K Keilor eilor,, Meado Meadow Melbourne Airport, Mickleham, Oaklands Junction, Roxburgh Park, Somert on, TTullamarine ullamarine es tmeado ws, ullamarine,, W Wes estmeado tmeadow Somerton, W ildw ood and Y ur ok ildwood Yur urok okee . Maribyrnong Edition: Braybrook, F ootscr ville ootscraa y, Kings Kingsville ville,, Maids Maidstt one one,, Marib yrnong, Seddon, TTott ott enham, W es estt Maribyrnong, ottenham, Wes Footscr arr ootscraay and Y Yarr arraa ville ville.. Moonee V alle y G az ett e E dition: Valle alley Gaz azett ette Edition: Aberf eldie es t, Asc ot V ale Aberfeldie eldie,, Airport W Wes est, Ascot Vale ale,, Avondale Heights, Es sendon, Es sendon Essendon, Essendon North, Es sendon W es t, Flemingt on, Essendon Wes est, Flemington, Keilor East, Moonee Ponds, Niddrie, Strathmore, Strathmore Heights and or Travanc ancor oree. Moreland Courier Edition: Batman, Brunswick, Brunswick East, Bruns wick W t, C obur g, C obur g Brunswick Wee sst, Cobur oburg, Cobur oburg North, FFaawkner oy North, Glenr oy, Glenro wkner,, Fitzr Fitzro Gowanbrae, Hadfield, Merlynston, Moreland, Oak Park, Parkville, Pascoe V a l ee,, PPaa s cco oe V Vaa l e S o u t h a n d Tullamarine ullamarine.. Sunbury Regional News Edition: Bulla, Sunbury • EASTERN DIVISION Knox-Sherbrooke News Editonia, FFerntr erntr ee Gully ion: Ba Bayyswater er,, Bor Boronia, erntree Gully,, K n ooxx f i e l d , LLyy s t e r f i e l d , R o w v i l l ee,, Ro Sas safr as, Sc or esb tudfield, TThe he Sassafr safras, Scor oresb esbyy, SStudfield, Basin, Upper FFerntr erntr ee Gully antirna, erntree Gully,, W Wantirna, Wantirna South. Manningham News Edition: Bulleen, Doncas t, Doncastt er er,, Doncas Doncastt er Eas East, Donvale, Nunawading, Park Orchards, Ringw o o d N o r t h , TTee m p l e sstt o w e , wo Temples o w e rr,, W andyt emplestt o w e LLo Waa r rrandyt andytee , Warr andyt onga PPark. ark. arrandyt andytee South, W Wonga Maroondah Mail Edition: Bayswater North, Croydon, Croydon Hills, Croydon North, Croydon South, Heathmont, Kilsyth, Kilsyth South, Park Orchards, Ringwood, Ringwood East, Ringw ood North, V ermont, W arr an wood Ringwood Vermont, Warr arran anw and W onga PPark. ark. Wonga Monash Gazette Edition: Ashwood, Burwood, Chadstone, Cla yt on, Glen W ely Clayt yton, Waa ver erely ely,, Hughesdale Hughesdale,, H u n t i n g d a l ee,, M o u n t W Waa v e r l eeyy , Mulgrave, Notting Hill, Oakleigh, Oakleigh East, Oakleigh South, Pinewood, Syndal and Wheelers Hill. Progress News Edition: Ashburton, Balwyn, Balwyn North, Burw ood, Cant erbury t, Burwood, Canterbury erbury,, K Keew, K Kee w Eas East, Mont Albert, Surrey Hills. Whitehorse Gazette Edition: Blackburn, Blackburn North, Blackburn South, Box Hill, Box Hill North, Box Hill South, Burwood, Burwood East, Forest Hill, Mitcham, Mont Albert, Mont Albert North, Nunawading, Surrey Hills, Vermont, V ermont South. Vermont


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Local Briefs Local People held over ■ The Local People four-page section has been held over from this edition. Editor Ash Long suffered a serious fall on Friday afternoon (Apr. 16) and is on medical leave.

The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021 - Page 9

Yea golfers win at Hidden Valley

Mernda man nabbed ■ State Highway Patrol Police have impounded a vehicle travelling 122kmh over the speed limit early Saturday morning (Apr. 17) in Bundoora. The BMW sedan was detected travelling at an alleged speed of 222km/h in a 100kmh zone on the Metropolitan Ring Road about 1am. Police attempted to intercept the vehicle, the driver initially failing to stop, but was pulled over in a nearby industrial estate. The 24-year-old Mernda man has had his car impounded for 30 days at a cost of $884 and will be charged on summons with numerous traffic offences.

C’burn bike blitz

■ Illegal dirt bike riders in the Craigieburn area have been put on notice, with Police charging 18 people as part of an ongoing operation in the area. In support of Operation Achilles, the statewide police response to hoon driving incidents, Craigieburn Police have again ramped up their efforts to focus on dangerous dirt bike riders. Police last week arrested six offenders and issued a total of 37 fines. This includes: ■ 7 x fail to obey red lights ■ 5 x use mobile phone while driving ■ 4 x speeding offences ■ 4 x disobey signs/signals ■ 2 x unregistered vehicles ■ 2 x unlicensed drivers ■ 2 x learner driver licence offences ■ 1 x unroadworthy vehicle ■ 1 x seatbelt offences Other offences Police were able to detect as part of the operation included trafficking drug of dependence, possession drug of dependence, obtain property by deception and theft. The operation is regularly run by Craigieburn Police, and since the start of the year a total of 18 people have been charged and 65 fines have been issued. In January, Police impounded six motorcycles involved in the illegal activity in the area.

Mitchell engages ■ During April and early May Mitchell Shire Council is inviting the public to say what they'd like to see in the municipality in the next 30 years. The Council plans to meet this week with morning commuters at Seymour, Wallan and Wandong railway stations.

● Hidden Valley Bowl Winners 2021 were Yea Golf Club representatives Meryl Connell, Jan Wealands and Adrianne Anglin.

Local News

No date for Shire office opening ■ Murrindindi Shire Council is unable to provide a re-opening date for its Alexandra head office to the public. In answer to questions from The Local Paper, Murrindindi Shire Council acknowledged there was no public access to the administration offices in Perkins St, Alexandra. “Customer services will continue to operate from [the library] in Alexandra until a longerterm decision is made, said a statement issued to The Local Paper. “All of Council's services are fully operational and accessible by the public and have been for many months. “All of our Library and Customer Service Centres are operating in Alexandra, Yea and Kinglake, and via our mobile service at eight stops around the Shire. ● Continued on Page 14

Burrinja opened

Name released

Rodeo success

Gender equality ■ Some 50 per cent of women in Murrindindi Shire earn less than the minimum wage compared with 35 per cent of men. This leads to lower economic security for women, pay inequity, less super, and more social isolation, the Council was told.

■ There were six ladies playing a par event on Saturday at Yea. Winner with square was Jan Wealands with Di Holdsworth second with -2 and Vicki Clements third with -3. Sunday saw the third round of Men’s Pennant played at Marysville with Yea playing Alexandra. Yea won 3-2 with Greg Clements, Jonathon Fisher and Rick Wills winning their matches. This puts Yea on top with 2½ out of three rounds played. The last round is in two weeks at Eildon versus Seymour. - Alan Pell

T’town impound

■ Bells Civil Excavations Pty Ltd has won the Murrindindi Shire Council contract for the Kinglake Streetscape works for the lump sum price of $1,336,387.80 . ■ Murrindindi Shire Councillor Damien Gallagher has spoken of the success of the Alexandra Pro Rodeo which attracted 3800 patrons. “ I was very proud of the manner in which the community welcomed visitors to our town and our region. The sponsors, volunteers, and the volunteer committee under the committed leadership of Andrew Embling, are to be congratulated for their preparations and for running one of Victoria’s premier rodeo events,” Cr Gallagher said.

Local Briefs Jan wins par

■ Greensborough Highway Patrol have impounded a vehicle after it was detected allegedly speeding in Thomastown on Monday morning (Apr. 19). Officers observed the silver Nissan Pulsar travelling erratically on Cooper St in Epping just after 2am. The 19-year-old driver continued travelling onto the Metropolitan Ring Road where the speed had been reduced to 40km due to ongoing road works. The Lalor man was detected travelling at an alleged speed of 95km in a 40km zone. Police intercepted the car and ascertained the 19-year-old was unlicensed. His vehicle was impounded for 30 days at a cost of $896.10. The man is expected to be charged on summons with unlicensed driving and exceed speed limit.

Meeting at Yea ■ Next week’s Murrindindi Shire meeting is listed at the Council’s website as being held at Yea at 6pm on Wednesday (April 28). The agenda for the meeting is expected to published at the Council’s website on Friday afternoon (Apr. 23), prior to the ANZAC weekend.

Resheeting roads

■ Murrindindi Shire Council’s $1.3 million programs to re-sheet roads in 2021 includes the following locations: ■ Bushy Park Estate Road, Kinglake ■ Captains Creek Road, Glenburn ■ Creekside Drive, Flowerdale ■ Guymer Road, Homewood ■ King Parrot Court, Flowerdale ■ Kookaburra Court, Flowerdale ■ McMahons Road, Kinglake ■ Murrays Road, Kinglake ■ Old Spring Valley Road, Flowerdale ■ Rae Street, Kinglake West ■ Rosella Court, Flowerdale ■ Ryan Road, Kinglake West ■ Spring Valley Road, Flowerdale ■ Tooheys Road, Pheasant Creek ■ Unnamed Road (off Whittlesea-Yea Rd), Kinglake West ■ Upper King Parrot Creek Road, Flowerdale ■ Webbs Lane, Taggerty ■ Whittlesea-Yea Road Service Road, Kinglake West.

ANZAC services ■ Details of ANZAC Day observances in Murrindindi Shire are included in a Council advertisement in this week’s edition of The Local Paper. ● Holly DeMaria, Cr Fiona McAllister, James Merlino and Gareth Hart with the plaque for the newly-redeveloped Burrinja Cultural Centre on Friday (Apr. 16). ■ The newly-redeveloped Burrinja Cultural munity members. The $3 million redevelopment Centre at Tecoma was officially opened on Fri- project started in 2019, with a goal of improving day (Apr. 16) following a multi-million dollar foyer and circulation spaces, artist studios, the building project to improve artist, gallery and kitchen/cafe and social space and the galleries social spaces. at the venue. Acting Premier James Merlino; and Yarra Works were completed mid-2020, but an Ranges Mayor Cr Fiona McAllister, opened opening event was not able to be held due to the the venue with Wurundjeri woman Julie COVID-19 restrictions on social gatherings at Coombes, Burrinja Creative Director and CEO; the time. Gareth Hart, President of the Burrinja Board, The project was funded with the support of Holly DeMaria and a group of artists and com- the State Government's GrowingSuburbs Fund.

Rates up 1.5%

■ Whittlesea Council proposes to increase annual rates by the maximum 1.5 per cent allowed by the Victorian State Government. Major projects for the year ahead include: ■ $1.89 million pavilion upgrade at H.R. Uren Reserve ■ $2 million to transform Quarry Hills Regional Park into a major open space facility ■ $3.43 million for the construction of the Wollert East Community Activity Centre ■ $2.79 million upgrade of McLeans Road Kindergarten ■ $0.9 mil.upgradeof Whittlesea Skate Park.


Page 10 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021

Where to pick up your free copy of The Local Paper ■ ALEXANDRA. Alexandra Newsagency. 82-84 Grant St. ■ ALEXANDRA. Corner Hotel. 65 Grant St. ■ ALEXANDRA. Endeavour Alexandra (BP). 10 Downey St. ■ ALEXANDRA. Foodworks. 102 Grant St. ■ ALEXANDRA. Mount Pleasant Hotel. 90 Grant St. ■ ALEXANDRA. Nutrien Harcourts. 56 Grant St. ■ ALEXANDRA. Shamrock Hotel. 80 Grant St. ■ ALEXANDRA. Simpson’s Fuel (Caltex). 25 Aitken St. ■ ALEXANDRA. Totally Trout. 42 Downey St. ■ BUXTON. Blue Igloo Roadhouse. 2200 Maroondah Hwy. ■ BUXTON. Buxton Hotel. 2192 Maroondah Hwy. ■ BUXTON. Shell Buxton. 2093 Maroondah Hwy. ■ DIAMOND CREEK. Diamond Creek Newsagency. Shop 62a Main Rd, Diamond Creek Plaza. ■ DOREEN. Doreen General Store. 920 Yan Yean Rd. ■ EILDON. Foodworks. 18 Main St. ■ ELTHAM. Eltham Newsagency. 2/963 Main Rd. ■ EPPING. APCO Service Station. Cnr McDonalds Rd and High St. ■ EPPING. Epping RSL. Harvest Home Rd. ■ FLOWERDALE. Flowerdale Community House. 36 Silver Creek Rd. ■ FLOWERDALE. Flowerdale Hotel. 3325 Whittlesea-Yea Rd. ■ FLOWERDALE. Hazeldene General Store. 6 Curlings Rd. ■ GLENBURN. Glenburn Roadhouse. 3883 Melba Hwy. ■ HURSTBRIDGE. Hurstbridge Newsagency. 900 Main Hustbridge Rd. ■ KANGAROO GROUND. Kangaroo Ground General Store. 280 Eltham-Yarra Glen Rd. ■ KINGLAKE. Cafe. WhittleseaKinglake Rd. ■ KINGLAKE. Foodworks. 12 Whittlesea-Kinglake Rd. ■ KINGLAKE. Kinglake Pub. 28 Whittlesea-Kinglake Rd. ■ KINGLAKE. United Service Station. 2 Glenburn-Kinglake Rd. ■ LAURIMAR. Laurimar Newsagency. 95 Hazel Glen Dr. ■ MANSFIELD. Foodworks. 119 High St. ■ MARYSVILLE. Foodworks. 40A Darwin St. ■ MERNDA. Mernda Villages Post Office. 50 Mernda Village Dr. ■ MOLESWORTH. Molesworth Store. 4353 Goulburn Valley Hwy. ■ NARBETHONG. Black Spur Inn. 436 Maroondah Hwy. ■ NARBETHONG. Black Spur Roadhouse. 264 Maroondah Hwy. ■ PANTON HILL. Panton Hill General Store. 586 Kangaroo Ground-St Andrews Rd. ■ PANTON HILL. Panton Hill Hotel. 633 Kangaroo Ground-St Andrews Rd. ■ PHEASANT CREEK. Flying Tarts Cafe. 888 WhittleseaKinglake Rd. ■ PHEASANT CREEK. Pheasant Creek Store. 884 Whittlesea-Kinglake Rd. ■ RESEARCH. Research Post Office. 1546 Main Rd. ■ SMITHS GULLY. Smiths Gully General Store. 914 Kangaroo Ground-St Andrews Rd. ■ SOUTH MORANG. Milk Bar. 15 Gorge Rd. ■ ST ANDREWS. St Andrews General Store. 10 Caledonia St. ■ ST ANDREWS. St Andrews Hotel. 79 Burns St. ■ STRATH CREEK. Strath Creek Post Office. 8 Glover Rd. ■ TAGGERTY. Taggerty General Store. 26 Taggerty-Thornton Rd. ■ THORNTON. 4 Ways Diner. 1369 Taggerty-Thornton Rd. ■ THORNTON. Rubicon Hotel. 1362 Taggerty-Thornton Rd.

■ THORNTON. Thornton General Store. 1365 TaggertyThornton Rd. ■ WATTLE GLEN. Peppers Paddock General Store. 13 Kangaroo Ground-Wattle Glen Rd. ■ WHITTLESEA. Champions IGA Supermarket. 2/16 Church St. ■ WHITTLESEA. El Azar Milk Bar. 13 Church St. ■ WHITTLESEA. Royal Mail Hotel. 29 Beech St. ■ WHITTLESEA. Whittlesea Bowls Club. 101 Church St. ■ WHITTLESEA. Whittlesea Court House. 74 Church St. ■ WHITTLESEA. Whittlesea NewsXpress. 45 Church St. ■ WOLLERT. Wollert General Store. 491 Epping Rd. ■ YARCK. Buck’s Country Bakehouse. 6585 Maroondah Hwy. ■ YARCK. Giddy Goat Cafe. 6606 Maroondah Hwy. ■ YARCK. Yarck Hotel. Maroondah Hwy. ■ YEA. Amble Inn Cafe. 24 High St. ■ YEA. Country Club Hotel. 18 High St. ■ YEA. Endeavour Petroleum (BP). 31 High St. ■ YEA. Foodworks. 10 High St. ■ YEA. Giddy Coat Cafe. 94 High St. ■ YEA. Grand Central Hotel. 64 High St. ■ YEA. Marmalades. 20 High St. ■ YEA. Mint and Jam. 46 High St. ■ YEA. Nutrien Harcourts. 52 High St. ■ YEA. Peppercorn Hotel. 21 Station St. ■ YEA. Provender Bakery. 56 High St. ■ YEA. Rendezvous In Yea. 10 High St. ■ YEA. Royal Mail Hotel. 88 High St. ■ YEA. Yea Bakery. 44 High St. ■ YEA. Yea Newsagency. 74 High St. ■ YEA. Yea Take-Away. 68 High St.

Lilydale and Yarra Valley Express Edition

■ COLDSTREAM. Coldstream Post Office/Newsagency. The Lodge Shopping Centre. 670-672 Maroondah Hwy. ■ CROYDON NORTH. Croydon North Newsagency. 5 Exeter Rd. ■ HEALESVILLE. BP. 66 Maroondah Hwy. ■ HEALESVILLE. Coles Express. 123 Maroondah Hwy. ■ HEALESVILLE. Grand Hotel. 270 Maroondah Hwy. ■ HEALESVILLE. Healesville Newsagency. 195 Maroondah Hwy. ■ HEALESVILLE. Tobacco Station/Tatts. Shop 11, Healesville Walk. ■ LAUNCHING PLACE. Launching Place General Store. 2200 Warburton Hwy. ■ LAUNCHING PLACE. Home Hotel. 2170 Warburton Hwy. ■ LILYDALE. Lilydale Newsagency. 237 Main St. ■ MILLGROVE. Licensed Grocery. 3043 Warburton Hwy. ■ MOUNT EVELYN. Mount Evelyn Newsagency. 1A Wray Cres. ■ RINGWOOD. Burnt Bridge Newsagency. 434 Maroondah Hwy. ■ SEVILLE. Wooworths Seville. 568 Warburton Hwy. ■ WANDIN. Wandin Newsagency. 18/2 Union Rd. ■ WARBURTON. Bakery. 3415 Warburton Hwy. ■ WARRANDYTE. Grand Hotel. 140 Yarra St. ■ WARRANDYTE. Quinton’s Supa IGA Supermarket. 1/402 Warrandyte Rd.

■ WARRANDYTE. Warrandyte Newsagency/Post Office. 100 Melbourne Hill Rd. ■ WESBURN. Hotel. 2882 Warburton Hwy. ■ WONGA PARK. IGA Xpress. 70 Jumping Creek Rd. ■ WOORI YALLOCK. Hillcrest Little Store. 1745 Warburton Hwy. ■ WOORI YALLOCK. Woori Yallock Newsagency. Shop 4,1585 Warburton Hwy. ■ YARRA GLEN. IGA Supermarket. 1/38 Bell St. ■ YARRA GLEN. Yarra Glen Newsagency. 32 Bell St. ■ YARRA JUNCTION. Yarra Junction Newsagency. 2454 Warburton Hwy.

Mitchell Shire Edition

■ BEVERIDGE. Beveridge Post Office. Lot 1 Old Hume Hwy. ■ BROADFORD. Broadford Corner Store. 89 High St. ■ BROADFORD. Broadford Hotel. 100 High St. ■ BROADFORD. Broadford Newsagency. 67 High St. ■ BROADFORD. Broadford Post Office. 123 High St. ■ BROADFORD. Broadford Service Station. 165 High St. ■ BROADFORD. Commercial Hotel. 31 High St. ■ BROADFORD. High Street Bakery. 67A High St. ■ BROADFORD. IGA Supermarket. 65 High St. ■ BROADFORD. Stuty’s Bakehouse. 91-93 High St. ■ DONNYBROOK. Donnybrook Hotel. 825 Donnybrook Rd. ■ DONNYBROOK. Donnybrook Post Office. 810 Donnybrook Rd. ■ KILMORE. BP. 102 Sydney St. ■ KILMORE. Kemp’s Bakery. 65 Sydney St. ■ KILMORE. Kilmore Bakery. 54 Sydney St. ■ KILMORE. Kilmore Newsagency. 41 Sydney St. ■ KILMORE. Red Lion Hotel. 29-31 Sydney St. ■ KILMORE. Royal Oak Hotel. 29-31 Sydney St. ■ KILMORE. United Service Station. 127-145 Powlett St. ■ SEYMOUR. IGA O’Keefe’s. 10/115 Anzac Ave. ■ SEYMOUR. Liberty Seymour. 37-39 Emily St. ■ SEYMOUR. Seymour NewsXpress. 66 Station St. ■ SEYMOUR. Seymour South Post and Lotto. 75 Anzac Ave. ■ SEYMOUR. Prince of Wales Hotel. 48 Emily St. ■ SEYMOUR. Royal Hotel. 26 Emily St. ■ SEYMOUR. Terminus Hotel. 26 Station St. ■ SEYMOUR. Top Shop. Cnr Anzac Ave and Delatite Rd. ■ TALLAROOK. Tallarook General Store. 36 Main Rd. ■ TALLAROOK. Tallarook Hotel. 15 Main Rd. ■ TRAWOOL. Trawool Estate/ Hotel. 8150 Goulburn Valley Hwy. ■ WALLAN. United Service Station. 11-14 High St. ■ WALLAN. Wallan News and Lotto. Shop 6, 55 High St. ■ WALLAN EAST. New Rattlers Inn. Station St. ■ WANDONG. Caltex Star Mart. 3272 Epping-Kilmore Rd. ■ WANDONG. Dundee’s Fish and Cips. 3272 Epping-Kilmore Rd. ■ WANDONG. IGA Supermarket. 3272 Epping-Kilmore Rd. ■ WANDONG. Wandong Post News and Tatts. 3272 EppingKilmore Rd. ■ WANDONG. Kemp’s Wandong Bakery. 372 EppingKilmore Rd. ■ WANDONG. Magpie and Stump Hotel. 3313 EppingKilmore Rd.

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Court Lists Seymourd Magistrates’ Court Plaintiff / Informant / Applicant vs Defendant / Accused / Respondent. Information Division. Criminal Case Listings Thurssday, April 22 Victoria Police - Wills, S (38147) v Angelico, Rob. Uni-Kilmore Victoria Police - Malane, J (36750)v Ash, Jarryd Wayne. Uni-Nagambie Victoria Police - Maynard, E (38468) v Bahnan, John. Uni-Wallan Victoria Police - Fidler, T (41595) v Bell, Dean. Dtu-Seymour Victoria Police - Edwards, P (42776) v Bell, Dean. Uni-Seymour Victoria Police - Crossing, J (42422) v Bell, Dean. Uni-Seymour Victoria Police - Bougoure-Latchford, H (43770) v Bell, Dean John. Uni-Mordialloc Community Corrections Centre - Kandell, E v Benmasaud, Nathan Timothy. Seymour Community Correction Centre Victoria Police - Pezzimenti, P (32040) v Bettridge, Anthony. Highway Patrol-Seymour Victoria Police - Chang, S (43176) v Boden, Adian Glenn. Mitchell Victoria Police - Fabbo, D (42701) v Bourne, Daniel Mark. Uni-Seymour Victoria Police - Malone, P (44935) v Bullard, Glenn. Uni-Seymour Victoria Police - Weedon, D (43502) v Cresswell, Slade. Uni-Kilmore Victoria Police - Wilkins, A (35964) v Crooks, Ebony. Uni-Kinglake Victoria Police - Thomas, S (40419) v El Wazi, Omar. Ciu-Mitchell Victoria Police - Yates, C (42281) v Garrett, Liam Mitchell. Uni-Kilmore Victoria Police - Donohue, B (41483) v Grant, Aaron. Socit-Seymour Victoria Police - Crossing, J (42422) v Hannon, Bailey. Uni-Seymour Victoria Police - Bortolotto, C (40740) v Harrington, Jason. Mitchell Victoria Police - Voisey, A (41594) v Harvey, Luke Alan. Criminal Proceeds Squad Victoria Police - Houguet, B (40313) v Hepworth-Joyce, Douglas. Uni-Wallan Victoria Police - Porter, I (33403) v Hodgson, Riley Michael. Ciu-Mitchell Victoria Police - Crossing, J (42422) v Hore, Andrew. Dtu-Seymour Victoria Police - Bourne, G (44387) v Ismail, Deniz. Uni-Kilmore Victoria Police - Basse, E (41359) v Isse, Jabil. Uni-Seymour Victoria Police - Turco, Z (44303) v Johnstone, Krissy. Uni-Seymour Victoria Police - Tait, W (37033) v KeamyQuirk, Caleb. Uni-Nagambie Victoria Police - Lock, M (42446) v Keep, Chantelle. Highway Patrol-Seymour Victoria Police - Derrett, R (33398)v Kilby, Shane. Dtu-Seymour Victoria Police - Wells, B (37438) v Laurent, Andrew. Highway Patrol-Seymour Victoria Police - Yates, C (42281) v Maliku, Zini. Uni-Kilmore Victoria Police - Evans, R (41791) v Manns, Thomas. Uni-Wallan Victoria Police - Hall-Poulios, D (40888) v Manns, Thomas. Highway Patrol-Fawkner Victoria Police - Maqbool, E (43456) v Mcdonald, Colin. Uni-Seymour Victoria Police - Wright, A (31459) v Meldrum, Christopher. Highway PatrolSeymour Victoria Police - Basse, E (41359) v Mohamed, Hassan. Uni-Seymour Victoria Police - Pezzimenti, P (32040) v Moore, Joanne Lorraine. Highway PatrolSeymour Victoria Police - Voisey, A (41594) v Morrow, Karly. Uni-Seymour Victoria Police - Duff, D (35543) v Morrow, Karly. Uni-Nagambie Victoria Police - Lock, M (42446) v Morrow, Karly Rose. Uni-Seymour Victoria Police - Wilson, J (30444) v Nash, Trevor. Traffic Camera Office Victoria Police - Coghill, C (43306)v Orr, Andrew. Uni-Wallan Victoria Police - Dangal, A (42686)v Pardo, Frankie. Uni-Wallan Victoria Police - Hanks, J (43723) v Pardo, Frankie. Uni-Kilmore Victoria Police - Patane, H (43503)v Pardo, Frankie. Uni-Kilmore Victoria Police - Bourne, G (44387) v Pardo, Frankie. Uni-Kilmore ● Turn To Page 11

The Whip Our Spy in Parliament

Merlino grows a pair of spectacles

● James Merlino, Acting Premier ■ Acting Premier James Merlino has a new look, with an impressive pair of spectacles that make him look quite studious. It’s an interesting move given that Premier Daniel Andrews’s minders did what they could to have Dan ditch his glasses. Dan’s look was never helped by a lazy eye. But Dan has bigger problems after his serious fall on the Mornington Peninsula. The political rumour mill is running wild around Mr Andrews - and his longer-term future as head of Victoria.

Aide moves on

■ The Premier and Acting Premier have shared another problem. "A former ministerial adviser in the Andrews Government has reported her former partner – a senior adviser in the Premier’s office – to Police following years of alleged domestic abuse," reported Annika Smethurst and Paul Sakkal in The Age. “In her police statement she detailed allegations of escalating physical and psychological abuse by the man throughout their years-long relationship, culminating in an attempt in December to strangle her during which she feared she would die. "The Age has put the claims to the man, who abruptly left his role in Premier Daniel Andrews’s office in recent weeks after the government was made aware of the woman’s allegations, but he declined to comment,” the newspaper said.

Back at Spring St

■ State politicians are having a break from their State Parliamentary sitting duties during April, with no Assembly or Council dates. The MLAs and MLCs are due to be back at Spring St for sitting days on May 4-5-6.

Spent convictions ■ Samantha Ratnam, Green MLC, made this comment in Parliament: “ I have seen much talk recently in the media about the need to encourage new talent and diversity into our parliaments, so perhaps it is well time to consider the sobering fact that our laws regarding disclosure of criminal records in our constitution would have prevented a Mandela, a Gandhi or a Nehru not only from serving in this Parliament but very likely also from being able to serve food in a restaurant.”

Parliamentary Points

■ Kew MLA Tim Smith appears to have been increasing his schedule of media appearances in recent weeks. What’s doing? ■ Yan Yean MLA Danielle Green drove all the way to Cardinia Shire to get her photo in The Local Paper. ■ Does Yarraville-based MP Cesar Melhem (Labor) do many personal appearances in his western suburbs electorate on weekends? Or does he prefer the farm life?


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LATE NOTICES DEATHS DOWNS - Alan Robert 23.11.1945-18.4.2021 You were always smiling and happy and we are already missing your smile and laugh. - Audrey and Geoff

FUNERALS DOWNS. The service celebrating Alan's life will be held at the Murrindindi Chapel, 21 Johnston St, Alexandra on Friday April 23, at 11am.

Ticks & Crosses

?

Indi MHR Dr Helen Haines says that over “the past few weeks past few weeks I have been meeting with GPs and health services such as Albury Wodonga Health, Mansfield District Hospital and Alpine Health to discuss current and future infrastructure needs. I’ve heard first-hand how the vaccine rollout is progressing and what challenges are being faced.”

After waiting an entire season due to COVID-19 restrictions, the Broadford sporting community finally flicked the switch on four newly installed 30-metre light towers at Harley Hammond Reserve Oval. Mitchell Shire Mayor Cr Rhonda Sanderson and Cr Bill Chisholm joined the Broadford Football Netball Club for their season launch on Thursday night (Apr. 15) to see the oval under lights. Each light tower houses four LED lamps that can be set to 50 lux for training and 100 lux for competition. These are the current Australian standards for Australian Rules Football at a local level. The lights have the capacity to be upgraded to 150 lux in the future.

A more consistent and modern approach to signs on private land around the City of Whittlesea is the intent of a new local planning policy. The policy requires an amendment to the planning scheme before it can be adopted. If you are a business, school or club that intends to display signs, you are invited to have your say on the policy. Submissions are due by April 30.

Nillumbik Council has allocated $300,000 from a Federal Govern ment Pandemic Recovery grant to improve traffic flow and parking around Marngrook Oval which will also help ease the parking strain for netballers just across the pedestrian bridge. The nearby netball court works are funded by almost $2 million from the Victorian Government through the Community Sports Infrastructure Program.

In a boon for community sport in Wallan, Greenhill Reserve will soon be hosting night football and netball matches thanks to the installation of competition-standard lighting on the netball courts and main oval. Yan Yean MLA Danielle Green MP joined by Mitchell Shire Council and community user group representatives to officially flick the switch on the lighting, which is set to benefit the more than 700 players and their families who use Greenhill Reserve. These numbers are set to swell with the new lighting providing the opportunity to expand competitions and accommodate more teams and players. Greenhill Reserve is home to: Wallan Football Netball Club, allan Junior Football Club and Wallan District Cricket Club.

If anyone If anyone can assist with the Alexandra junior football-netball canteen on home games during the season please speak to Melissa Crane and Shona Miljkovic to go on the roster.

The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021 - Page 11

Local News

Gastro outbreaks in Ranges ■ Melbourne’s eastern suburbs are amongst the worst hit with a series of gastro outbreaks, says Bruce Bolam, Victorian Executive Director for Communicable Diseases. There have been 389 outbreaks in childcare so far in 2021, up by more than 150 on a month earlier. Worst hit in the east and south-east are Casey (17 outbreaks), Yarra Ranges (16), Knox (12), Maroondah (12), Boroondara (10), Whitehorse (10), Kingston (8), Monash (8), Cardinia (6), Stonnington (6) and Manningham (5). In Melbourne’s north and north-weat, the number of outbreaks have been: Darebin (14), Hume (11), Moonee Valley (11), Yarra (11), Hobsons Bay (9), Melbourne (8), Brimbank (7), Moreland (7), Nillumbik (7), Whittlesea (6), Maribyrnong (6) and Banyule (4). In the outer north-east, Mitchell Shire has four cases, and Mansfield Shire has two. Dr Bolam said childcare workers, the children and their families all had a role to play in limiting the spread of the virus. He said children needed to be taught and reminded of the need for handwashing, and families needed to keep their children home from early childhood services until after recovery.

● Dr Bruce Bolam, Executive Director for Communicable Disease

‘Witnesses in tears’ ■ “Event operators don’t know what’s going to happen in a week’s time or a month’s time with snap lockdowns and restriction changes. Their confidence is destroyed,” says Eildon MLA Cindy McLeish. “The events sector continues to be one of the hardest hit by the COVID-19 pandemic. They need our urgent support, because they’ve been forgotten by Daniel Andrews.” Ms McLeish made the comments after last week’s Parliamentary Inquiry into the impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on the Tourism and Events Sectors. Ms McLeish said witnesses fought back tears as they described the harrowing circumstances of little or no work over 12 months, and mass job losses while still having bills to pay. “Their confidence has hit an all-time low by the continuous uncertainty created by the

● Cindy McLeish, Eildon MLA Andrews Labor Government’s snap lockdowns and botched handling of COVID19. “Victoria’s events sector has been gutted. Now, the Andrews Labor Government must lift its game to genuinely listen to it and provide real sup-

port. The Liberal Nationals consider that the creation of a new, more focussed ‘Events Victoria’ from within the existing ranks and staffing of Department of Jobs, Precincts and Regions would help to foster more and improved support for this vital sector. “Victoria has one of the most onerous approval processes, forcing event operators to jump through many hoops, adding even more stress at an already difficult time. This process needs to be streamlined more in line with operating models in New South Wales and Queensland. “In addition, the cost of storage of equipment vital to the sector adds an additional burden to already struggling businesses. The government must look to providing support for these costs to preserve and protect the industry over the next six months to ensure long-term survival,” Ms McLeish said.

YV Water seeks efficiencies ■ Yarra Valley Water’s Community Water Efficiency Program is helping community organisations with grants of up to $10,000 available to help save water and money. The program will enable organisations such as community centres and not-for-profit organisations to upgrade their plumbing to save water and redirect money to their work. Yarra Valley Water says the program is a way that it is supporting the health and wellbeing of customers. Organisations that apply for a grant will need to demonstrate how the money will help them to save water and how they will be able to better support their community. Yarra Valley Water Managing Director Pat McCafferty said that the program would help community organisations to identify simple plumbing improvements. “We’re committed to helping the community we serve to thrive, and sometimes it’s the simplest upgrades that can make a huge difference to an organisation’s water bill. “These organisations provide really important services to the community, and it’s great that we can help them save money which can be channelled into the work they do,” Mr McCafferty said.

● Pat McCafferty, Yarra Valley Water

Local Briefs Help for the Yarra

■ The State Government is taking real action to protect the iconic Yarra River, the Birrarung, with stronger, permanent planning protections. Richard Wynne, Minister for Planning, announced permanent planning controls to protect the river and its surrounding lands from Richmond to Warrandyte. The controls will ensure the health and amenity of the Yarra River is safeguarded. The changes lock in permanent landscape and built form controls, including height restrictions to prevent overshadowing, and setbacks to protect the river from inappropriate development. Mandatory height limits of between 6 and 25 metres have been set along the Yarra River between Richmond and Warrandyte and a minimum mandatory setback of 30 metres means no development can occur on the sensitive riverbanks. The setbacks prohibit development close to the river and protect it from overshadowing and tall intrusive buildings. Previously, apartment developments, which were too high, were springing up as close as 15 metres from the banks of the river. The restrictions are based on a detailed landscape assessment of the river corridor across Banyule, Boroondara, Manningham, Nillumbik, Stonnington and Yarra and build on interim protections the Victorian Government implemented four years ago between Richmond and Warrandyte.

U. Yarra revisted

■ Yarra Ranges Council has received a question about whether it would consider reestablishing the Upper Yarra Shire (which was amalgamated into Yarra Ranges Council about 20 years ago). “The responsibilities for creating a new Council falls with the Minister for Local Government to consider,” said a Council statement. “However this is a complex process, which requires establishing a restructuring advisory panel, who would review the proposal and assess the impacts and benefits, including financial sustainability, on all affected Councils and communities. “Council has no plans to advocate for the creation of a new Council at this time. If the Minister determined that such a review would be required, we would provide a considered response to that panel at that time,” the Council representative said. ● From Page 10

Local Court Lists Victoria Police - Bova, L (31851) v Pardo, Frankie. Mitchell Victoria Police - Patane, H (43503) v Pardo, Frankie. Uni-Kilmore Victoria Police - Bennett, N (36915) v Petronio, Jamie. Ciu-Mitchell Victoria Police - Bennett, N (36915) v Porco, Frank. Ciu-Mitchell Victoria Police - Faraci, J (36129) v Robertson, Melina Ann. Highway PatrolGreensborough Victoria Police - Niemann, C (34454) v Roman Ardiles, Christian. Socit-Seymour Victoria Police - Patane, H (43503) v Sargeant, Benjamin. Uni-Kilmore Victoria Police - Hanks, J (43723) v Sargeant, Benjamin. Uni-Kilmore Victoria Police - Siebold, W (33670) v Sargeant, Benjamin Henry. Uni-Kilmore Victoria Police - Bourne, G (44387) v Sargeant, Benjamin Henry. Uni-Kilmore Victoria Police - Wright, A (31459) v Skinner, Paula. Highway Patrol-Seymour Victoria Police - Bennett, N (36915) v Smith, Troy Allan. Ciu-Mitchell Victoria Police - Wills, S (38147) v Spiropoulos, Sara. Uni-Broadford Victoria Police - Edwards, P (42776) v Springall, David. Uni-Seymour Victoria Police - Elliott, C (45668) v Stanford, Donald Keith. Uni-Seymour Victoria Police - Crossing, J (42422) v Stoneman, Bonnie. Uni-Seymour Victoria Police - Tait, W (37033) v Trotman, Courtney. Uni-Nagambie Victoria Police - Wright, A (31459) v Wazi, Omer El. Highway Patrol-Seymour Victoria Police - Malone, P (44935) v Webb, Gavin. Uni-Seymour Victoria Police - Voisey, A (41594) v Whiley, Jackson. Criminal Proceeds Squad Victoria Police - Richards, L (33614) v Worth, Mitchell Bryan. Socit-Benalla


Page 12 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021

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Phone 9411 0111 www.freemasonsvic.net.au


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Your Stars with Kerry Kulkens ARIES: (March 21- April 20) Lucky Colour: Silver Lucky Day: Tuesday Racing Numbers: 8.9.4.5 Lotto Numbers: 8.2.4.16.28.33. Money should be easier to come by. Your career aims could be attracting publicity. You need to be around people you can trust emotionally. Believe in yourself more and stop trying to please others all the time. TAURUS: (April 21- May 20) Lucky Colour: Lemon Lucky Day: Sunday Racing Numbers: 6.9.1.2 Lotto Numbers: 1,17,23,34,44.45. Except for some major changes you will be able to solve the problems that have been holding you back. A good career opportunity is on its way. Money matters will improve if you push your idea ahead. GEMINI: (May 21- June 21) Lucky Colour: White Lucky Day: Monday Racing Numbers: 7.9.1.4. Lotto Numbers: 1,16,23,34,36,22, Someone could give you an expensive present. Someone with influence could take quite and interest in your affairs. Choices to make in your love life don't be pushed to make them take your time. CANCER: (June 22- July 22) Lucky Colour: Green Lucky Day: Friday Racing Numbers: 7,8,9,3, Lotto Numbers: 1,16,23,34,41,22, Travel could bring some unusual people into your life. Many could decide to relocate permanently. Finances should be easier to manage. Watch yours diet as there is problems around the stomach area. LEO: (July 23- August 22) Lucky Colour: Cream Lucky Day: Sunday Racing Numbers: 6,8,4,5, Lotto Numbers: 1,17,23,36,42,11, Health will improve and a break away from your usual haunts would work wonders for your ego. Business affairs will soon be on the up and up. Stop trying to prove your worth to others its their issue not yours. VIRGO: (August 23- September 23) Lucky Colour: Mauve Lucky Day: Tuesday Racing Numbers: 7,9,3,4, Lotto Numbers: 1,16,23,34,41,22, Happy vibes around your home or work scene. Most will be undergoing a major change of lifestyle. Someone close may object to the new you. However, when you make up your mind no one will change it. LIBRA: (September 24- October 23) Lucky Colour: Yellow Lucky Day: Sunday Racing Numbers: 7,9,3,5, Lotto Numbers: 3,6,23,31,22,28, Most will be able to release those pent-up pleasures. Most will be more in a mood to make love than fight. Many will be coming up with the right advice for their nearest and dearest. SCORPIO: (October 24- November 22) Lucky Colour: Orange Lucky Day: Wednesday Racing Numbers: 6,9,3,4, Lotto Numbers: 1,16,23,27,34,41, You will need to write down everything before flaring off at the mouth. Celebrations can turn into punch ups with very little effort. Exercise more to clam yourself down. SAGITTARIUS: (November 23- December 20) Lucky Colour: Red Lucky Day: Saturday Racing Numbers: 6,8,3,4, Lotto Numbers: 1,15,23,35,41,22, Most will be making major changes to their emotional and working affairs. Most will have to be very direct in their approach with authority. Watch what you say to others as your mouth could cause trouble. CAPRICORN: (December 21- January 19) Lucky Colour: Silver Lucky Day: Thursday Racing Numbers: 4,6,2,3, Lotto Numbers: 1,14,23,27,34,38, Most will be finding their way out of recent problems. People are coming into your life and having a big impact on your future decision making. Many could be tempted into making unwise decisions in their love lives. AQUARIUS: (January 20- February 19) Lucky Colour: Violet Lucky Day: Thursday. Racing Numbers: 5,7,3,4, Lotto Numbers: 1,16,23,26,34,39, A period of surprises and many could be offered a new career direction. Romance looks good and will bring greater happiness. Great time coming up and surprise visitors. PISCES: (February 20- March 20) Lucky Colour: Red Lucky Day: Tuesday Racing Numbers: 7.8.9.3. Lotto Numbers: 1,14,23,34,45,22, Most will be on a winning streak and most of your troubles fade away. Love could bring the unexpected and travel for pleasure is indicated. Beware of arguments with a Leo.

VISIT KERRY KULKENS MAGIC SHOP AT 1693 BURWOOD HWY BELGRAVE PH/FAX 9754 4587 WWW.KERRYKULKENS.COM.AU Like us on Facebook

The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021 - Page 13

Local News

Wins for Alex. Firsts, Twos ■ The AFL Outer East League Round 1 of the 2021 season saw the Club's Under 17s team travel to Seville, the home side showing a clean pair of heels from the opening bounce. The Rebels were undermanned with several late withdrawals and four Under 15 players making their debut but despite everything, the Rebels never gave in. With two players injured in early play the pressure was on but they were still able to keep Seville to three goals in the first quarter and then one goal in the second quarter. Seville kicked away in the second half as they added another nine goals but the coaches, support staff and parents were proud of the efforts of the players who never stopped trying, Alexandra 0.2 (2) to Seville 13.13 (91). Awards: Bundalaguah Engineering award Harry Correa, Alexandra Tyrepower award Banjo Fitzpatrick, Alexandra Apparel award Austen Ross, Alan and Betty Parsons award Jacob Bourke, Sponsor award - Ethan Russell and Luke Wal. The Under 17s play Broadford at Rebel Park with the rest of the Club next Saturday. RESERVES Last Saturday, the Rebels travelled to Yarra Glen and the Reserves ran out with 20 players, 11 of whom were under 21 years of age. The football travelled freely from end to end as players made use of the open spaces of the wide ground, only a couple of points separating the teams at the first break, then only a goal the difference as the Rebels led at half-time. The young Rebels' enthusiasm was infectious as they kicked three unanswered goals in the third quarter and then two goals to one in the final quarter to take a rare win at Yarra Glen, 10.7 (67) to 4.9 (33). Awards: Shepparton Volkswagen award Lachlan Wall, Caltex fuel card - Jordan Rice, Alex Sportspower - Jake Keath, Buxton Hotel Jack Hehir. SENIORS The Seniors faced Yarra Glen which has been a consistent top three team in senior football, running out with nine new players and thirteen locals including four former junior players making their debut. Yarra Glen started the better with six goals to two in the first quarter and Brayden Norris also showered after an injury. The second quarter was a complete turnaround as the Rebels kicked six unanswered goals but also lost Jason Degabriele due to injury, going in 15 points up at the main break. The second half was a good contest with excellent passages of play by both sides keeping a large crowd entertained but the Rebels were able to add another seven goals to five to take the win, 15.11 (101) to 11.16 (82). Awards: BMH Roofworx award - Tom Boots, Healesville Toyota award - Harrison Kelly, ITEC Earthworks award - Patrick Ferguson, Buxton Hotel - David Ray. NETBALLAWARDS Caltex $25 fuel card award: Katherine Quinsee. A-Grade lost 33 - 52: Coaches' award Caitlan Haggis, Grant St Grocer award - Stef

Jager, Sponsor award - Shona Gesler. B-Grade lost 14 - 76: Coaches' award - Sarah Mooney, Grant St Grocer award - Carly Hill, Sponsor award - Ashleigh Creighton. C-Grade lost 18 - 53: Coaches' award - Tess McDonald, Grant St Grocer award - Brooke Pearce, Essence Coffee Lounge award - Georgia Millard; D-Grade lost 13 - 22: Coaches' award Mikaela Krijt, Grant St Grocer award - Laura Westwood, Essence Coffee Lounge award Louise Hurrey. CLUB NOTES Thank you to Gerrard and staff at the Shamrock Hotel for hosting the Rebels for our awards last Saturday night as the hospitality was very much appreciated. The Alexandra Football/Netball Club is very proud to work with the Alexandra RSL to celebrate the ANZAC spirit this coming Saturday as we host Broadford for three games of football and four games of netball. Entry is by donation so please consider paying the normal entry fee of $10 as a minimum with all monies raised at the gate going to the Alexandra RSL to support their important work within the community. There will be a line up of players and officials between the Reserves and Seniors football matches with the Alexandra RSL members acknowledging the ANZAC spirit. Everyone is invited into the social rooms after the games for the awards and some additional presentations. The following week we host Warburton Millgrove for Round 3 at Rebel Park and the Player Auction returns with opportunities to invest in a range of player groups. Lists will be available on the day with the Auction to commence around 7pm. Open age and Under 17 football and netball players earn points for their respective groups during the season and at the Presentation Function. First and second player group owners won $2900 and $1750 respectively in 2019 so it is worth studying the form guide especially with a number of new players in all grades of football and netball. Do not forget to order your Club merchandise - polo shirts, warm up shirts @ $50, hoodies, vests @ $70, casual shorts @ $40, Club stubby holders @ $7, travel mugs @ $15, peaked caps and beanies @ $25, bumper stickers are free. Thursday night dinners have two sittings, for juniors and then seniors after their respective training with main course and sweets - adults $15 and kids $10, everyone is welcome. Thursday's Rebel Raffles started last Thursday and we thank our sponsors Reddrops Foodworks / Houseboat Sales Lake Eildon, Eildon Bakery / Outdoor Education Group, Alexandra Quality Meats / AFNC canteen, Yea Chinese Restaurant / Bailey Funerals with the winners Michael Harper, Brodie Williamson, Corey Jack, Jos Builder and Len Jenkins. The Joker Jackpot will be worth $600 this week so come along and buy some tickets at $1 each but you need to be at the Club rooms at 8pm for the draw. - Ray Steyger

First round for Juniors ■ The Alexandra Football-Netball Club junior teams kicked off the 2021 season and travelled to Euroa for two games of football and three games of netball with several new coaches, players and excited parents and grandparents. The Under 11s football had a game but theirs is non-competitive and non-scoring so there is no win loss for that competition, as is the Under 9s football. The Under 15s football and Under 9s football each had a bye. UNDER 13s FOOTBALL Alexandra 1.0 (6) defeated by Euroa 15.21 (111) Essence Coffee Lounge award Dylan Woehl; Reddrops Foodworks award Angus Burchall; Alexandra Bakery and Café award George Sotiropoulos; Hadfield Contracting award Tom Clark; Coach's award Brock Hanlon. UNDER 11s NETBALL Alexandra 2 defeated by Euroa 20

Reddrops Foodworks award Ava Carr; Alexandra Bakery and Café award Holly Williams; Sponsor award Tahlia Malone. UNDER 13s NETBALL Alexandra 5 defeated by Euroa 3 Reddrops Foodworks award Eva Twitchett; Alexandra Bakery and Café award Marli Coller; Sponsor award Darcy Kidd. UNDER 15s NETBALL Alexandra 55 defeated Euroa 6 Reddrops Foodworks award Danielle Nadj; Alexandra Bakery and Café award Caeley Palmer; Sponsor award Daisy Sheehan. A very big thank you to the above award sponsors for their continued support of our junior footballers and netballers in 2021. Next Sunday we have the bye for Anzac Day. The following weekend on Sunday, 2nd May we travel to Broadford and then the following weekend on Sunday, May 9, we host St Marys at Rebel Park. - Ray Steyger

Murrindindi Matters Items provided by Murrindindi Shire Council. The Local Paper makes no charge for this space.

Streetscape works to start at K’lake

■ Murrindindi Shire Council is pleased to advise that works will soon commence on the much anticipated second phase of the Kinglake Streetscape Renewal Project. Following a comprehensive tender process, Council recently agreed to appoint a contractor to carry out Phase Two of the $1.9 million project. The contractor will be announced shortly. Works are expected to start in May, with completion planned for August 2021 (weather permitting). Kinglake Ward Councillor, Ilona Gerencser, said a lot of time and energy has gone into getting the Project to this point, both from Council and the community. “We are delighted that construction works are about to commence,” Cr Gerencser said. “A renewed streetscape in Kinglake will enhance the natural beauty of the stunning place in which we live and make the town that much lovelier and easier to navigate for all. “It will provide a boost to local businesses, help attract more tourists and ensure a prosperous future for our community.” “The upgrade to Aitkin Crescent was Phase One of the Project, and it was completed in July 2020. “The works included construction of kerb and channel, pavement, asphalting, stormwater drains and footpaths and have really improved the look of that part of town. “Since then, we have been busy working with our design contractors Tomkinson Group Pty Ltd on the final detailed design for Phase Two. “This included two rounds of consultation with community and local traders in the second half of 2020. “Key features of Phase Two include additional parking for vehicles, motorbikes and cyclists, public seating areas, landscaping and electric vehicle charging stations. “I encourage you to have a look at the final plans on Council's website, along with the landscaping plans, material and colour palette. “There is also an artist's impression of the final streetscape, along with a Frequently Asked Questions document. “I would like to thank all those in the community who have provided feedback along the way. “Your input has really helped us to shape this important Project. The high level of engagement from community, along with valuable input provided from Kinglake traders, adjoining landholders and other agencies, is a real testament to how vital the project is to the community of the Kinglake Ranges. “Of course, none of this would be possible without support from the Australian Government's 'Building Better Regions Fund' and Regional Development Victoria, which have each contributed $750,000 to the Project. Council has also contributed $418,000,” said Cr Gerencser. “As the Project progresses, we will continue to keep the community updated via our Facebook page, in the local publications and on local radio UGFM. “Please keep in mind that as with any Project of this scale, there will be some unavoidable disruption during construction. “Our contractors will do their best to keep these to a minimum and we will continue to work with affected businesses throughout the period,” said Cr Gerencser. ■ For more information about the Project, visit murrindindi.vic.gov.au/streetscape or give Council a call on 5772 0333. The final plans can also be viewed at the Kinglake Library and Customer Service Centre. - Contributed


Page 14 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021

Local Sport Thornton EDFNC

■ Last weekend saw Round One kick-off with both netball and women’s football travelling over the hill to Yarra Junction. There was a lot of excitement in the air with the incredible and highly anticipated return to community sports. We would like to acknowledge our hard working volunteers, our players and especially our sponsors who have supported Thornton to get to Round One. It has brought a lot of pride to many supporters of TEDFNC knowing our club is getting teams out there competing, keeping their legacy alive and well. Stand by and watch this space for function announcements. Congratulations to all our new players debut games for the Shinboners on the weekend. NETBALL Our opening game against Yarra Junction was a great way to dust off the cobwebs. We came out strong in the first quarter leading 1-7 and enjoyed the sunny, but overcast weather. It was good to see our new team play together and work out the best positions suited for our players. The second quarter saw Yarra make good progress, but we were still in the lead 7-14. A few changes at our attacking end saw us use the court space much better and opened up for smoother play. We love playing against Yarra Junction and they are a competitive, fair-playing team. The final score was celebrated with a win of 25-10 - such a fantastic way to start the season. Special thanks to all of our supporters on the day and behind the scene. Next week Thornton netball play our first home game on Sunday for the ANZAC Day clash against Powelltown D-Grade at 10am. Would love the support so come on down. WOMEN’S FOOTBALL Kicking off our first game for the season it was a delight to be up against Yarra Junctions. We have been able to build a really positive relationship with Junction over the development of women's football and the progression of women's footy within our clubs. With 11 debutant players taking to the field for the first time, they were led out onto the field by Captain Emily Kerr, Vice-Captain Lucy McRae, and Deputy Captain Kelly Fitzpatrick. Thornton put up a good fight again a wellestablished side and managed to get some points on the board, Billie Heard kicked our first point of the season from the right-hand pocket under pressure. This was followed by a goal from Tash Hay our coach, she got the ball from out the back of the pack, composed herself a pulled of a stunning goal, lastly a point kicked by Tahnee Heard, a well-taken mark and huge kick from 40m out. Overall, the girls battled till the end keeping up the fight against Junction right down to the last minute, it was amazing to see the girls play so well together for a mostly debutant side. First-round players Awards went to Shannon Whittaker - Rubicon Hotel voucher, Ema Newton- Simpson - fuel voucher, Lucy McRae - Sportspower voucher, Nerissa Carter - Cafe Alex voucher, and Lynden Jane - Thornton club voucher. Thanks to all our sponsors for supporting these great awards. We are all looking forward to Round 2 next week against Belgrave at their home ground for a 4.45pm kick-off. - Sarah Carlton

Junior Scoreboard SDJFNL results ■ Under 11: Broadford 11.13 (79) d Yea 2.5 (17). Seymour v Tabilk. Wanmdong v St Mary’s. Euroa v Alexandra. ■ Uunder13: Broadford 8.14 (62) d Yea 5.7 (37). Seymour 11.9 (87) d Tabilk 2.2 (14). Wandong v St Marys. Euroa 15.12 (111) d Alexandra 1.0 (6).

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Local Sport

Yea too strong for Broadford

● Yea Football Seniors sing the club song at Broadford on Saturday. SENIORS goals), Xavier O'Dwyer (two) and Patrick Evans Broadford 7.8 (5)0 defeated by Yea 14.11(95) (two) hit the scoreboard, with Cameron Evans Yea notched their first victory of the season (one) everywhere across half-forward. on Saturday when they travelled to meet newYea square off against Yarra Glen at home comers to the league. Broadford, walking away this Saturday in a bid to start the season 2-0. winners by 45 points. RESERVES It was a fast start from the visiting side, with Broadford 6.7(43) defeated by Yea 9.11(65) the Tigers dominating territory early and slamYea kicked off its 2021 campaign in fine fashming on six goals to one in the opening quarter ion, beating Broadford on the road by 22 points. to lead by 30 points at the first change. The Tigers kicked away early with a three The Kangaroos lifted their work rate in the goal-to-one opening term, and although prosecond term, and while they only managed one ceedings evened up after half time, the visitors major themselves, they were able to limit Yea to were too strong in their first outing since 2019. one goal too. There were winners all over the ground for The Tigers took back the ascendancy in the Yea, with Lindon Young (two goals) and third, booting another six goals to two to effec- Hayden Witton (one) finding a stack of the foottively put the result beyond doubt heading into ball through the midfield. the final break, before conceding four goals in Ian Porter was a rock in defence, Indi Kaak the last. and Eddie Neilson were in everything and each Adrian McCarthy (one goal), Aidan finished with a major, while in attack, Trent McSpeerin and Harrison Jarvie (one) ran riot McMahon was dangerous and finished with one, in the midfield and took full advantage of Darcy supported by Lachie White with two. Pell's ruck dominance, while Matt Squires and Yea will look to make it back-to-back wins Mitch Ryan were key pillars in defence. when they host Yarra Glen at the Recreation In the front half, Corbin Sutherland (four Reserve on Saturday. - Patrick Evans

Yea wins at Hidden Valley LADIES’ GOLF Once again a small field for Saturday Golf. Even so there was a winner Cindy Armstrong (48) who clocked up another win having 38pts to runner up Judi Newman (51) 35 pts. Cindy will certainly be knocking off those strokes lowering her handicap quickly. Well done. On Monday April 12, three girls went to Hidden Valley, the course of much water hazards. Many a ball lost over the years. I believe the day was cold and a little rain fell. It was our girls: Jan Wealands, Adrianne Anglin and Meryl Connell who conquered the dreaded course winning the Hidden Valley Bowl with (86pts). Meryl won B-Grade (31pts) . Both Adrianne and Meryl also collected a few player of the year points to top the day. On Wednesday, April 14, it was the first round of the Kath Homewood 36 hole aggregate. Twelve players completed the 18 holes with new comer Sharon Grogan (54) having a great day out 67 strokes. Runner up: Christine Simmons (23) 75 strokes. Nearest the pin: Margie Wright. After last week’s match play for a little fun it was decided that the losers of their match had the pleasure of providing afternoon nibbles. So Miranda and Di Elliott donned the aprons, Vicki had gone missing On Sunday the club is having a wine n dine complete with a great load of wood (chopped) for the raffle. - Karen Sangster ★ BOB WINS ON COUNTBACK Wednesday saw 20 blokes play golf at Yea with a stroke and putting event. Winner with nett 69 was Bob Glenister (10) from Brendan Chenhall (14) on CB. Third was James Walsh (5) with nett 73 and fourth was Jarrad Hea (l9) on 74. Bob was NTP on the 11th and Lachlan Wischer was the Club Award winner. - Alan Pell

● Bob Glenister MONTHLYMEDAL Saturday saw 25 players contest the Monthly Medal Stroke and Putting Event. Winner with a nett 68 was Jonathon Fisher (14). Second was Carl Maffei (20), after a long break from the game, with nett 70. Third was Trevor Connell (17) nett 71 from fourth Peter Johnston (13) 75 and fifth Steve Rumney (24) 76. NTP on the 14th was Jonathon Fisher and the Putting was won by Anthony Coleman with 27 putts. Mark Mullaly won the Club Award. Chooklotto Superdraw was won by Rick Wills $60, Kevin Coghlan $30 and Neil Peterson $10. - Alan Pell

Local Briefs EFNL netball

■ Premier and Division 1. East Burwood Black 36 d Lilydale Falcons 35. Boronia Hawkjs 65 d Haethmont Jets 26. Knox Falcons 48 d Scoresby Magpies 34. ■ Division 2. Croydon North MLOC 29 d Th Basin Red 18. Mulgrave Red 37 d Croydon 26. Scoresby Magpies Black 33 d Park Orchards Red 22. Vermont Eagles Gold 21 d Lilydale Gold 20. Kilsyth Cougars Black: Bye. ■ Division 3. Knox Red 28 d Upper Ferntree Gully Red 14. Coldtream Gray 37 d Montrose Demons 20. Ringwood Red 26 d Glen Waverley Hawks Blue 22. Whitehorse Pioneers Netball 25 d Heathmont White 20. Warrandyte Swans 21 d Park Orchards Blue 19. ■ Division 4. Montrose Flames 29 d Coldstream Black 12. Mulgrave Blue 17 drew with Nunawading Lions 17. Glen Waverley Hawks White 39 d Chirnside Panthers 24. The Basin Green 45 d South Croydon Blue 25. ■ Division 5. Knox Black 30 d Montrose Devils 16. Mitcham Tigers Yellow 25 d East Ringwood White 24. Upper Ferntree Gully Blue 23 d Coldstream Red 15. Coldstream White 26 d Ringwood Black 23. The Basin Black 33 d Vermont Purple 29. Kilsyth Cougars Red 33 d Ferntree Gully Blue 7. ■ Division 6. Coldstream Blue 42 d Mulgrave Yellow 20. Glen Waverley Hawks Yellow 37 d The Basin White 19. Balwyn Tigers 31 d East Burwood White 9. Mitcham Tigers Black 31 d Heathmont Yellow 9. Scoresby Magpies Gray 29 d Lilydale Yellow 19. ■ Division 7. The Basin Grey 38 d Boronia Diamonds 7. Montrose Heat 37 d Coldstream Green 5. Norwood White 32 d Mulgrave White 21. Waverley Blues: Bye. ● From Page 9

Dindi offices query ■ “In regard to the administration office in Alexandra, we made a decision to move our customer services to the Alexandra Library temporarily in early 2020, while repairs took place to the external façade of the building, including around the entrance,” said the Murrindindi Shire Council statement. “While there is currently no public access to the administration office in Alexandra, it has been open for a number of months now to allow some Council officers to work from this location, in-line with COVID-19 restrictions that have been in place. “We have also made some changes to internal arrangements within this office to ensure we can manage the ongoing obligations for staff to be able to maintain 1.5 m distance from each other. “We acknowledge that the most recent easing of restrictions announced on April 9 allows 100 per cent of staff to return to the office, if appropriate distancing measures are in place. “This means that over the coming weeks more of our staff will return to working from the office, but like many businesses and organisations, we are taking a flexible approach to how this is implemented. “While there have been some challenges for staff working from home, overall it has been a very positive and productive experience for both staff and for Council's productivity. “We've also been able to engage with the community in different ways, whether that be via Zoom or other online meeting platforms. “It's been great to see staff and community members embrace new technologies and processes to help keep us all connected during the pandemic. “We will continue to look at the new 'hybrid' working model to find the best arrangement for us and our community. This will help us to attract and retain staff so that we can continue to be an employer of choice in the Shire. “We have communicated the changes to how and where our services are delivered via updates to the community via Facebook, our website, local newspapers, community newsletters and UGFM,” the Council said.


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The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021 - Page 15

Local Sport

Results from last Saturday’s local footy AFL OUTER EAST PREMIER DIVISION SENIORS Narre Warren 18.15 (123) defeated OlindaFerny Creek 5.11 (41). PREMIER DIVISION RESERVES Narre Warren 14.8 (102) d Olinda-Ferny Creek 3.3 (21). PREMIER DIVISION UNDER 19s Upwey-Tecoma 20.11 (131) d Berwick Springs 8.4 (52). DIVISION 1 SENIORS Berwick Springs 12.16 (88) d Belgrave 9.11 (65), Monbulk 12.5 (87) d Officer 12.9 (81), Mt Evelyn 15.13 (103) d Emerald 7.14 (56), Seville 17.13 (115) d Gembrook-Cockatoo 10.13 (73). Healesville: Bye. DIVISION 1 RESERVES Belgrave 15.10 (100) d Berwick Springs 4.7 (31), Officer 7.10 (52) d Monbulk 4.9 (33), Mt Evelyn 14.99 d Emerald 6.6 (42), Seville 13.11 (89) d Gembrook-Cockatoo 4.5 (29). DIVISION 1 UNDER 19s Gembrook-Cockatoo 11.6 (72) d Healesville 10.8 (68), Officer 12.10 (82) d Monbulk 1.1 (7), Emerald 12.20 (92) d Mt Evelyn 2.5 (17), Olinda-Ferny Creek 9.9 (63) d Narre Warren White 5.5 (35. Wandin: Bye. DIVISION 2 SENIORS Yea 14.11 (95) d Broadford 7.8 (50), Powelltown 14.11 (95) d Wartburton- Millgrove 11.10 (76), Alexandra 15.11 (101) d Yarra Glen 11.16 (82), Kinglake 12.9 (81) d Yarra Junction 9.13 (67). DIVISION 2 RESERVES Yea 9.11 (65) d Broadford 6.7 (43). Powelltown 7.9 (51) d Warburton-Millgrove 7.7 (49). Alexandra 10.7 (67) d Yarra Glen 4.9 (33). Kinglake 19.8 (122) d Yarra Junction 5.6 (36). UNDER 17 BOYS Kinglake 17.10 (112) d Broadford 2.9 (21). Secille 13.13 (91) d Alexandra 0.2 (2). VETERANS Healesville Vets 17.21 (81) d Marysville Vets 0.1 (1). Mt Evelyn Vets 7.3 (45) d Gembrook Cockatoo Vets 3.8 (28). WOMEN’S DIVISION 1 Beaconsfield 11.9 (75) d Upwey-Tecoma 2.4 (16). Mt Evelyn 7.16 (58) d Healesville 1.0 (6). Pakenham 7.13 (55) d Monbulk 1.0 (6). WOMEN’S DIVISION 2 Yarra Junction 9.11 (65) d Thornton-Eildon 1.2 (8). Belgrave 6.6 (42) d Olinda-Ferny Creek 3.5 (23). Seville/Woori Yallock v Officer. AUSTRALIAN FOOTBALL LEAGUE ROUND 6 Friday, April 23. GWS Giants vs. Western Bulldogs (MO) (N). Saturday, April 24. Geelong Cats vs. West Coast Eagles (GMHBA) Gold Coast Suns vs. Sydney Swans (MS). Carlton vs. Brisbane Lions (MRVL) (T). Melbourne vs. Richmond (MCG) (N). Fremantle vs. North Melbourne (OS) (N). Sunday, April 25. Hawthorn vs. Adelaide Crows (UTAS). Collingwood vs. Essendon (MCG). Port Adelaide vs. St Kilda (AO) (N) EASTERN FOOTBALL NETBALL LEAGUE PREMIER DIVISION SENIORS South Croydon 19.14 (128) d Doncaster 8.11 (59). Balwyn 12.14 (86) d Vermont 12.12 (84). Blackburn 12.7 (79) d Doncaster East 11.12 (78). Berwick 7.17 (59) d Noble Park 8.13 (61). Nirwood 21.13 (139) d North Ringwood 11.13 (79). PREMIER DIVISION RESERVES South Croydon 15.14 (104) d Doncaster 4.4 (28). Vermont 25.13 (163) d Balwyn 3.2 (20). Blacvkburn 28.19 (187) d Doncaster East 0.0 (0). Noble Park 5.5 (35) d Berwick 2.11 (23). Norwood 8.9 (57) d North Ringwood 2.6 (18). PREMIER DIVISION UNDER 19s North Ringwood v South Croydon Blue. East Burwood 19.9 123) d Rowville 2.11 (23). Surrey Park 17.9 (111) d Balwyn 3.10 (28). Blackburn 11.6 (72) d Vermont 6.9 (45). Noble Park 13.6 (84) d Berwick Blue 9.3 (57). DIVISION 1 SENIORS Mooroolbark 17.10 (112) d Bayswater 9.8 (62). Croydon 13.23 (101) d Upper Ferntree

EASTERN FOOTBALL NETBALL LEAGUE Gully 7.2 (44). Park Orchards 16.17 (113) d Lilydale 6.8 (44). Mitcham 14.8 (92) d Mo0ntrose 6.7 (43). East Ringwood 13.11 (89) d Wantirna South 4.11 (35). DIVISION 1 RESERVES Mooroolbark 1.7 (103) d Bayswater 5.4 (34). Croydon 18.19 (127) d Upper Ferntree Gully 1.4 (10). Park Orchards 26.21 (177) d Lilydale 1.3 (9). Mitcham v Montrose. East Ringwood 8.11 (59) d Wantirna South 9.4 (58). DIVISION 1 UNDER 19s Mooroolbark 17.10 (112) d Bayswater 3.9 (27). Park Orchards 17.12 (114) d Lilydale 2.5 (17). Mitcham 12.13 (85) d Montrose 5.6 (36). Wantirna South 10.10 (70) d East Ringwood 9.10 (64). DIVISION 3 SENIORS East Burwood 12.10 (82) d Donvale 7.14 (56)(. Waverley Blues 25.25 (175) d Scoresby 5.6 (36). Whitehorse Pioneers 16.12 (108) d Fair Park 7.16 (58). Warrandyte 15.12 (102) d Ferntree Gullky 10.9 (69). DIVISION 3 RESERVES East Burwood 11.8 (74) d Donvale 4.8 (32). Waverley Blues 9.8 (62) d Scoresby 7.6 (48). Fair Park 8.4 (52) d Whitehorse Pioneers 7.8 (50). Ferntree Gully 10.12 (72) d Warrandyte 6.7 (43). DIVISION 3 UNDER 19s Ringwood 16.15 (111) d Donvale 4.4 (28). Waverley Blues 18.16 (124) d Scoresby 4.9 (33). Whitehorse Pioneers 27.17 (179) d Fair Park 1.7 (13). Ferntree Gully 5.8 (38). DIVISION 4 SENIORS Coldstream 23.18 (156) d Chirnside Park 6.5 (41). Surrey Park 27.25 (1987) d Nunawading 7.5 (47). Kilsyth 18.19 (127) d Croydon North MLOC 3.5 (23). Silvan 14.17 (101) d Forest Hill 12.12 (84). DIVISION 4 RESERVES Coldstream 13.9 (87) d Chrinside Park 10.4 (64). Surrey Park 24.16 (160) d Nunawading 3.4 (22). Croydon North MLOC 6.5 (41) d Kilsyth 5.5 (35). Forest Hill 10.13 (73) d Silvan 9.9 (63). DIVISION 4 UNDER 19s The Basin Green 11.13 (79) d South Croydon Red 5.7 (37). Wantirna South White 11.12 (78) d East Ringwood White 7.5 (47). Chirnside Park 22.17 (149) d Coldstream 3.4 (22). Blackburn Red 16.6 (102) d Berwick White 5.8 (38). PREMIER WOMEN’S DISTRICT Blackburn Black 11.8 (74) d Donvale Black 4.4 (28). Chirnside Park Black 12.9 (81) d Whitehorse Suns 3.2 (20). Vermont 5.5 (35) d South Croydon Blue 5.4 (34). DIVISION 1 WOMEN’S Berwick 6.5 (41) d SBL Wolves 1.5 (11). North Ringwood 9.4 (58) d Park Orchards 4.8 (32). The Basin v East Ringwood. Ferntree Gully 6.10 (46) d Boronia Brown 2.2 (14). DIVISION 2 WOMEN’S Kilsyth 4.9 (33) d Knox 0.1 (1). Ringwood 12.7 (79) d Montrose 3.7 (19). Heathmont 2.5 (17) d Surrey Park 1.3 (9). ESSENDON DISTRICT FOOTBALL LEAGUE PREMIER DIVISION SENIORS Keilor 13.12 (90) d Greenvale 11.16 (82). Strathmore 27.28 (190) d Craigieburn 0.5 (5). Avondale Heights 16.12 (108) d Maribyrnong Park 13.10 (88). Glenroy 11.5 (71) d Essendon Doutta Stars 7.12 (54). Aberfeldie 9.18 (72) d Pascoe Vale 9.5 (59). PREMIER DIVISION RESERVES Keilor 19.16 (130) d Greenvale 1.3 (9). Strathmore 31.18 (204) d Craigieburn 0.0 (0). Maribyrnong 12.9 (81) d Avondale Heights 7.10 (52). Gloenroy 13.12 (90) d Essendon Doutta Stars 4.5 (29). Aberfeldie 19.12 (126) d Pascoe Vale 9.3 (57). PREMIER DIVISION UNDER 19s Keilor 1 17.18 (120) d Greenvale 0.1 (1). Strathmore 13.23 (101) d Craigieburn 3.1 (19). Maribyrnong Park 1 22.14 (146) d Essendon Doutta Stars 2.3 (15). Aberfieldie: Bye. DIVISION 1 SENIORS Tullamarine 19.15 (129) d Airport West 15.14 (104). East Keilor 19.12 (126) d Hillside

ESSENDON DISTRICT FOOTBALL LEAGUE 10.9 (69). Sunbury Kangaroos 19.15 (129) d Taylors Lakes 7.13 (55). Westmeadows 15.9 (99) d Rupertswood 8.7 (55). West Coburg 11.20 (86) d Roxburgh Park 8.9 (57). DIVISION 1 RESERVES Tullamarine 17.12 (114) d Airport West 5.6 (36). East Keilor 13.13 (91) d Hillside 3.5 (23). Taylors Lakes 12.11 (83) d Sunbury Kangaroos 7.15 (57). Westmeadows 13.9 (87) d Rupertswood 4.4 (28). West Coburg 21.14 (140) d Roxburgh Park 4.5 (29). DIVISION 1 UNDER 18.5 West Coburg 15.15 (105) d Airport West 5.1 (31). Hillside 1 16.4 (100) d Maribyrnong Park 2 4.5 (20). Tayl.ors Lakes 8.15 (63) d Sunbury Kangaroos 8.6 (54). Westmeadows 19.11 (125) d Rupertswood 2.2 (14). DIVISION 2 SENIORS Northern Saints 19.8 (122) d HJadfield 17.12 (114). Moonee Valley 14.14 (98) d Coburg Districts 9.5 (50). Oak Park 26.13 (169) d Burnside Heights 18.3 (111). East Sunbury 14.8 (92) d Keilor Park 13.10 (88). DIVISION 2 RESERVES Northern Saints 28.13 (181) d Hadfield 9.4 (58). Moonee Valley 33.12 (210) d Coburg Districts 10.5 (65). Oak Park 16.14 (110) d Burnside Heights 9.9 (63). Keilor Park 18.13 (121) d East Sunbury 6.5 (41). DIVISION 2 UNDER 18.5 Strathmore 2 14.12 (96) d Northern Saints 8.11 (59). Oak Park 21.14 (140) d Burnside Heights 2.5 (17). Keilor 2 9.18 (72) d Hillside 2 5.4 (34). Keilor Park 7.14 (56) d East Sunbury 7.9 (51). THIRDS Hillside 12.8 (80) d West Coburg 3.6 (24). Pascoe Vale 10.9 (69) d Strathmore (Blue) 5.5 (35). Greenvale 8.9 (57) d Keilor Park 7.8 (50). Maribyrnong Park 22.12 (144) d Oak Park 2.3 (15). Hillside 7.17 (59) d Roxburgh Park 5.3 (33). Keilor 18.13 (121) d Strathmore (Gold) 6.4 (40). Moonee Valley 7.13 (55) d Westmeadows 8.3 (51). PREMIERS WOMEN’S Hilside 4.13 (37) d Essendon Doutta Stars 1.4 (10). Keilor 9.9 (63) d Burnside Heights 1 1.2 (8). Westmeadows 1 9.8 (62) d Oak Park 2.1 (13). Maribyrnong Park 3.6 (24) d Aberfeldie 0.1 (1). DIVISION 1 WOMEN’S Gisborne 3.7 (25) d Pascoe Vale 2.8 (20). Greenvale 10.6 (66) d Tullamatrine 3.4 (22). Moonee Valley 35.17 (227) d Sunbury Kangaroos 0.0 (0). Strathmore 11.8 (74) d Airport West 0.1 (1). DIVISION 2 WOMEN’S RESERVES Coburg Districts 12.19 (91) d Burnsdie Heights 1.1 (7). Sunbury Lions 12.17 (89) d Moonee Valley 2 0.0 (0). Westmeadows 10.10 (70) d Maribyrnong Park 2 0.1 (1). DIVISION 2 WOMEN’S UNDER 18.5 Hillside 25 d Aberfeldie 16. Maribyrnong Park 23.21 (159) d Sunbury Lions 0.0 (0). East Sunbury v Roxburgh Park. Strathmore: Bye. MORNINGTON PENINSULA NEPEAN FOOTBALL LEAGUE DIVISION 1 SENIORS Mt Eliza 13.8 (86) drew with Frankston YCW 12.14 (86). Sorrento 13.11 (89) d Pines 12.12 (84). Rosebud 13.15 (93) d Dromana 9.11 (65). Bonbeach 14.9 (93) d Red Hill 9.11 (65). Frankston Bombers 18.10 (119) d Edithvale-Aspendale 8.12 (80). DIVISION 1 RESERVES Mt Eliza 5.,11 (41) d Frankstonb YCW 5.7 (37). Sorrenton 7.9 (51) d Pines 7.7 (49). Rosebud 15.8 (89) d Dromana 3.5 (23). Red Hill 14.11 (95) d Bonbeach 2.6 (18). Frankston Bombers 7.11 (53) d Edithvale-Aspendale 7.8 (50). DIVISION 1 UNDER 18s Mt Eliza 7.13 (55) d Frankston YCW 4.9 (33). Sorrenton 7.7 (49) d Pines 1.7 (13). Dromana 9.8 (62) d Rosebud 4.5 (29). Bonbeach 7.10 (52) d Red Hill 9.1 (55). Frankston Bombers 12.15 (87) d Edithvale-Aspendale 6.9 (45). DIVISION 2 SENIORS Langwarrin 7.16 (58) d Karingal 8.4 (52). Seaford 21.15 (141) d Tyabb 8.7 (55). Devon Meadows 10.16 (76) d Crib Point 7.10 (52).

MORNINGTON PENINSULA NEPEAN FOOTBALL LEAGUE Pearcedale 10.12 (72) d Chelsea 8.8 (56) Somerville 11.10 (76) d Rye 15.6 (96) Mornington 10.11 (71) d Hastings 8.10 (58) DIVISION 2 RESERVES Langwarrin 14.17 (101) d Karingal 6.2 (38) Seaford 13.7 (85) d Tyabb 6.1 (37). Devon Meadows v Crib Point. Pearcedale 18.10 (118 d Chelsea 2.2 (14). Somerville 9.11 (65) d Rye 4.1 (25). Mornington 13.13 (91) d Hastings 3.6 (24). DIVISION2 UNDER 19s Karingal v Langwarrin. Seaford 23.10 (148) d Tyabb 2.1 (13). Crib Point 4.7 (31) d Devon Meadows 3.10 (28). Pearcedale 10.12 (72 d Chelsea 8.8. Somerville 14.10 (94) d Rye 4.3 (27). Mornington 14.16 (100) d Hastings 3.4 (22).

NORTHERN FOOTBALL NETBALL LEAGUE DIVISION 1 SENIORS Hurstbridge 13.10 (88) d Macelod 12.10 (82) Greensborough 11.8 (74) d West Preston Lakeside 10.13 (73). Heidelberg 12.15 (87) d Whittlesea 8.7 (55). North Heidelberg 14.18 (102) d Northcote Park 8.7 (55). Bundoora 12.17 (89) d Montmorency 6.12 (48). DIVISION 1 RESERVES Macleod 16.20 (116) d Hurstbridge 6.0 (36) Greensborough 12.9 (81) d West Preston Lakeside 6.7 (43). Whittlesea 10.9 (69) d Heidelberg 9.11 (65). Bundoora 9.7 (61) d Montmorency 9,7 (61). Northcote Park 15.11 (101) d North Heidelberg 6.9 (45). DIVISION 2 SENIORS Epping 9.8 (62) d Watsonia 8.13 (61). Dia mond Creek 15.16 (106) d Fitzroy Stars 2.1 (13). Eltham 14.25 (109) d Panton Hill 3.5 (23). St Mary’s 13.13 (91) d Thomastown 6.14 (50). Banyule 7.15 (57) d Lower Plenty 6.12 (48). DIVISION 2 RESERVES Watsonia 18.13 (121) d Eppi9ng 0.5 (5). Dia mond Creek 29.23 (197) d Fitzroy Stars 1.0 (6). Eltham 25.19 (169) d Panton Hill 2.1 (13). St Mary’s 12.16 (88) d Thomastown 3.9 (27). Banyule 8.13 (61) d Lower Plenty 4.5 (23). DIVISION 3 SENIORS South Morang 14.9 (93) d Old Eltham Collegina s 9.9 (63). Heidelberg West 15.10 (100) d Mernda 8.9 (57). Kilmore 12.17 (89) d Lalor 5.4 (34). Laurimar 25.25 (175) d Res ervoir 0.2 (2). DIVISION 3 RESERVES South Morang 18.21 (129) d Old Eltham Col legians 6.8 (44). Heidelberg West 11.12 (76) d Mernda 10.5 (65). Kilmore v Lalor.Essendon 16.22 (118) d Reservoir 1.5 (11). SOUTHERN FOOTBALL NETBALL LEAGUE

DIVISION 1 SENIORS St Kilda City 24.17 (161) d Mordialloc 7.7 (49). East Malvern 15.9 (99) d Bentleigh 9.10 (64). Cheltenham 13.19 (97) d St Paul’s McKinnon 7.6 (48). Port Melbourne Colts 25.15 (165) d Highett 0.6 (6). Dingley 24.9 (153) d Oakleigh District 4.7 (31). DIVISION 1 RESERVES St Kilda City 8.9 (57) d Mordialloc 8.2 (50) Bentleigh 12.11 (83) d East Malvern 4.3 (27) St Paul’s McKinnon 9.8 (63) d Cheltenham 3.8 (26). Dingley 18.12 (120) d Oakleigh District 4.5 (29). DIVISION 2 SENIORS East Brighton 16.25 (121) d Hampton 2.3 (15). Keysborough 12.14 (86) d Murrumbeena 4.9 (33). Hampton Park 12.13 (85) d Caulfield Bears 11.8 (74). Skye 13.14 (92) d Heather ton 5.5 (35). Springvale Districts 11.9 (75) d Chelsea Heights 5.6 (36). DIVISION 2 RESERVES East Brighton 17.12 (114) d Hampton 1.2 (8) Keysborough 11.10 (76) d Murrumbeena 5.7 (37). Caulfield Bears 18.23 (131) d Hampton Park 4.6 (30). Skye 18.15 (123) d Heather ton 2.1 (13). Springvale Districts 10.10 (70) d Chelsea Heights 1.2 (8). DIVISION 3 SENIORS Endeavour Hills 17.15 (117) d South Morn


Page 16 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021

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Local Sport SOUTHERN FOOTBALL NETBALL LEAGUE

ington 9.13 (67). Clayton 23.19 (157) d Doveton Eagles 3.0 (18). Narre South Saints 17.13 (115) d South Yarra 2.15 (27). Black Rock 12.7 (79) d Ashwood 9.12 (66). DIVISION 3 RESERVES Endevaour Hills 11.15 (81) d South Mornington 2.5 (17). Clayton 41`.26 (272) d Doveton Eagles 0.0 (0). Narre South Saints 13.14 (92) d South Yarra 3.3 (21). Black Rock 7.5 (41) d Ashwood 6.8 (44). DIVISION 4 SENIORS Frankston Dolphins 16.14 (110) d Lyndale 4.9 (33). Carrum Patterson Lakes 12.13 (85) d Hallam 4.10 (34). Cerebus 27.12 (174) d Dandenong 3.3 (21). Lyndhurst 4.7 (31) d Moorabbin Kangaroos 1.1 (7). DIVISION 4 RESERVES Frankston Dolphins 10.8 (68) d Lyndaloe 5.3 (33). Carrum Patterson Lakes 11.,10 (76) d Hallam 6.4 (40). Cerebus 8.9 (57) d Dandenong 4.5 (29). Lyndhurst 1.1 (7) v Moorabbin Kangaroos 0.0 (0). UNDER 19 GRADING Cheltenham 13.15 (93) d Bentleigh Blue 5.2 (32). St Kilda City 14.4 (88) d Mordialloc 3.8 (26). Bentleigh Red 17.19 (121) d Hallam 4.1 (25). Frankston Dolphins 13.11 (89) d Murrumbenna 0.0 (0). Dingley 21.19 (145) d Narre South Saints 4.2 (26). THIRDS Sandown 14.1 (85) d Carrum Patterson Lakes 3.9 (27). Endeavour Hills 14.8 (92) d Cheltenham 12.12 (84). St Kilda City 9.12 (66) d Keysborough 2.3 (15). Dingley 15.16 (106) d Springvale Districts 4.0 (24).

VICTORIAN AMATEUR FOOTBALL ASSOCIATION PREMIER MEN’S Old Melburnians 14.14 (98) d Old Trinity Grammarians 11.3 (69). St Kevin’s 9.18 (72) d Old Brighton 10.9 (69). University Blues 13.10 (88) d Caulfield Grammarians 10.8 (68). St Bernards 12.6 (78) d Coillegians 10.11 (71). Old Xaverians 17.24 (126) d Old Scotch 4.8 (32). PREMIER MEN’S RESERVE St Kevins 14.13 (97) d Old Brighton 1.8 (14). Caulfield Grammarians 12.13 (85) d University Blues 8.10 (58). Collegians v St Bernards. Old Trinity Grammarians v Old Melburnians. Old Xavierians v Old Scotch. PREMIER B MEN’S Williamston CYMS 12.15 (87) v De La Salle 10.8 (68). Old Xavierians v Old scotch. Beaumaris 11.14 (80) d AJAX 5.7 (37). Fitzroy 24.10 (154) d Parkdale Vultures 6.8 (44). University Blacks 13.12 (90) d St Bedes/Mentone Tigers 10.8 (68). Old Haileyburians 16.19 (115) d Old Carey 4.6 (30). PREMIER B MEN’S RESERVES De La Salle 12.11 (83) d Williamstown CYMS 6.5 (41). AJAX v Beaumaris. Parkdale Vultures v Fitzroy. University Blacks 12.15 (87) d St Bedes/Mentone Ti9gers 5.7 (37). Old Carey 14.10 (94) d Old Haileyburians 10.8 (68). PREMIER C MEN’S Hampton Rovers 30.16 (196) d UHS-VU AFC 4.7 (31). Old Geelong 11.5 (71) d old Ivanhoe Grammarians 9.15 (69). Ormond 17.23 (125) d Preston Bullants 6.7 (43). Monash Blues 20.8 (128) d Old Mentonians 6.4 (40). Marcellin OC v Mazenod. PREMIER C MEN’S RESERVES Hampton Rovers 11.11 (77) d UHS-VU AFC 0.7 (7). Old Geelong 12.14 (86) d Old Ivanhoe Grammarians 11.10 (76). Ormond 14.9 (93) d Preston Bullants 7.3 (45). Monash Blues 17.21 (123) d Old Melburnians 2.7 (19). DVISION 1 MEN’S Kew 13.9 (87) d Brunswick 6.5 (41). Peninsula 12.14 (86) d Thi9erry Penola OB 11.8 (74). PEGS 17.10 (112) d Prahran Assumption 8.12 (60). Old Camberwell Grammarians 15.15 (105) d Oakleigh 12.6 (78). Whitefriars 13.18 (96) d St Mary’s Salesian 13.8 (86). DIVISION 1 MEN’S RESERVES Whitefriars v St Mary’s Salesian. Brunswick v Kew. Peninsula 10.14 (74) d Therry Penola OB 8.1 (49). PEGS v Prahran Assumption. DIVISION 2 MEN’S Glen Eira 17.24 (126) d Yarra old Grammarians 3.5 (23). MHSOB 20.12 (132) d Old Paradians 10.9 (69). West Brunswick 14.1`3 (97) d Manningham Cobras 9.11 (65). Aquinas OC 29.17 (191) d Bulleen Templestowe 5.3

VICTORIAN AMATEUR FOOTBALL ASSOCIATION 4.6 (30). DIVISION 2 MEN’S RESERVES Glen Eira 30.14 (194) d Yarra Old Grammarians 0.3 (3). MHSOB v Old Paradians. West Brunswick v Manningham Cobras. Aquinas 24.22 (166) d Bulleen Templestowe 0.1 (1). DIVISION 3 MEN’S Canterbury 10.9 (69) d North Brunswick 7.15 (57). Richmond Central 20.20 (140) d Westbourne Grammarians 6.6 (42). Parkside 13.5 (83) d Emmasus St Leos 11.11 (72). Hawthorn AFC 22.16 (148) d Albert Park 7.5 (47). DIVISION 3 MEN’S RESERVES North Brunswick 14.12 (96) d Canterbury 7.12 (54). Richmond Central 20.19 (139) d Westbourne Grammarians 4.4 (28). Emmaus St Leos 8.7 (55) d Parkside 7.6 (48). Hawthorn AFC 14.17 (101) d Albert Park 6.10 (46). DIVISION 4 MEN’S Elsternwick 39.25 (259) d Box Hill North 1.1 (7). La Trobe University 13.14 (92) d Masala 12.4 (76). Swinburne University 3.11 (29) d St John’s 1.0 (6). South Melbourne Districts 23.14 (152) D Eley Park Sharks 8.7 (55). DIVISION 4 MEN’S RESERVES Brunswick 27.27 (189) d Box Hill North 1.6 (12). Masala v La Trobe University. Swinburne University 16.19 (115) d St Johns 7.1 (43). Eley Park Sharks v South Melbourne Districts. PREMIER WOMEN’S Marcellin OC v St Kevins. Kew 8.9 (57) d Old Xaverians 3.4 (22). Caulfield Grammarians 11.10 (76) d St Mary’s Salesian 0.0 (0). West Brunswick 6.4 (40) d Old Trinity 4.5 (29). PREMIER B WOMEN’S Old Geelong 7.5 (47) d Melbourne University 3.6 (24). Fitzroy 4.4 (28) d Monash Blues 1.4 (10). Old Camberwell 3.3 (21) d Collegians 0.6 (6). Beaumaris 8.8 (56) d Yarra Old Grammarians 5.4 (34). PREMIER C WOMEN’S Aquinas v Brunswick Renegades. St Bedes/ Mentone Tigers 3.2 (20) d Ivanhoe 2.3 (15). Richmond Central v Mazenod. UHS-VU v North Brunswick. WESTERN REGION FOOTBALL LEAGUE DIVISION 1 SENIORS Deer Park 11.8 (74) d Spotswood 9.9 (63). Altona 15.5 (95) d Hoppers Crossing 7.6 (48). Werribee Districts 27.15 (177) d Point Cook 3.5 (23). St Albqans 7.16 (58) d Sunshine 6.8 (44). Caroline Springs 14.14 (98) d Yarraville Seddon Eagles 8.5 (53). DIVISION 1 RESERVES Spotswood 25.18 (168) d Deer Park 2.0 (12). Altona 10.11 (71) d Hoppers Crossing 6.6 (42). Werribee Districts 22.19 (151) d Point Cook 0.0 (0). Sunshine 10.4 (64) d St Albans 9.8 (62). Caroline Springs 8.6 (54) d Yarraville Seddon Eagles 2.6 (18). DIVISION 2 SENIORS Newport 15.12 (102) d North Footscray 5.12 (42). Parkside 10.18 (78) d Point Cook Centrals 5.5 (35). Glen Orden 14.16 (100) d West Footscray 6.9 (55). Wyndhamvale 21.12 (138) d Albion 8.6 (54). DIVISION 2 RESERVES Newport 11.8 (74) d North Footscray 7.8 (50). West Footscray 10.8 (68) d Glen Orden 8.6 (54). Wyndhamvale 7.12 (54) d Albion 7.10 (52). Parkside 12.8 (80) d Point Cook Centrals 4.4 (28). DIVISION 3 SENIORS Albanvale 27.22 (184) d North Sunshine 5.5 (35). Sunshine Heights 17.10 (112) d Tarneit 10.5 (65). Wyndham Suns 12.4 (76) d Braybrook 9.6 (60). Laverton: Bye. DIVISION 3 RESERVES Albanvale 31.14 (200) d North Sunshine 3.5 (23). Sunshine Heights 10.7 (67) d Tarneit 4.3 (27). Wyndham Suns 12.14 (86) d Braybrook 7.3 (45). Laverton: Bye. SENIOR WOMEN Spotswood 15.2 (92) d Point Cook Centrals 2.2 (14). Caroline Springs 10.11 (71) d Yarraville Seddon Eagles 1.3 (9). North Sunshine v Braybrook/Albanvale. UNDER 18 DIVISION 1 Caroline Springs 13.21 (99) d Point Cook Centrals 7.3 (45). Werribee Distyricts 14.10 (94) d Yarraville Seddon Eagles 6.3 (39). Hoppers Crossing 9.10 (64) d Altona 4.5 (29). Point Cook 14.9 (93) d Spotswood 7.6 (48). UNDER 18 DIVISION 2

WESTERN REGION FOOTBALL LEAGUE 8.6 (54). Point Cook 11.9 (75) d Werribee Districts 5.9 (39). St Albans 18.10 (118) d Tarneit 8.3 (51). Hoppers Crossing : Bye. UNDER 18.5 GIRLS Spotswood d Werribee Centrals. Yarraville Seddon/Flemington Juniors 8.12 (60) d Point Cook 1.0 (6). Caroline Springs 11.9 (75) d Werribee Districts 1.5 (11). COUNTRY LEAGUES GOULBURN VALLEY FOOTBALL LEAGUE SENIORS Euroa 15.12 (102) d Rochester 11.14 (80). Benalla 10.12 (72) d Shepparton 7.7 (49). Mooroopna 11.12 (78) d Tatura 8.9 (57). Echuca 10.10 (70) d Kyabram 7.8 (50). Shepparton Swans 11.14 (80) d Shepparton United 4.12 (36). Seymour: Bye. Mansfield: Bye. RESERVES Euroa 17.12 (114) d Seymour 1.2 (8). Benalla 16.11 (107) d Shepparton 7.3 (45). Tatura 8.9 (57) d Mooroopna 9.1 (55). Echuca 10.13 (73) d Kyabram 5.5 (35). Shepparton Swans 8.12 (60) d Shepparton United 2.7 (19). Seymour: Bye. Mansfield: Bye. UNDER 18 Shepparton 6.14 (50) d Benalla 4.7 (31). Euroa v Rochester. Mooroopna 22.21 (153) d Tatura 1.1 (7). Echuca 20.13 (133) d Kyabram 2.1 (13). Shepparton uNITED 9.6 (60) d Shepparton Swans 8.5 (53). Seymour: Bye. Mansfield: Bye. UNDER 16 Mooroopna 36.26 (242) d Tatura 0.0 (0). Echuca 18.17 (125) d Kyabram 4.2 (26). Rochester 12.11 (83) d Euroa 5.3 (33). Shepparton Swans 24.12 (156) d Shepparton United 3.3 (21). Seymour: Bye. Mansfield: Bye. KYABRAM DISTRICT FOOTBALL LEAGUE SENIORS Dookie United 20.17 (137) d Tallygaroopna 2.9 (21). Girgarre 20.24 (144 d Ardmona 2.8 (20). Shepparton East 30.27 (207) d Longwood 2.4 (16). Lancaster 12.16 (88) d Merrigum 4.9 (33). Murchison-Toolamba 20.,15 (135) d Rushworth 3.4 (22). Stanhope 12,13 (85) d Undera 6.5 (41). Avenel 11.13 (79) d Violet Town 12.4 (76). Nagambie: Bye. RESERVES Dooklie United 7.8 (50) d Tallygaroopna 5.7 (37). Girgarre 13.19 (97) d Ardmona 1.3 (9). Shepparton East 21.18 (144) d Longwood 0.5 (5). Lancaster 12.12 (984) d Merrigum 3,.2 (20). Murchison-Toolamba 25.15 (169) d Rushworth 1.3 (9). Stanhope 18.11 (119) d Undera 1.1 (7). Avenel 16.8 (104) d Violet Town 2.2 (14). Nagambie: Bye. THIRDS Lancaster 19.15 (129) d Merrigum 7.4 (46). Dookie United v Tallygaroopna. Longwood 13.7 (85) d Shepparton Swans 4.5 (29). MurchisonToolamba 23.18 (156) d Rushworth 2.3 (13). Undera 7.12 (54) d Stanhope 5.11 (41). Violet Town 8.3 (51) d Avenel 6.5 (41). Girgarre 23.15 (153) d Ardmona 9.9 (63). Nagambie: Bye. RIDDELL DISTRICT FOOTBALL LEAGUE SENIORS Diggers Rest v Woodend-Hesket. Wallan 18.17 (25 d Romsey 6.6 (42). Melton Centrals 17.18 (120) d Western Rams 6.5 (41). Riddell 8.11 (59) drew with Macedon 8.11 (59). Lancefield: Bye. RESERVES Diggers Rest v Woodend-Hesket. Wanbdin 23.20 (158) d Romsey 0.2 (2). Melton Centrals 19.24 (138) d Western Rames 0.2 (2). Riddell 18,10 (118) d Macedon 4.8 (32). Lancefield: Bye. UNDER 19.5 Romsey 10.7 (67) d Wallan 5.8 (38). Riddell 7.8 (50) d Macedon 6.1 (37). Diggers Rest: Bye. BONNIE DOON Bonnie Doon competes in the Ovens and King Football League. Bonnie Doon had the bye in the first round.

AFL OUTER EAST NETBALL RESULTS PREMIER A-GRADE Olinda-Ferny Creek 56 d Narre Warren 48. PREMIER B-GRADE Narre Warren 58 d Olinda-Ferny Creek 46. PREMIER C-GRADE Narre Warren 46 d Olinda-Ferny Creek 34. PREMIER D-GRADE Narre Warren 42 d Olinda-Ferny Creek 26. DIVISION 1 A-GRADE Berwick Springs 42 d Belgrave 41. Seville v Gembrook-Cockatoo. ROC 49 d Monbulk Hawks 33. Emerald 47 d Mount Evelyn 38. DIVISION 1 B-GRADE Belgrave 53 d Berwick Springs 37. Sevillev Gembrook-Cockatoo. ROC 61 d Mobulk Hawks 29. Mount Evelyn 45 d Emerald 32. DIVISION 1 C-GRADE Berwick Springs 41 d Belgrave 37. Seville v Gembrook-Cockatoo. ROC 46 d Mobulk Hawks 17. Emerald 42 d Mount Evelyn 24. DIVISION 1 D-GRADE Berwick Springs 35 d Belgrave 11. Seville v Gembrook-Cockatoo. ROC 51 d Monbulk Hawks 1. Mount Evelyn 23 drew with Emerald 23. DIVISION 2 A-GRADE Yea 35 d Broadford 33. Warburton-Millgrove 65 d Powelltown 30. Yarra junction 53 d Kinglake 19. Yarra Glen 52 d Alexandra 35. DIVISION 2 B-GRADE Broadford 62 d Yea 37. Powelltown 51 d Warburton-Millgrove 38. Yarra junction 45 d Kinglake 26. Yarra Glen 76 d Alexandra 14. DIVISION 2 C-GRADE Broadford 41 d Yea 5. Warburton-Millgrove 34 d Powelltown 18. Yarra Junction 26 d Kinglake 12. Yarra Glen 53 d Alexandra 18. DIVISION 2 D-GRADE Broadford 26 d Yea 1. Powelltown 33 d Warburton-Millgrove 16. Thornton-Eildon 25 d Yarra Junction 10. Yarra Glen 22 d Alexandra 13. NORTHERN FNL NETBALL RESULTS NETBALL GRADING Bundoora 8 30 d West Preston-Lakeside 24. Fitzroy Stars 1 41 d North Heidelberg 1 34. Hume 1 35 d Diamond Creek 3 18. Epping 5 26 d Heat 5 21. Bundoorsa 5 27 d Montmorency 4 26. Whittlesea 2 34 d La Trobe University 2 8. Heidelberg West 2 32 d South Moranf 2 11. Reservoir 1 36 d Maclkeod 1 10. Lalor 4 26 d Hume 3 20. Whittlesea 1 48 d Hume 2 19. Bundoora 4 33 d Hurstbridge 2 12. Watsonia 3 26 d Thomastown 3 25. North Heidelberg 2 32 d Ivanhoe 2 31. North Heidelberg 5 35 d Fitzroy Stars 2 15. Heidelberg 1 39 d Diamond Creek 2 19. Watsonia 1 25 d Heat 2 19. Heidelberg 3 31 d Epping 1 27. La Trobe University 31 d Montmorency 3 25. Kilmore 2 27 d South Morang 1 26. Kilmore 1 33 d Lalor 2 19. Lalor 3 22 d Watsonia 2 17. Whittlesea 3 29 d Kilmore 7 13. Reservoiir 2 42 d Hurstbridge 3 7. Kilmore 4 30 d Thomastown 4 29. Ivanhoe 4 37 d Thomastown 2 22. North Heidelberg 3 38 d Bundoora 2 22. Northcote Park 2 47 d Diamond Creek 4 25. Heat 1 31 d Heidelberg 2 21. Kilmore 6 26 d Epping 4 22. Montmorency 5 31 d Bundoora 7 21. Epping 3 d Lower Plenty 1 11. Lalor 1 37 d Heidelberg West 1 26. Kilmore 5 33 d Lalor 5 11. Greensborough 2 34 d Ivanhoe 3 24. North Heidelberg 6 35 d Diamond Creek 5 19. Northcote Park 1 35 d Greensborough 1 17. Heat 4 27 d West Ivanhoe 1 21. Montmorency 6 31 d Bundoora 6 15. Montmorency 1 27 d Bundoora 1 25. Bundoora 6 31 d Hume 4 12, St Marys 1 27 d Bundoora 2 19. Thomastown 1 27 d Hurstbridge 1 19. Diamond Creek 1 44 d Ivanhoe 1 24. Heat 3 37 d North Heidelberg 7 24. Eppi9ng 2 30 d Northcote Park 3 19. Heidelberg West 3 27 d Lower Plenty 2 8. Kilmore 3 23 d Greensborough 3 16. North Heidelberg 4 35 d Panton Hill 1 22. AFL OUTER EAST DIV. 2 FIXTURE Saturday, April 24. Alexandra v Broadford. Yea v Yarra Glen. Sunday, April 25. Kinglake v Powelltown. Warburton-Millgrove v Yarra Junction.


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Local Theatre Shows

■ Panorama Theatre Company: Chitty Chitty Bang Bang Until May 16 at the Frankston Arts Centre, Davey St., Frankston. Directors: Natasha and Robert Harvey; Musical Director: Peter Pham Nguyen; Choreographer: Natasha Harvey. Bookings: www.artscentre.frankston.vic.gov.au ■ The 1812 Theatre: The Full Monty Until May 1 at The 1812 Theatre, 3 Rose St., Upper Ferntree Gully. Director: Pip Le Blond. Bookings: http://www.1812theatre.com.au 9758 3964. ■ Brighton Theatre Company: Flipside (by Ken Duncum) Until April 24 at the Brighton Arts and Cultural Centre, Cnr.Wilson and Carpenter Sts., Brighton. Director: David Collins. Bookings: www.brightontheatre.com.au 1300 752 126 ■ Ark Theatre: Robin Hood Men in Tights (a pantomime in the park by Julie Cunningham) April 18 at 2.30pm and April, 17 and 18 at 11.00am at Melba Park, Market St., Lilydale. BYO picnic rug. Bookings: https:/ / w w w. t r y b o o k i n g . c o m / b o o k / sessions?eid=706472 ■ Lilydale Athenaeum Theatre: Talking Heads (Three monologues by Alan Bennett) April 15 - May 1 at 39-41 Castella St., Lilydale. Director: Alan Burrows. Bookings: 9735 1777 (Mondays, Tuesdays and Fridays 10am - 2pm). ■ Powderkeg Players: Popcorn (by Ben Elton) April 16 - May 1 at Dempster Park Hall, 82 Phoenix St., North Sunshine. Director: Ash Weidner. Bookings: www.trybooking.com/BPDZL ■ Eltham Little Theatre: I'll Be Back Before Midnight (by Peter Colley) April 16 - May 1 at the Eltham Performing Arts Centre, 1603 Main Rd., Research. Bookings: www.elthamlittletheatre.org.au ■ Geelong Repertory Theatre: LoopedApril 16 - May 1 at the Woodbin Theatre, 15 Coronation St., Geelong West. Director: Geoff Gaskill. Bookings: www.gpac.org.au or 5225 1200 ■ Malvern Theatre Company: Educating Rita (by Willy Russell) April 23 - May 8 at 29 Burke Rd., Malvern East. Director: Nicholas Opolski. Bookings: www.malverntheatre.com.au 1300 131 552 ■ Mordialloc Theatre Company: Things I Know to be True (by Andrew Bovell) April 23 - May 8 at Shirley Burke Theatre, 64 Parkers Rd., Parkdale. Director: Geoff Arnold. Bookings: www.mordialloctheatre.com or 9587 5141 ■ Cardinia Performing Arts Company (CPAC): Priscilla Queen of the Desert - the Musical April 24 - May 2 at the Cardinia Cultural Centre, Pakenham. Bookings and more information: www.midsumma.org.au ■ Theatre of the Damned: Side Show April 29 - May 7 at the Shenton Performing Arts Centre, 379 Ryrie St., Geelong. Tickets: $37.50. Bookings: theatreofthedamned22@ gmail.com or 0425786843 or https:// www.trybooking.com/BGFIA ■ Heidelberg Theatre Company: A Short Season of Play-Readings. Play One: Love in Lockdown by Bob Tyers, April 30 at 8.00pm, May 1 at 2.00pm at Heidelberg Theatre, 36 Turnham Ave., Rosanna. Director: Bob Tyers. Play Two: Guardian Angel: A Modern Miracle by Gavin Williams, May 2 at 2.00pm, May 7 at 8.00pm. Director: Gavin Williams. Play Three: Tinderella: Sex and Stanislavski by Joachim Matschoss, May 8 and 9 at 8.00pm. Director: Joachim Matschoss. Admission: Free. Bookings essential. Call 9457 4117 with booking requirements. ■ CLOC Musical Theatre (CLOC): Priscilla Queen of the Desert - the Musical April 30 May 22 at the National Theatre, St Kilda. CoDirectors: Lynette and Chris White; Choreographer: Lynette White; Musical Director: Andy McCalman. Bookings: www.cloc.org.au ■ Bairnsdale Production Line Theatre Company: Mamma Mia! May 7 - 23 at Forge Theatre and Arts Hub, 80 McKean St., Bairnsdale. Directors: Haylee Treasure, Skye Smith, Tony Porter. Bookings: https:// w w w. t r y b o o k i n g . c o m / e v e n t s / landing?eid=706757 ● Continued in column, at right

Observer

The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021 - Page 17

Observations Jam Queens

Published statewide weekly in the Melbourne Observer and all editions of The Local Paper. Phone: 1800 231 311. Email: editor@MelbourneObserver.com.au

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21, 2021

‘FLIPSIDE’ AT BRIGHTON

● Paris Romanis, John Murphy, Liam O”Kane and Kieren Dawson in Flipside. Photo: John Shelbourn ■ Brighton Theatre Company presents the Bound, where he is befriended by kayaker and drama Flipside until April 24 at the Brighton photographer Rick. Arts and Cultural Centre, under the direction Rick convinces Jim to sign on for the voyof David Collins. age, despite the American not having any sailBased on a true story written by Ken Duncum, ing experience.. adapted from Capsized written by crew memCaptain and boat-builder of 'Rose Noelle', ber American Jim Nalepka, Flipside tells of the John, is a single-minded man convinced his crenewly commissioned trimaran 'Rose Noelle' ation 'will never flip', while the fourth crew memsmacked over by a huge rogue wave on its ber is the infuriating Phil Hoffman. maiden voyage from New Zealand to Tonga in The four disparate personalities act out life 1989. confined in the hull, lacing their experience with Its crew of four spent an unprecedented 119 laconic humour, philosophy, passion, pathos and days huddled in the vessel's upturned hull as it resilience. drifted in the South Pacific before being wrecked Performance Season: Until April 24 on rocks at Great Barrier Island. Venue: Brighton Arts and Cultural Centre, Essentially a shipwreck saga, it is also a story Carpenter St., Brighton. of friendship and love, narrated from the perBookings: www.brightontheatrecompany. spective of Jim, an instructor at Outward com.au - Cheryl Threadgold

EVERY SECOND

● Josephine Moon ■ Take four women from different generations in the one family and you have all the makings of a family saga. Throw in competitive jam making, train trips, and underlying issues and you have a cracker of a story. And that neatly sums up foodie queen and novelist Josephine Moon's latest novel, The Jam Queens. The Jam Queens follows a mother, daughter, grandmother and great-aunt reuniting for the trip of a lifetime through some of Australia's magical and remote places. Award-winning jam maker Aggie is determined to take her Barossa Valley Cafe to new heights. after trying to forget the pain of unsuccessful IVF treatments and focus on the future. So she accepts an invitation to travel across Australia on the Ghan for her mother's 70th birthday. Despite her initial apprehension, Aggie knows that the trip offers a precious opportunity to spend some quality time with her disgruntled mother, Valeria, and her distant daughter, Holly, as well as her meddling great-aunt Myrtle. The four generations of the family, all single women, will be reunited at last. In a case of art imitating life, when Josephine decided to write a novel about jam makers, she decided to get some first hand experience and entered an agricultural show for the very first time as a jam maker - and won. But how did the idea of taking a trip on the Ghan come into the picture? "I had heard my uncle Anthony mention several times that he'd like to take a trip on the Ghan and it must have wormed its way into my subconscious as a great bucket list item. In the novel, it becomes both a physical and metaphorical journey my characters take together." Josephine explained And our current limitations on overseas travel provided further impetus for her. " At this time in the world when travelling is still so difficult for so many people, it is fortuitous that this story came to fruition now to give my readers a chance to armchair travel through our magnificent country," Josephine enthused. With Mother's Day looming next month, The Jam Queens would be a perfect gift to surprise any food-loving mother with ... and isn't that all of us? The Jam Queens by Josephine Moon is published by Penguin Random House and available in all good bookstores. - Julie Houghton ● Continued from column, at left

Shows

● Lansy Feng, Madeleine Magee Carr, Richard Mealey and Riley Nottingham in Every Second. Photo: Sare Clarke ■ Independent theatre company Wit Incorpo- while also exploring the male experience of inrated presents Every Second, a fast-paced dark fertility. comedy by award-winning Australian playMeg and Tim, Jen and Bill. All they want is a wright Vanessa Bates from May 19 - 29 at the child. No sugar, no alcohol, no dignity. How Bluestone Church Arts Space, Footscray. much can be sacrificed to get what we want? The company's return to the stage coincides The show is directed by British theatre artist with their seventh birthday and Every Second is Emma Drysdale making her Melbourne directhe first production since new leaders El Boydell torial debut. and Lansy Feng took the reins from founding Performance Season: May 19 - 29 8pm and members Belinda Campbell and Jennifer Piper. Saturday matinees at 3pm. Every Second explores infertility, infidelity Venue: Bluestone Church Arts Space, 8A and the fallibility of love and friendship with hon- Hyde St., Footscray esty and humour. Bookings: witinc.com.au/shows/every-secThe show continues Wit Incorporated's tra- ond dition of bringing women's voices to the fore, - Cheryl Threadgold

■ The Mount Players: Too Many Crooks ( A radio play by Christiane Rochefort, Jean Nery, screenplay by Michael Pertwee) May 14 - 30 at the Mountview Theatre, 56 Smith St., Macedon. Director: John Rowland. Adapted for radio by John Rowland. Bookings: www.themountplayers.com ■ Beaumaris Theatre: Anne and Gilbert the Musical May 21 - 30 at Beaumaris Theatre, 82 Wells Road, Beaumaris. Director: Debbie Keyt: Musical Director: Harrison Ewart-Dart; Choreographer: Brontee French. Tickets: $35/ $32. Bookings: www.beaumaristheatre. com.au ■ Rosebud Theatre Company: Arsenic and Old Lace (by Joseph Kesselring) May 20 30 at the Rosebud Memorial Hall. Director: Isaac Schmidt. Cabaret seating (Tables of 8) Friday and Saturday nights. Traditional seating Sunday matinees. Bookings: http:// astral.org.au/tickets/ - Cheryl Threadgold ● Auditions on next page


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Call Will Mob: 0432 991 992 EXCAVATIONS Ph: 03 5797 2235


The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021 - Page 27

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Trades & Services Directory EXCAVATIONS

FENCING

HIRE

LEGAL AND PLANNING

KITCHENS

LEGAL SERVICES

All general farm fencing, cattle yards, sheep yards, vineyards, on site welding and oxy work. Tree plantation ripping. 5 hydraulic post drivers and pneumatic drivers. HAY CONTRACTING: Mowing, raking, round and square bales, cartage, loading, unloading. GRASS SLASHING: 4 extra heavy duty slashers. GENERAL FREIGHT: Hay, timber, wool, steel, grapes, machinery

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LANDSCAPES

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HANDYMAN

PARTY HIRE


Page 28 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021

www.LocalPaper.com.au

Trades & Services Directory PEST CONTROL

PLUMBER

RECYCLING

SCRAP REMOVAL

PLUMBER Simon Young 0429 052 166 I am a local guy who has lived in the area for more than 34 years and have 20 years’ plumbing experience. I pride myself in quality workmanship and reliability. • All areas of plumbing • Drainage • New Homes • Hot water installation • Renovations • Gas fitting • Roofing and Gutter • Maintenance and repairs • Septic tanks • Water tanks and pumps • Free quotes

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RENEWABLE ENERGY

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Property Maintenance Group PH: 0458 205 637

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(A CFA recommendation)

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TO ADVERTISE IN THE LOCAL PAPER PHONE OUR FRIENDLY Reiki Healing AD-VISORS ON838 Karli Chase: 0425 794 1800 231 311 7 The Semi-Circle, Yea www.reikiinsight.com


The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021 - Page 29

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Trades & Services Directory TERMITE CONTROL

TREE SERVICES

TRIMMING

WATER CARTAGE

THERAPIES

TREE SERVICES

UPHOLSTERY

WINDOW CLEANING

Crystal Pine Tree Services

Maxwell’s

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TREE CARE

TIMBER

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T: 5774 2201 M: 0417 321 781 E : max@maxwellsupholstery.com.au W : www.maxwellsupholstery.com.au Skyline Rd, Eildon

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Looking to improve your business? Advertise your business in this newspaper. Ads from just $5 per week. No extra charge for artwork. Call our Ad-visor today. Phone 1800 231 311


Page 30 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021

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www.northcentralhire.com.au


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The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021 - Page 31


Page 32 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021

Observations Gospel According To Paul

www.LocalPaper.com.au

Melbourne

Confidential

Observations Morning Melodies

Talk is cheap, gossip is priceless

SUPPER AND SHOWGIRLS ● Jonathan Biggins as Paul Keating in The Gospel According to Paul. ■ Australian comic actor Jonathan Biggins stars as Paul Keating in the smash hit comedy about a critical time in Australian history and the man that shaped it. The Gospel According to Paul is a funny, insightful and poignant portrait of the man that — as he tells it — single-handedly shaped contemporary Australia. Distilling the essence of his leadership into 90 minutes and showcasing Keating’s eviscerating wit, rich rhetoric and ego the size of Everest, Biggins focusses on landmark political achievements as well as personal obsessions: a man who grew up in the tribe of the Labor Party and gained an education at the knee of Jack Lang, who treated economics as an artform, and demanded we confront with rigorous honesty the wrongs of our colonial past. Biggins, like many Australians, has long been fascinated by Keating and what he means to Australia. What can we learn from this singular politician? It's finally Melbourne’s turn to experience what Biggins’ describes as “the first threedimensional, unauthorised autobiography written by someone else … I can’t think of a more entertaining or significant figure in recent Australian history with whom to spend an evening. All iceberg, no tip.” Written by and starring: Jonathan Biggins. Director: Aarne Neeme.. Designer: Mark Thompson. Lighting Designer: Verity Hampson. Sound and Video Designer: David Bergman. Venue: The Playhouse, Arts Centre Melbourne Dates: Wednesday May 11 – Sunday May 23 Performance Times: Tuesday - Saturday 7.30pm, Saturday matinees at 2pm, Sunday at 4pm Prices: $59 full price, $49 concession (plus venue booking fees) Bookings: artscentremelbourne.com.au, 1300 182 183 Running Time: 90 minutes, no interval - Cheryl Threadgold

Scratch Arts

■ Scratch Arts present two weeks of contemporary and queer art at the iconic Mission to Seafarers from April 20 - May 1 at 717 Finders Street, Docklands. Some 89 artists, 48 performances, 13 visual artists (from Melbourne and Ballarat), five integrated music and breathwork sessions, five nights of immersive light and sound installations, two life drawing classes and one huge party to finish it all off! Scratch Arts will be activating the historically listed Mission to Seafarers with a focus on local and regional artists, presented as part of the Midsumma Festival. The head of Scratch Arts, Timothy Ryan, says "Our focus as a company is to elevate queer and contemporary artists and bring their work to wider audiences. We adore the vibrant creations these artists offer and celebrate their work as the future of Australian art." Theatre and Exhibition Times: 5.3010.30pm April 20 - 24 and April 27 - May 1. Party Times 3pm-11pm, May 2. Venue: Mission to Seafarers, 717 Flinders St.., Docklands. Further information: www.ScratchArts. com - Cheryl Threadgold

● PHOTO: Jazida, Piera Dennerstein, Moira Finucane, Willow Sizer and Maude Davey in The Supper and Showgirls Show at the Stardust Room at Luna Park. Photo: Vanessa Fernandez. ■ Finucane and Smith present The Supper and Finucane and Smith Unlimited specialise Showgirls Show on April 23 and April 24 at in Unrealistic Art, mixing provocation and en5.30pm (sunset shows) and 8.00pm on April 24 tertainment and using various artforms . at the Stardust Room, Luna Park, 18 Lower Their work has won 15 performance awards Esplanade, St Kilda. including the Climakaze Award for Outstanding Starring Moira Finucane with burlesque's Art in Climate Justice (USA, 2017), the Jazida, performer Maude Davey, cabaret's Wil- CHAMACO Award for International Presentalow Sizer and opera singer Piera Dennerstein, tion of the Year (2015, Cuba), eight Green Room the performers have joined forces with Luna Awards and the Patrick White Playwright Park and chef Sophie Storen to present The Award. Supper and Showgirls Show. Performance Dates: Friday, April 23 and SatThe show is promoted as "Where arty opera urday April 24 meets ruffling risqué, gothic tales and sweet Times: Friday 5:30pm and Saturday 5:30 and songs join a sumptuous supper offering by the 8pm Creative Director of Cookes Food, mixing old Venue: Luna Park - Stardust Room, 18 world amusements with new world dash. And Lower Esplanade, St Kilda, finish your night riding the Southern Hemisphere's Tickets: $88 including gourmet supper largest and most ornate carousel." Bookings: www.trybooking.com/BPWAC

Carmen On The Beach ■ Younger sister's generosity continues; previously a ticket to The World's Longest Lunch, reviewed late last month in this newspaper. This time a ticket to Carmen On The Beach from Emotionworks Cut Opera who promised "Carmen with a sexy mix of Latin,Salsa,Blues and Jazz". We arrived at Lifesaving Victoria. Carmen not on the beach but indoors; a curved widewindowed space facing out over Princes and Station Piers and Port Phillip Bay. Carmen was my second experience of their opera fusion. The first? Tales of Hoffman in December 2019 when I wrote; "What did I make of this fusion of opera and such Chasons Parisienne as Mon Legionnaire, Chason d'amour, Non je ne Regrette etc.etc.Great fun and a successful meld", and "much of the opera remained and into which the chasons were a better than average fit ..." I cannot report the same of Carmen. Audience not familiar with Prosper Merimee's no-

vella or Bizet's opera were exposed to a nonsensical mash of the original opera and an ill-assortment of popular songs familiar to many in the audience; Begin The Beguine,Fever and much more of the same. Further, adaptation made Escamillo the toreador Eskimo Joe the blues singer;Don Jose and Zuniga the Lieutenant of Dragoons drug squad detectives,no problem there,but the leader of the smugglers who transposed to drug dealer/ night club boss was clad in a white slip. I don't recall a cross dresser in Bizet's libretto. There were for me few bright moments of relief in this farrago of popular nonsense.The role of Michaela from Katy Turbitt who managed briefly to return the evening to Carmen by Bizet.I well remembered her from Tales Of Hoffman when I wrote " ... and brilliant evocations of the three women Hoffman falls for, from Katy Turbitt who is in turn,the mechanical doll Olympia,the prostitute Guillrtta and finally the virgin Antonia". - Review by Peter Green

Matador returns to Melb. ■ Matador returns to Melbourne at Her Majesty's Theatre for a strictly limited season from April 29, after recent sold-out return seasons in Brisbane and Adelaide. A fiery fusion of burlesque, dance and jawdropping circus acts, Matador is set across a fiery Spanish sunset and is a tale of forbidden love, carnal desires, passion and pain, of a love torn bull and the seductive Matador. Presented by Bass Fam Creative as part of Midsumma Festival 2021, Matador is promoted

as a "journey of self-discovery, identity, sexuality, lust, sex and passion, exploring the trials and tribulations of love, from the pain of unrequited love to the effects of infidelity on a relationship. Above all else, MATADOR is a celebration of love, friendship and the bonds that hold us together." Season details: April 29 - May 2 at 8.00pm, Sunday at 3.30pm. Venue: Her Majesty's Theatre, 219 Exhibition St.., Melbourne. Bookings: ticketek.com.au Tickets: $70-$150

● Simon Dow from The Australian Ballet School ■ Arts Centre Melbourne’s Morning Melodies return to Hamer Hall with a stellar lineup of music theatre, cabaret, opera, jazz and dance from May to December. The feel-good concerts will celebrate Australian performers including David Hobson, Silvie Paladino, Zoy Frangos and Trevor Ashley as well as future stars with performances from The Australian Ballet School and Victorian College of the Arts. Now an annual tradition, The Australian Ballet School’s performance opens this year’s Morning Melodies program with En Pointe – a repertoire filled with energy, athleticism and the refined skills of the School's young dancers; celebrating the art of ballet with new works from Stephen Baynes and Simon Dow along with the romance of Paquita. International drag superstar TrevorAshley is more Liza Minnelli than Minnelli herself. This hilarious tribute Liza with a He! explores all the great roles and Broadway show tunes that Liza never got to sing along with her much loved classics. Some of Broadway's greatest hits including I Have Confidence, Memory, Send in the Clowns, One Singular Sensation plus Minnelli masterpieces, Maybe This Time, Cabaret and New York, New York will be belted out from the Hamer Hall stage this June. June will be filled with even more Morning Melodies joy, as songstress Silvie Paladino returns by popular demand. Accompanied by the David Cameron Trio, Paladino will entertain audiences with songs from her vast repertoire traversing musical theatre, hits by female vocalists and songs of inspiration. Come July, Orchestra Victoria presents a specially curated program for Morning Melodies 2021 under the leadership of Artistic Director Nicolette Fraillon. Principal performance partners of The Australian Ballet, Opera Australia and Victorian Opera and most recently accompanying local contemporary musicians The Teskey Brothers and Mo’Ju, the musical beauty and craftsmanship of this ensemble will be spotlighted in this concert. First Morning Melodies Event Date: Tuesday, May 18 at 11am and 1.30pm Venue: Hamer Hall, Arts Centre Melbourne Bookings: artscentremelbourne.com.au - Cheryl Threadgold

Auditions

■ Encore Theatre Company: Vigil (by Morris Panych) May 1 at 2.00pm, May 2 at 7.30pm at Fleigner Hall, 31-39 Highland Avenue, Oakleigh East. Director: David Collins. Audition bookings: divcollins@gmail.com or 0423 505 980. ■ Legends of the Skies (LOTS) Theatre: Series Nine. Open readings/auditions on Monday, May 17 and Wednesday May 19, 7.00-9.00pm in Mordialloc. Director: Maggie Morrison. Audition bookings: 0408 272343 or email maggie07@bigpond.net.au ■ Peridot Theatre: Hypnosis (by David Tristram) June 6 at 1.00pm, June 7 at 7.00pm at Mt Waverley Secondary College, Lechte Rd., Mt Waverley. Director: Pip Le Blond. Audition bookings: pipleblond@gmail.com or 0400 350 792. ■ Playhouse Players Inc: Around the World in 80 Days (by Jules Verne adapted by Mark Brown) April 24 2pm, April 27 7pm at the Rentoul Theatre, 16 Livingstone Close, Burwood. Director: Graeme McCoubrie. Audition bookings and details: playhouseplayers@hotmail.com or 0407 276 973 - Cheryl Threadgold


The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021 - Page 33

www.LocalPaper.com.au

Magazine Strange Space

■ In Melbourne’s newest art precinct, the newly opened Collingwood Yards,visitors can celebrate the venue through the shared studios, galleries, workshops, hubs, and everywhere in between. With projection as the backdrop, A Strange Space celebrates the creativity and diversity of Collingwood Yards – and all that goes on within – acknowledging the artistic connections, moments and human interactions that are the interstitial spaces where we collectively gather, create and work. A free, open-air, multi-arts exhibition over four nights, co-curated by Edwina Bartlem and Jacob Tolo for the Centre for Projection Art and Midsumma Festival. Audiences will experience site-responsive projection art, performance, music, dance and online works by LGBTQIA+ artists and allies, exploring the theme A Strange Space and the various forms, ideas and experiences that this concept evokes. Artists: Megan Beckwith, Alison Bennett, Jane Crappsley, Wesley Dowling, Jenna Eriksen, KP Finley, Susan Maco Forrester, Jonathan Homsey, Eric Jong, Susannah Langley, Drew Pettifer, Leisa Prowd, Queertech.io, Melinda Smith, Scotty So, Van Sowerwine and Isobel Knowles, Yandell Walton and Wendy Yu. Event dates: April 22 - 25, 6pm to midnight Venue: Collingwood Yards, 35 Johnston St., Collingwood Launch event: April 22, 6:00pm-midnight Speeches commence promptly at 6:30pm, followed by performances Friday night panel discussion: Creating Strange Spaces: Friday, April 23 6.pm-7pm Artists Susan Maco Forrester, Dr Drew Pettifer and Yandell Walton, with co-curators Edwina Bartlem and Jacob Tolo in conversation with Richard Watts about using space in their practice. Further information on the program and artists can be found at centreforprojection art.com.au/a-strange-space/ - Cheryl Threadgold

Billy Loves Cha Cha Forever ■ Cracked Actors Theatre presents Billy Loves Cha Cha Forever! from April 22 to May 5 at their theatre at Power House on the Lake, Level 1, 34 Lakeside Drive, Albert Park as part of the Midsumma Festival. Written and directed by Noel Anderson, CAT Artistic Director Matthew Richard Walsh says, "This play captures both the rough 'n' ready iconoclastic time in which it is set with the current yearning for an era that entrenched the LGBTIQ community in the mainstream of Australian culture." Set in Kings Cross, Sydney in 1968, the body of a street hustler shot at close range, lies on the carpet. A year earlier in The Boom Boom rom, Cha Cha weaves her magic on a small crowd. That night she meets Billy, a brash young boy from Melbourne and falls in love. Featuring Australian drag performer Samuel Thompson, Billy Loves Cha Cha is a bittersweet story, said to have "more frocks than Priscilla and more plot twists than Sleuth". Performance Season: April 22, 23, 28 to 30 and May 4, 5 at 7.30pm; April 24, 25 and May 1 at 2.30pm and 5.30pm Venue: Cracked Actors Theatre (CAT), Power House on the Lake, Level 1, 34 Lakeside Drive, Albert Park. Bookings: https://midsumma.org.au/whatson/events/billy-loves-cha-cha-forever Door sales available.

● Samuel Thompson as Cha Cha in Billy Loves Cha Cha Forever! Photo: Edwina Hollick Duration: 120 minutes with intermission. Tickets: $39 full/$29 concession or group of six plus. - Cheryl Threadgold

BAYSIDE BUBBLE

Jungle Bungle

■ Craig Christie’s Jungle Bungle is showing during the school holidays at Theatre Works. This is an hour-long musical show for the family focusing on themes of friendship, individuality, feelings and memories. The COVID-safe staging features Perspex booths for small groups around the perimeter of the space with performers using a ‘theatre in the round’ format. Snakes in the foyer are an instant hit with all ages. The arts and craft stations in each booth show that a lot of thought has gone into welcoming all ages. Energetic and enthused, Mitch Ralston sets the scene during the audience warm up with simple moves for all ages to do and participate during the show. His strong stage presence thrives on his portrayal of various characters and are a delight to watch. Meg McKibbin plays Claire. Meg is an accomplished actor, singer and dancer showing great energy and warmth. Rhys Wilson plays the endearing Oliver. His characterisation showed a pleasing sense of light and shade, but he needs to work on his vocals. Both his singing vocals along with diction and clarity of words need strengthening. Congratulations to Director, James Coley on his astute staging, using a simple but effective set designed by Jacob Battista. The clever lighting, designed by Jacob Shears, of the individual booths as well as the stage area denoting the various scenes allowed both performers to shine and audience to participate with great relish. Regarding age suitability, my four-year ld grandson was fearful of the dark when the lights first went down, and I feel the content would be better suited for ages 8+. This is definitely a fun, well written, ‘crazy’ song and dance show using local talent which will leave a smile on the faces of all family members on their way home. - Review by Lyn Hurst

Gruffalo’s Child

■ Live theatre will live on as long as we have children engaged early in this particular form of the Arts. The buzz of excited voices, many aged as young as three and four backed into their seats at the Athenaeum, while gazing intently at the magical set of extended hands and finger trees stretching up and into a moon – ooooh! “the deep , dark wood ...” The well known story of the adventures of the Gruffalo’s Child entered the musical genre ,as each character entertained mightily with their songs and dances, before returning to the task of the challenges faced by the disobedient little gruffalo. The flamenco snake particularly appealed to kids, and the con man fox was an absolute joy to older kids and adults. Costumes were marvellously created from the opening scene of a huge daddy Gruffalo (Skyler Ellis) , nursing the wide awake baby (Enya Daly). Ellis’s face was clearly seen above the “terrible teeth in his terrible jaws” Combined with loud, humourous snoring the absorbing suspension of disbelief, so vital to live theatre ,was evident throughout the entire 55 minute show, and was particularly engaging with the fox portrayed as a wily, flamboyant, conman estate agent. The audience of parents and kids were easily drawn into some rhythmic clapping and responses . Watching this I did some reflecting on the special skills it takes to be a good child entertainer; kids can recoil from an actor they see as needing them to respond, as opposed to an actor who really engages them in involvement. All three actors Gruffalo’s Child Enya Daly, Gruffalo and Predators Skyler Ellis, and Narrator/Mouse Madison Hegarty managed this interaction very successfully. At my attendance there seemed to be a slight problem with the volume on baby Gruffalo’s singing, although not the dialogue. With the excellent standard of everything else, I am confident that that would have been immediately rectified for the rest of the season. - Review by Maggie Morrison

Snake Oil

● Bayside Bubble Podcast presenters Kate Harvey (left) and Maree Lacy. Photo: Kate Harvey ■ The Bayside Bubble, an innovative podcast tion they have never heard before, and have a project devised by best friends Maree Lacy and whole lot of fun along the way." Kate Harvey has proven popular in the Bayside The Bayside Bubble podcasts recorded to area since going live in early November. date can be heard on www.baysidebubble. Local Bayside residents and small business- com.au owners Kate and Maree love their walks and Readers are invited to send suggestions for chats together along the BayTrail, and about Bayside interviewees or topics to Maree and two years ago started brainstorming ideas for a Kate at baysidebubblepodcast@gmail.com podcast. Their aim would be "to help showcase Under the leadership of dynamic duo Maree the amazing people and places in Bayside". Lacy and Kate Harvey, the future looks good for Each week the podcasts focus on a topic the Bayside Bubble, with the podcasts generatunique to Bayside, such as the bathing boxes, ing much interest in local and broader commuIcebergers, dog-owners and theatre, and the girls nities. interview a diverse range of community memIn Kate's words, "It's being done out of love bers. and a sense of fun. We don't know where it's Interview subjects have so far included best- going, but we're enjoying the journey." selling author Sally Hepworth, Young Talent - Cheryl Threadgold Time member Nicole Cooper, Mayor of Bayside, Laurie Evans, yachtsman Gordon Syme, tennis legend Neale Fraser and more. Kate and Maree point out: "Human beings ■ The Australian National Piano Award anare inherently social creatures. As far back as nounces the 11 finalists: Anthony Chen, Paul Cheung, Timothy Chiang, Matthew we can trace, humans have travelled, hunted, Garvie, Joshua Hooke, Bowen Li, Rachael Lin, and thrived in social groups. The Bayside Ruby Luck, Yasmin Rowe, Raymond Shon and Bubble is about strengthening our community Alex Zhang. through connection." They will perform in a week of solo reIn talking all things Bayside, the goal of the citals at Riverlinks Eastbank in Shepparton podcasts is "to share the heart and soul of our from October 4-9. community, surprise our listeners with informa-

Piano finalists

■ There are always going to be some unexpected surprises at the Melbourne International Comedy Festival and Snake Oil is one of them. Comedy duo and real-life brothers, Josh and Tom Burton, wrote and performed Snake Oil, a sketch comedy that had a quick remedy for any ailment and the audience in stitches. It’s an intimate show at the Improv Conspiracy Theatre in Meyers Place, where the brothers converse directly with the audience between quite hilarious short sketches. The sketches include parodies of iconic characters - the deceptive ‘snake oil salesman’ – from whom the show gets its name, toothpick chewing gangsters, a dashing damemagnet detective - think Humphrey Bogart, and the most iconic cowboy of all time, Sam Elliott (and his magical cream). There is plenty going on here, and while their impersonations impressed, their singing impressed even more. A few humourous and catchy songs showed off their impressive range and gift for harmonies. There is also some hilarious improv, which seems to be another of their strong suits. The show is pacey and well-constructed as they transform easily in and out of character, and it is amazing what they can do with a few carefully chosen props. As you might expect, the brother’s performance is tinged with sibling rivalry, but the banter and tantrums are all in good humour. With Mum and Dad in the audience (was it really them?) for guidance, the theme of family makes it more relatable and you simply can’t help liking and laughing at these guys. The Burton Brothers are a triple threat – they can sing, act and they know comedy. Snake Oil is highly recommended. - Review by Beth Klein


Page 34 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021

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Magazine National Playwright Competition

● Matthias Kootz (left), Chris Grant, Rob Selzer and Jordan Brown receive their awards for Mob Psychology. ■ Bridget, a pint-sized dynamo, has devised a devastating game for her party guests, Barry, a postman and his wife Angela, Tracey, a Flight Assistant, and Geraldine, Bridget’s boss at the bank. Burning Bridget, by Cerise de Gelder and directed by Angela Annese, was the first of the three plays in the finals of the National Playwright Competition at the Rentul theatre, Burwood Josephine Boffa was an effervescent Bridget. She could have become more ‘intoxicated’, given the number of bottles littering the set. Doc White was a natural Barry and Sue Rosenwax believable as Angela. Angelique Malcolm played Tracey skilfully and Ioanna Gagani was convincing as Geraldine. Emily Riley was quietly proficient as Jan the doctor. The actors’ tendency to address the audience, while effective for delivering monologues, was otherwise a tad overdone. The play was intriguing and well-constructed. Perfect, written by Carmen Saarelaht and directed by Steve Saul was barely ten minutes long. Several brief vignettes, employing compact dialogue, deal with the relationships of flatmates Tally (Elisa Bullock), Jerry (Sebastian Zych) and Rob (Mason Frost) during and after COVID. Relationships are intensified and all three are affected by love and death. The actors were competent, but for this reviewer, there was insufficient time for character development and dramatic impact. More volume and sharper diction were needed and in a play of this duration, faster scene changes are critical. Mob Pschology was written by Rob Selzer and directed by Graeme McCoubrie. Two gravediggers are preparing a hole for a large ominous sack. Bone is plain-speaking and uncomplicated. Ollie, a student, is an aspiring Professor but needs an essay to gain a scholarship. Both men work for the gangster, Boris. The sack moves and Kevin, former lawyer for Boris, emerges alive. Kevin pleads for his life, in return for helping Ollie with his essay. Matthias Kooz was amusing as the fasttalking Kevin. Chris Grant was a solid Bone, and Jordan Brown was a nicely conflicted Ollie. A brisk pace was maintained throughout the story, a clever, dark comedy with a neat final twist. All three playwrights are heartily congratulated. To be a finalist in a national one-act play competition is a stunning achievement. The awards presented by Cr Andrew Davenport from Whitehorse City Council on the final night included: Judges'Award: 1st. Mob Psychology written by Rob Selzer. 2nd. Perfect by Carmen Sarrelaht. 3rd Burning Bridget by Cerise De Gelder People's Choice Awards: (voted by audiences over the performance season): Best Written Play - Dead Heat : Burning Bridget and Mob Psychology Best Performed Play - Mob Psychology Best Performance of a Female ActorIoanna Gagani in Burning Bridget Best Performance of a Male Actor - Chris Grant in Mob Psychology - Review by Juliet Charles

The Midnight Gang

● Kyle Kaczmarczyk, Nicholas Starte and Alex Beauman in The Midnight Gang. Photo: Heidrun Lohr ■ David Walliam’s book The Midnight Gang the performance I saw the energy was low from is the latest adaptation by Producers CDP to hit both the audience and cast. the Regent Theatre. This may have been a lack of intimacy with Adapted into a play by Maryam Master, The such a large stage and the actors performing Midnight Gang aims to highlight the importance much of it towards the back, the dim lighting of ‘friendship, love, Imagination’ with a cast of aimed to reflect the midnight hour, or character imperfect characters joining together to over- development stopping at the point where rather come adversity and improve their lives. those characters deemed larger than life were The idea of creating adventures in an other- not quite ‘big enough’. wise dull hospital is exciting. Every night at midThere was creativity in the sheet elephant night a different ‘gang’ member is able to fulfill and ‘granny’s’ windy exit. More of this with less a wish with the help and imaginations of the set movement would have kept this show alive. others as they try to escape the clutches of mean One of my guests (age 8) was very fidgety, Matron (Sarah Greenwood). whilst the 7 year old said it was ‘OK,’ ‘is it over Tom the newest patient played youthfully by yet?’ and gave it 4/10. Alex Beauman encourages the gang to grant the My adult companion however loved it, parwish of Sally (also Sarah Greenwood); no easy ticularly the flying granny and Tom’s jokes. feat as they play out the future of this very sick I myself was frustrated that not more was girl, in one night. done to engage the audience, make better use Whilst the script has it all I feel this adapta- of the stage and live up to its professional status. tion did not take the show to its full potential. In - Review by Elizabeth Semmel

Treats at Lawler Theatre ■ Written in 1975, Christopher Hampton’s Treats, in its exploration of power and control in relationships is as relevant today as when it was first staged. The manipulative and frenetic Dave (Nicholas Jaquinot) returns from an overseas assignment to find his one time partner, Ann (Ashleigh Coleman), has thrown him out and taken up with a bumbling and placid, Patrick (James Martin). What ensues is part comedy but, essentially, tragic as we see the characters not only destroy each other but also themselves. There are moments in mime when characters reveal themselves before a mirror; their actions suggesting underlying tensions and uncertainties. This counterpoints with the physical interplay between them from physical violence to feigned gestures of intimacy. The dialogue between the characters was taut the calculating nature of which was designed to not only deceive each other but keep the audience guessing as to who was being genuine. Jaquinot moved effortlessly between manic energy and emotional distress, his character feigning both to maintain control. Martin’s portrayal of Patrick’s ineptitude and awkwardness was clownish in dimension which was incredibly well sustained but one wonders if that might have diminished the brutality attributed to the character of Ann who used him as a source of vengeance. It’s easier to toy with a clown and discard

● Ashleigh Coleman (Ann) and James Martin (Patrick) in Treats. Photo: Sarah Zijlstra him that it is to disingenuously abuse someone real. This balance, then, between the three is one of the hardest things to manage of which the director, Monique Morani, would have been well aware. Coleman captures the frustration of a woman caught in a vortex of chauvinistic masculinity unable to win the savage game regardless of the approach she takes. Hampton’s play is decades old. The subject matter is still pertinent. We, the audience, are put on notice as we laugh at the antics which turn to gratuitous violence. Dave and Patrick become partners in their mistreatment of Ann but for different reasons – both ends of the male spectrum of conduct being equally subjugating. For her part, Ann becomes a victim having misused Patrick. Each and all stand condemned as the cycle of manipulative control is perpetuated. The Lawler Theatre, Southbank - Review by David McLean

The Wheelhouse

■ The final performance of The Wheelhouse, created and produced by Ade Djajamihardja for disability-led production company A2K Media, was presented in friendly all-accessible hybrid style for both a live and online audience as part of the Melbourne International Comedy Festival.. Online viewers enjoyed what is believed to be the only disability-led festival show offering Auslan and also an option for audio description. The talented, diverse cast included activist and award-winning documentary filmmaker Sarah Barton, whose moderating role on the panel added calm stability. Comedic artist and wheelchair user Belinda Aitken, a non-fan of pet calendars with preference for firemen, used her unique droll comedy delivery style to be funny, engaging, and effectively convey issues to the non-disabled. Bubbly Madeleine Stewart's strong performance and big smile were also terrific. She courageously joked about her arm disability, even offering her limb for an audience participatory game of quoits. With their contrasting performative styles, Belinda and Madeleine would make a splendid comedy duo. Jamie Aditya Graham's musical skills and interesting lyrics entertained, adding variety to the show Jason Marion's skilled direction ensured the pacey show zapped along, with the home viewer feeling immersed and part of the action as if seated with the live audience. Jason also demonstrated his versatility by portraying various roles including dodgy disability aid salesman Ashley Bedder and politicians, including Prime Minister Scott Morrison. No topic was taboo for discussion from covid lockdown to sex, the Canberra bubble and issues regarding dating with a disability. The show exudes frank honesty from all involved. I didn't like hearing swearing - this detracts from the show's more important messages. Comedy content and performances strengthened as the show progressed.. Bravo to the two Auslan interpreters who worked diligently throughout the performance. Double stroke survivor Ade Djajamihardja maintains a commendable pivotal presence during the show in his role as creator, producer and performer. Congratulations to all involved. Looking forward to future Wheelhouse shows. - Review by Cheryl Threadgold

Shaun The Sheep

■ The premiere season of Shaun the Sheep’s Circus Show is brought to Melbourne by world acclaimed Circa Contemporary Circus ensemble and the UK based Aardman studio. This thrilling circus production is the latest iteration, adding to Shaun’s movie and TV series. This show, timed for the school holidays, was abuzz with excited families as they ascended the staircase to the grandeur of the Regent Theatre foyer. Curtains opened onto scenic designer Dan Potra’s stunning landscape set: a grassy meadow back-drop sloping back and rising several metres to the ceiling beneath which is the farmer’s lit up Mossy Bottom Farm cottage. Mid-way down the verge is a viewing panel into the farmer’s living room up to which the performers scramble, tumble and slide back down. There were familiar faces: irrepressible Shaun, his loyal, canine friend Bitzer, Timmy’s doting but careless Mum, wearing her signature curlers, who thought she’d lost Timmy for good as he tumbled from the stage. Circa costumes allowed for supremely physical circus feats while remaining true to character. A large board displayed names and scenes to fill in any gaps. Sheep bleated, and the farmer and postman spoke in Aardmanstyle gobbled vocabulary with surprising coherency: this show is about physicality, not elocution and the audience got it. The stage was alive with exhilarating aerial silk contortions, a constant stream of daring acrobatics, pole work with audience gasping as performers slid to drop centimetres from the floor, balancing plank feats and high jinx with the Lost Tyre. This inspired coupling of Shaun the Sheep with the highly skilled Circa’s fun, slapstick antics is a winning celebration of adventures at Mossy Bottom. - Review by Sherryn Danaher


The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021 - Page 35

MARKETING FEATURE

Magazine

Stateside with Gavin Wood in West Hollywood

WeHo City leaders on the move

■ Hi everyone, remotely from my suite at the Ramada Plaza Hotel and Suites comes this week's news

Out and About

City Manager retires

Early breakfast

■ After over 30 years of loyal service to the development of the City of West Hollywood, City manager Paul Arevalo is sadly moving on. Paul served as the Executive Director of the West Hollywood Redevelopment Agency and was Chief Executive Officer of City Hall. Mr Arevalo is also the Chair of the Pasadena Rose Bowl and has served on three Pasadena City commissions. He will be sadly missed in West Hollywood as one of the most approachable City Managers and also an executive that got things done. Lindsey Horvath is moving on after her reign as West Hollywood Mayor finishes to compete for a supervisors position on the Los Angeles Board of Supervisors and her campaign looks strong with the endorsement of former member of the California State Senate and Los Angeles County Supervisor for the 3rd district, Shelia Kuehl. Paul and Lindsay will be missed greatly. They both had passion and determination to get the job done.

Sports watching declines ■ Nearly half of Americans changed their sports viewing habits as progressive political messaging took over sporting events, according to a new poll. The YouGov/Yahoo News poll released on Monday showed that about three times as many Americans who started watching more sports in the midst of social justice messages actually watched less, Yahoo Sports reported. About 11 per cent of poll respondents said they watch more sports on TV because leagues and athletes are embracing political advocacy. However, more than one-third (34.5 percent) said they were watching less. The majority of poll respondents, 56.3 per cent, said their sports viewing was not altered by political or social messaging. When broken into political parties, 13.7 per cent of Democrats said they watched more sports and 53 per cent of Republicans said they watched less. About 8.7 per cent of independent voters said they watched more sports following the change to social justice messaging and 38.6 per cent watched less.

● Pictured together: Ramada Plaza Managing Director Alan Johnson with West Hollywood City Mayor Lindsay Horvath and retiring City Manager Paul Arevalo.

Re-segregation

Link to processed meat

■ Can a slice of bacon a day lead to dementia later in life? Researchers say eating just a small amount of processed meat each day significantly increases the risk of mental decline. Their study of nearly 500,000 people in the United States finds consuming 25 grams daily, about two crispy strips of bacon, raises dementia risk by 44 per cent. These products include bacon, sausages, canned meats, and cured items like salami. On the other hand, study authors reveal eating unprocessed red meat may actually lower the chances of developing the disease. Consuming 50 grams of meats like beef, pork, and veal contributed to a 19 per cent decrease in dementia risk. The team discovered the connection while examining the link between eating meat overall and dementia onset. The condition affects between 5 and 8 per cent of all adults over 60 years-old, with Alzheimer's disease being the most common variety. "Worldwide, the prevalence of dementia is increasing and diet as a modifiable factor could play a role,"?lead researcher and PhD student Huifeng Zhang says in a university release. "Our research adds to the growing body of evidence linking processed meat consumption to increased risk of a range of nontransmissible diseases." ■ If you are considering coming over for a holiday to see the stars later on in 2021or 2022, then I have got a special deal for you. We would love to see you at the Ramada Plaza Hotel and Suites, 8585 Santa Monica Boulevard, West Hollywood. I have secured a terrific holiday deal for readers of the Melbourne Observer and The Local Paper. Please mention 'Melbourne Observer' when you book to receive the 'Special Rate of the Day' for your advance bookings. Please contact Jennifer at info@ramadaweho.com Happy Holidays, Gavin Wood

■ When is the best time to have breakfast every morning? According to a new study, you shouldn't wait too long. That's because eating breakfast before 8.30am could reduce one's risk of developing Type 2 diabetes, researchers say. The study by Northwestern University researchers shows that people who have eaten before 8.30am had lower blood sugar levels and less insulin resistance. The finding won't be welcome news to those who follow intermittent fasting, a popular dieting strategy that typically requires one to wait until about 10 am to eat. Instead, enjoying your first snack of the day early on may be better for you, regardless of what time you stop eating. "We found people who started eating earlier in the day had lower blood sugar levels and less insulin resistance, regardless of whether they restricted their food intake to less than ten hours a day or their food intake was spread over more than 13 hours daily," lead study author Dr Marriam Ali says in a statement. "These findings suggest that timing is more strongly associated with metabolic measures than duration, and support early eating strategies." Insulin resistance happens when the body does not respond as well to insulin produced by the pancreas, and glucose is less able to enter the cells. People with insulin resistance might be at higher risk of developing Type 2 diabetes. Both insulin resistance and high blood sugar levels affect a person's metabolism, or the breaking down of food to proteins, carbohydrates or sugars, and fats.

GavinWood

From my Suite at the Ramada Plaza Complex on Santa Monica Blvd

US bail out ■ As Americans start to receive the latest round of stimulus cheques, a new analysis reveals that about $4.38 billion will also go to illegal immigrants. The Centre for Immigration Studies estimates that 2.65 million illegal immigrants have Social Security numbers that allow them to receive stimulus chequess. T his group of illegal immigrants can be described as "aliens temporarily present without status," according to Steven Camarota, director of research for the Centre for Immigration Studies. "These individuals are in the country illegally and could be required to leave. Yet, under the current system, they are still given work authorisation and Social Security numbers," he said. They include Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals and Temporary Protected Status recipients. In addition, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services issued 882,000 work authorisations and Social Security numbers to other illegal immigrants in fiscal year 2020, the analysis states. These include asylum applicants, as well as those applying for adjustment of status and suspension of deportation, among other categories.

www.gavinwood.us

■ HBO host Bill Maher suggested that the United States is "entering an era of re-segregation that's coming from the left" during a Friday night Real Time conversation with Democratic data scientist David Shor. Shor, who worked on former President Barack Obama's 2012 campaign and is currently head of data science at progressive non-profit Open Labs, was making the case that since most Americans do not agree with leftist values, Democrats should instead focus on issues most people "agree with us on" in order to win elections. "We seem to be entering an era of re-segregation that's coming from the left," Maher said, responding to a comment by Shor about the "geographic sorting" of liberals trending to urban areas. "I mean, on many college campuses, there are separate dorms, separate black dorms, graduation ceremonies, stuff like that. How will that affect elections in the future?"

Outlawing ‘Mom’, ‘Dad’ ■ Once they took out Dumbo and Pepe Le Pew, it was only a matter of time until the language police doubled down. An elite school in Manhattan has advised the school "community", that means not just the staff but students and parents, to stop saying "mom" and "dad," or even "parents," advising them to instead say "grown-ups, folks, or family." The Grace Church School, which charges $57,000 for students ranging from kindergarten to 12th grade, put out a 12-page guide addressed to the school community that bans a slew of words, phrases and even ideas. "The goal of this guide is to provide the community with more inclusive language that is aligned with the mission of Grace Church School," reads the guide. "While we recognize hateful language that promotes racism, misogyny, homophobia, and other forms of discrimination are already addressed in our school handbooks, we also recognize that we can do more than ban hateful language; we can use language to create welcoming and inclusive spaces. This guide addresses ways we can remove harmful assumptions from the way we interact with each other." "Families are formed and structured in many ways. At Grace Church School, we use inclusive language that reflects this diversity," the guide says. "It's important to refrain from making assumptions about who kids live with, who cares for them, whether they sleep in the same place every night, whether they see their parents, etc."


Page 36 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021

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Magazine ■ ■ The modern comedians seem to rely on foul language and crudity to get a laugh. There was a time when comic actors could entertain an audience with their sheer brilliance, funny material and timing. Such a character comedian was W.C. Fields. William Claude Dukenfield was born in Darby, Pennsylvania, in 1880. Claude was the eldest of five children. His father had served in the American Civil War and young Claude worked with his dad at various jobs from an early age. When he was 15 he trained to be a juggler and left the family home when he was eighteen. He changed his name to W. C. Fields and was employed as a juggler at Fortescue's Pier, Atlantic City. His friends knew him as ‘Bill’. He toured the world and was in Melbourne to perform at The Tivoli on two occasions, the first in 1903 and then again in 1914. He had brilliant reviews in Melbourne newspapers and he was described as the "silent comic juggler." Bill also performed at Buckingham Palace for Royalty and appeared with the famous Sarah Bernhardt. He introduced a mumbling dialogue into his vaudeville act which helped to get more laughs. He appeared in silent films in 1915 but returned to the stage and worked mainly in Broadway shows. In the early 1930s Bill made short films for Max Sennett and by 1934 he was established as a major film star. His films included David Copperfield, It's a gift, You Can't Cheat An Honest Man, Mississippi and The Bank Dick.

Whatever Happened To ... W.C. Fields By Kevin Trask of 3AW and 96.5 Inner FM My favourite is My Little Chickadee where he played a con man opposite Mae West. Remember the dialogue from The Bank Dick between W.C Fields and Shemp Howard (from The Three Stooges) playing the bartender. Fields: "Was I in here last night, and did I spend a $20 bill?" Shemp: "Yeah." Fields: "Oh boy, what a load that is off my mind... I thought I'd lost it!" He developed this great gruff character who loved a drink and hated children. I had the great pleasure of conducting a radio interview with his child co-star of Never Give a Sucker An Even Break, Gloria Jean. Gloria told me that if W.C. Fields had been seen drinking in front of a child the film would have been closed down.

● W.C. Fields

To avoid this he used to go behind a special screen to partake of the alcoholic beverages. Gloria said that he was a nice man and she had happy memories of making the film. In his later years W. C. Fields became very popular on radio, working with Edgar Bergen and his ventriloquist doll Charlie McCarthy. (In later years our own Ron Blaskett met Edgar Bergen.) His health was failing in 1946 and he was sent to hospital. Bill was a confirmed atheist but when a friend dropped in to visit him he was found reading the Bible in his hospital bed - Bill looked at the visitor and said …"I was just looking for loopholes." W.C. Fields passed away on Christmas Day 1946 from a stomach ulcer - he was only 66. Bill was married once and had two children. He was a great character actor whose work has touched many generations. Kevin Trask Kevin can be heard on 3AW The Time Tunnel - Remember When Sundays 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

Art on show at Monash University

Dale Harding: Through a lens of visitation: A descendant of the Bidjara, Ghungalu and Faringbai peoples of central Queensland, Dale Harding's multilayered practice is poetic and political in its materiality and process, and still has a strong focus on community, family, and place. His works pay particular homage to matrilineal female figures in his family engaging and bringing forth their stories. Through a lens of visitation explores the artists relationship to his mother's Country, Carnarvon Gorge, and includes a selection of existing works and a major commission with his mother, textile artist Kate Harding. The exhibition is accompanied by a publication of writings by women scholars that reflect on the history of the Gorge and speculate on its resonances within Australian modernism. Exhibition opens April 28 and closes June 26. Ground Floor Building F Caulfield Campus 900 Dandenong Rd, Caulfield East - Peter Kemp

At Benalla

Bushfire Brandalism: In early 2020, set against the backdrop of one Australia's worst bushfire seasons on record, 41 leading street artists took to the streets of Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne for the nation's largest unsanctioned art campaign Bushfire Brandalism. The works were presented n walls and in bus shelter advertising spaces as a direct response to the artists feeling of hopelessness and powerlessness during the unprecedented 2020 bushfires and continuing drought. Exhibition closes April 25. Venue: Bennett Gallery BenallaArt Gallery Botanical Gardens Bridge St, Benalla

Ledger Gallery

Re-Gathering: Drawing from the Benalla Art Gallery Collection and the RACV Art Collection, Re-Gathering is presented as a space for the community to come together and reflect on their experi-

The Arts

with Peter Kemp ences of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. The exhibition features portraits, figurative works and landscapes devoid of the human figure, all produced prior to any understanding of COVID19. As such, works are recontextualised through the inclusion of first-hand accounts from the Benalla community. Participants voice their experiencer of loss, and equally of hope. Exhibition closes June 20. Venue: Ledger Gallery. - Peter Kemp

Northern focus Northern Abstractions: Ralph Bristow, Frank Burgess and Anthea Kemp Northern Abstraction draws together three artists with deep ties to the North East Victorian region to explore their diverse approaches to abstract painting. Living in Barwite and working from his studio overlooking the Broken River, Ralph Bristow's paintings are a mindful collage where dimensions are subverted, spontaneity trumps tradition, consciousness streams and colours enter with delight in unexpected associations. There is an urgency in his layering of paint, through which forms and stories emerge.

Based in Wangaratta and practicing from his Bridge Street Studio in Benalla, Frank Burgers explores and challenges Formalist principles. His current work draws on multiple sources of inspiration, ranging from artists such as Robert Jacks and Richard Dunn, to his immediate studio environment and the like-minded creatives who inhabit it. Working from both memory and direct references Anthea Kemp's paintings are grounded in place, exploring the formalities of both representation and abstraction while sitting somewhere in the slippery space between these two approaches. Having grown up on farmland in North East Victoria, Kemp recently completed her Masters of Contemporary Art at the VCA, University of Melbourne. Exhibition opens April 23 and closes June 27. - Peter Kemp

Victorian Opera Victorian Opera: The Pearl fishers Join Victorian Opera under the stars for George Bizet's The Pearl Fishers. The forecast outlines a clear and cool night, perfect for stargazing on stage and above. Pack a picnic, fill the thermos and delight in one of the world's best-loved operas. Hear a 50-piece Orchestra Victoria under the baton of Richard Mills together with the Victorian Opera Chorus and a principal cast of beloved opera singers, Kathryn Radcliffe, Carlos E. Barcenas, Stephen Marsh and Teddy Tahu Rhodes. One night inly. Thursday April 27 at 7.30pm Venue: Sydney Myer Music Bowl. - Peter Kemp

Happy 100th Queenie

■ Queenie Pierce, one of the more prominent talkback callers to radio station 3AW, celebrated her 100th birthday last week with a party attended by Philip Brady and Simon Owens.

OK. With John O’Keefe Ross The Boss

● Ross Stevenson with Russel Howcroft ■ Is there no end to the talents of 3AW’s brekky boss Ross Stevenson? He often bangs on about how he was a boy soprano in his school days, but little is known that Ross was in the choir that supported Colleen Hewett in her best selling rendition of Day by Day. Good one Ross.

Earlybird Nat

■ Natalie Barr, co-host of Sunrise on Seven, is an early riser Monday to Friday. Rising at 3am Nat has her one and only cup of coffee at 3.30am, prior to setting off for the studio where she catches up with the news overnight. Then by 4.30am you’ll find her in make-up for hair , and dressing for camera. By 5.30am she’s in the studio, on camera and ready to read the headlines. Wow, what a morning. It’s nothing to Nat as she has been performing this same ritual for 18 years.

Remember Shannen

■ Shannen Doherty was one of the gang who propelled Beverly Hills 90210 to the top of the ratings around the 1980s. Now aged 50 she is battling breast cancer but putting on a brave face, keeping active and being involved in her love of animals. She beat cancer in 2015 only for the dreaded disease to return two years later.

Luck of the draw

■ For the past two years The Lottery Office has monitored all the results of lottery draws in Australia. A tiny township called Bulgarra, on the north coast of WA is the luckiest place for lottery winners, followed by NSW suburban branches. Unfortunately Victoria does not rate in the Top 10.

Larry spooked by intruder

■ Seven’s all-round good guy Larry Emdur decided to take a short vacation on the NSW coastline. One night he awoke when the security alarm went off, the intrepid Larry searched for the intruder but no evidence could be found. Same thing happened the following night and this time Larry found compelling evidence. A wombat had taken a liking to Larry’s porch and even dropped his business card for Larry to clean up. Back in the studio Larry is the new presenter of The Chase, as well as continuing with The Morning Show. - John O’Keefe


The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021 - Page 37

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Magazine

Movies, DVDs with Jim Sherlock, Aaron Rourke What’s Hot and What’s Not FILM: GODZILLA II - King of The Monsters: Available on DVD and Blu-ray & New to Streaming on NETFLIX G e n r e : Action/Adventure/Fantasy. Cast: Millie Bobby Brown, Charles Dance, Lexi Rabe, Vera Farmiga, Ken Watanabe, Ziyi Zhang, Sally Hawkins, David Strathairn. Year: 2019/ M/131 Minutes. Stars: **• Review: The crypto-zoological agency faces off against a battery of god-sized monsters, including the mighty Godzilla, who collides with the legendary giants Mothra, Rodan, and his ultimate nemesis, the three-headed King Ghidorah. With "Godzilla vs. Kong" stomping ferociously on screens around Australia, this monumental foot-stomping, earth shaking, city smashing monster-mash-up creature-feature of a battle of the titans is a loud, head-thumping romp that lacks any form of intelligence or plausibility, filled from beginning to end with all the mind-numbing ingredients, now less the man in a rubber suit, that have made the "Godzilla" and his fan base a trashy diet for over five decades. Following on from 2014s "Godzilla," the stellar cast that includes "Stranger Things" Millie Bobby Brown, along with Kyle Chandler, Charles Dance, Vera Farmiga, Ken Watanabe, Ziyi Zhang, Sally Hawkins, and David Strathairn, this over flows with cliché and banal dialogue that tries to give "Godzilla" higher meaning, but fails miserably as they are seemingly searching for the plot as they confusingly try to figure out how to save the world as the giants running amok and battling each other. Reflective of 1968s Toho monster-mash "Destroy All Monsters," the consistently dark and murky cinematography make it all the more a confusing and strained experience, however, on a positive note, the big feller is in it for considerably more that his 2014 effort, which was around 11 minutes, and if you like your creature features, or most notably the long running "Godzilla" franchise, you may find something here to relish, but sadly, this time around, the great "Godzilla" is nothing more than a poor and laughable facsimile of himself, one that we have seen too far many times before. FILM: DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES: Available on DVD and Blu-ray & New to Streaming on Disney+ G e n r e : Action/Sci-Fi/Drama. Cast: Andy Serkis, Jason Clarke, Gary Oldman, Keri Russell, Kodi Smit-McPhee. Year: 2014. Rating: TBC. Length: 130 Minutes. Stars: **** Review: A nation of genetically evolved apes led by Caesar is threatened by a band of human survivors from a devastating virus unleashed a decade earlier. They reach a fragile peace, but it proves short-lived. This follow up to 2011's Rise of the Planet of the Apes is a sensational cinematic experience, to say the least. Not since Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back in 1980, or any other, has a sequel so overwhelmingly surpassed its predecessor on every technical and emotional level, and then some. The evolution of cinema in relation to art, storytelling, emotion and entertainment has reached all new and unsurpassable heights. The visuals are jaw-dropping, the brilliantly sustained tension unbearable and the action truly exciting. Not one frame or one word is wasted due to a hugely intelligent screenplay. Dawn of the Planet of the Apes is a phenomenal groundbreaking spectacle, a staggering landmark achievement that results in a thrilling, chilling, haunting and unmissable entertainment experience! An instant classic! FILM: APOLLO 11: Available on DVD and Blu-ray and New to Streaming on Netflix G e n r e : Documentary/History. Year: 2019. Rating: G . Length: 93 Minutes. Stars: * * * * ½ Review: To commemorate its 50th anniversary, a look at the Apollo 11 mission to land on the moon led by commander Neil Armstrong and pilots Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins with newly restored never-before-seen standard and large format 70mm footage.

Just when you thought you'd seen everything there has to see and know about the moon landing between the 16th and 24th of July, 1969, along comes this spectacular feature length documentary, a breathtaking, meticulously constructed and executed front row, edgeof-your-seat, you are right there, cinematic experience unlike anything previously attempted. Minute by minute, hour by hour, day by day, you are thrust chronologically into this extraordinary milestone event as it unfolds through the vision and voices of those involved, no talking heads or interviews, all raw NASA audio and vision meticulously restored, much of it neverbefore-seen or heard, including spectacular eye-popping never before released 70MM footage from the NASA vaults. From the opening frame to the last, without missing a beat, this journey also symbolizes with great subtlety and tremendous power the insane complexity of early technology and what humanity is capable of in working together in reaching a goal, and its subsequent global effect and unification, a personal, adrenaline pumping, poignant, spellbinding, hair-raising, awe-inspiring and ultimately unmissable journey back to the future! FILM: THE OUTPOST: Now Streaming on Google Play & AppleTV G e n r e : History/Action/Drama. Cast: Scott Eastwood, Orlando Bloom, Caleb Landry Jones. Details: 2020/MA15+/123 Minutes/Stars:*** Review: A small team of U.S. soldiers battle against hundreds of Taliban fighters in Afghanistan. Based on the true story of the 'Battle of Kamdesh' in 2009, this may lack the mega-budget of Ridley Scott's similarly themed "Black Hawk Down" (2001) or more recently the "behind-the-scenes whizz-bang technical wizardry of Sam Mendes' "1917," among others, but nonetheless, this is still very much an exciting, compelling and respectfully crafted slice of 'against-all-odds' combat and survival that succeeds in depicting the prodigious power of courage and valour without falling into false heroics, sentimentality or cliché. Obviously filmed on a minimal budget, the cast includes Scott Eastwood (Pacific Rim: Uprising/Fate of the Furious), Caleb Landry Jones (Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri), Orlando Bloom (Pirates of the Caribbean/ Lord of the Rings), Milo Gibson (Hacksaw Ridge) and Jack Kesy (12 Strong), and among others, all give an effectively solid equal measure of determination and strength in bringing this extraordinary story to the screen, ultimately a fitting tribute to all those who took part in the battle. Directed by Rod Lurie, whose previous credits include the superb politically based thrillers "Deterrence" (1999), the Oscar nominated "The Contender" with Joan Allen and Jeff Bridges, (2000) and "The Last Castle" (2001) with Robert Redford and James Gandolfini, has delivered 21st Century "Zulu" (1964), a tightly raw and unflinching war experience that will also leave you with an overwhelming disbelief at the sheer ignorance and stupidity of military decision making, and that it does very little, if anything, to inspire a career in the armed forces. FILM: THE SECRET GARDEN: Now available on DVD & Streaming on Google Play & AppleTV. G e n r e : Drama/Family/Fantasy. Cast: Dixie Egerickx, Julie Walters, Colin Firth, Richard Hansell. Details: 2 0 2 0 . Rating: P G . Length: 99 Minutes. Stars: * * * Review: In 1947 in British India, the parents of a young girl have died from cholera, so she is sent away to her uncle in England where she discovers a magical garden hidden at her embittered uncle's estate. First filmed in 1919, and again in 1949 by MGM with Margaret O'Brien, then numerous times since for the big and small screens, this latest film adaptation based on the classic 1911 novel by Frances Hodgson Burnett is not the best representation so far, most notably suffering from an elusiveness of any strong emotional grip and balance between reality and GGI fantasy, but nonetheless, it does have an abundance on offer throughout, from beautifully beguiling visual razzle-dazzle to some strikingly gothic splendour. - James Sherlock

Rourke’s Reviews Oscars 2021 ■ It is a very interesting list of nominees at the Oscars this year, but there are a number of genuinely worthy films in the mix, all deserving to go home with a gold statuette. I have reviewed all the Best Film nominees, along with my tips as to who may win. The Academy Awards will be presented on April 26. Best Film Nominees. The Father(M). ****½ Superbly directed by Florian Zeller (who co-wrote the screenplay, based on his play) to deliberately disorientate its audience, this gripping, devastating drama also features Anthony Hopkins' best performance in years. Olivia Colman is great as always, and its narrative structure is edited to perfection. ■ Judas And The Black Messiah (M). **** Powerful and provocative examination of the work of Black Panther Party Chairman Fred Hampton (played with blistering energy by Daniel Kaluuya), and the person who the FBI used to try and bring him down. Vivid and compelling viewing. ■ Mank (M). ***½ Gorgeously crafted by David Fincher (Seven, Fight Club), this unflattering look at the making of Citizen Kane will be enjoyed by film buffs, but is missing that human touch to completely draw the viewer in to the behind-the-scenes mind games between writer, director and producer. Gary Oldman is outstanding. ■ Minari (PG). **** Affecting and refreshingly lowkey, writer-director Lee Isaac Chung's autobiographical drama is charming and emotionally satisfying, featuring a gallery of excellent performances. ■ Nomadland (M). ****½ Writer/director Chloe Zhao (Songs My Brother Taught Me) continues to confirm what an immense talent she is in this Terrence Malick-like film which looks at people trying to survive in modern day America. After her previous film, The Rider, was criminally ignored by the Academy, one hopes Zhao is properly rewarded this time around. ■ Promising Young Woman (MA). ***½ Emerald Fennell makes an impressive directorial debut with this clever subversion of the 80's raperevenge film, deftly merging it with potent social commentary, and is anchored by a strong performance

● Writer/director Chloe Zhao on the set of the wonderful Nomadland, one of the movies up for Best Film at the 2021 Academy Awards. by Carey Mulligan. There is also fine support from Bo Burnham (who wrote and directed the brilliant 2018 teen drama Eighth Grade). ■ Sound Of Metal (M). *** Fairly engrossing drama that is a little too self-consciously 'arthouse', with Riz Ahmed noticeably trying hard to deliver a powerful lead performance as a drummer who loses his hearing. He is however easily outshone by his supporting cast, namely Olivia Cooke, Paul Raci and Mathieu Amalric. Key moments are strangely skimmed over. ■ The Trial Of The Chicago 7 (M). ** Disappointing treatment of a landmark true story, written and directed (by Aaron Sorkin) as if it were second-tier Steven Spielberg. Wrongheaded at times, and superficial from beginning to end. Jeremy Kagan's 1987 TV movie, Conspiracy : The Trial Of The Chicago 8, is far superior. ■ Predictions (major categories). Best Film - Nomadland. Best Director - Chloe Zhao (Nomadland). Best Actor - Chadwick Boseman (Ma Rainey's Black Bottom). Best Actress - Viola Davis (Ma Rainey's Black Bottom). Best Supporting Actor - Daniel Kaluuya (Judas And The Black Messiah). Best Supporting Actress - Youn Yuh-jung (Minari). Best Adapted Screenplay - Chloe Zhao (Nomadland). Best Original Screenplay - Emerald Fennell (Promising Young Woman). Best Animated Film - Soul. - Aaron Rourke

DVD COLLECTION: Specialising in Classic and Hard to Find Movies, and Latest Releases Classics, Comedy, TV, Drama, Thriller, Action, Music, Adventure, Cult Classics, Horror, Documentary. All Genres for All Tastes - Box Sets and Limited Editions Collections UNIT 2, 21 FLIGHT DRIVE, TULLAMARINE PHONE: 9338 4879 HOURS: Tuesday-Friday, 10am-4pm vidcoll@bigpond.net.au www.ebay.com.au/str/dvdcoll281


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Page 38 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021

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Lovatts Crossword No 6 Across

Across 1. Most advantageous 6. Drearier 11. Oil-exporting cartel 13. Oar 17. Frustrates 22. Mushroom seed 23. Go to bistro (3,3) 24. Chief 25. Step 26. Scottish city 27. Cavort 29. Domesticated 32. Flair 34. Terra firma (3,4) 35. Chain-store outlet 36. Demure 38. Glide aloft 39. Thoughts 41. Pointy beard 42. Keepsakes 44. Finest 46. Mausoleum, Taj ... 48. Doze, ... off 49. Common shoreline bird 50. Lucifer 51. Direction 53. Elbowroom 56. A single entity 57. Man 58. Reached high point 59. Female fox 60. Beast 63. Agree to 65. Deity 66. Red-faced 67. Grandma 68. Squash (insect) 69. Cloth scrap 71. Manned (ship) 72. Skirt edge 74. Fencing sword 75. Canine skin disease 76. Float on breeze 77. Early Peruvians 79. Classic painting, ... Lisa 80. Adult education group (1,1,1) 82. Elliptical shapes 84. Vegetable paste 85. Tiny 87. Tennis champ, Monica ... 89. Mad Roman emperor 91. Recount 93. Disguises 94. Circus performers 96. Demise 98. Festival, Mardi ... 101. Mongrel dogs 102. Female zebras 103. Meal, bangers & ... 104. Quantity of paper 106. Streamlined 108. Plain-spoken 109. Minerals 110. Attracted 111. Earthquake measure, ... scale 113. Dressed 115. Fully satisfies 117. Active European volcano 118. Persona ... grata 119. Eiffel Tower city 120. Heavily scented 121. Restorative medicine 123. Move unsteadily 125. The masses, ... polloi 126. Eskimo coat 127. Flagpoles 128. Jacob's Old Testament twin 130. Racing driver, ... Mansell 132. Verification 134. Marshy 135. Drains (udder) 137. Shout 139. Apple drink 141. Me, ... truly 143. Wigwam 144. Money factories 145. Floor dance 147. Patch up 149. Recorded 151. Trace 153. Cracks (of lip) 154. Israel's ... Meir 155. Tablets 157. Soon 159. Mention, ... to 161. Damascus is there 162. Aviator, ... Johnson 163. Dads 164. Card game 166. Fuse (of bones) 168. Challenger 170. ... Francisco 171. It is (poetic) ('3) 172. Peaceful resort 173. ... Lang Syne 174. Form (conclusion) 176. Valley 178. Giant 180. Golfing body (1,1,1) 182. Asked (question) 183. Healthy 185. Radial or cross-ply 187. Utter (cry) 189. Tibetan priests 191. African language group 192. Super athlete, ... Lewis 193. Army eatery 195. Naval exercises 197. Couple 199. Filled pastries 201. Gullible 202. Greek philosopher

204. 205. 207. 208. 210. 212. 213. 214. 215. 217. 220. 222. 224. 225. 226. 229. 231. 233. 235. 236. 237. 239. 241. 243. 245. 247. 248. 249. 251. 253. 255. 256. 257. 258. 260. 262. 264. 265. 266. 268. 270. 272. 273. 274. 276. 278. 280. 281. 282. 283. 286. 288. 290. 291. 292. 294. 296. 298. 299. 301. 302. 303. 304. 306. 308. 309. 310. 311. 313. 315. 318. 319. 320. 323. 325. 326. 327. 328. 330. 332. 333. 334. 335. 336. 338. 339. 340. 342. 343. 344. 346. 348. 350. 352. 353. 355. 356. 359. 360. 361. 362. 363. 364. 365. 368. 369. 371. 373. 374. 376. 379. 381. 382. 383. 385. 386. 387. 388. 389. 390. 391. 392. 393.

Implement Haggard Drizzles Musical, Porgy & ... Cuban currency Sink in middle Following Clothing Tennis great, ... Borg Ermine Eternal City Singer, ... Horne Italian money unit Blunders Glum Canadian gold rush region Lifeless (hair) Rescue Jazz style, bossa ... Toadstools China's ... Zedong Bark ... mortis Boxing dais White ant Wordless acts Actors Gibson or Brooks Underneath Of birth Murder (2,2) Cash advances Pulverises (fruit) Ravine Old photo shade Scour Haemorrhaged Brazil's ... Paulo Surrenders Metal mixture Howls shrilly Egret US shares index, ... Jones Unwanted plants Verdant Chairs Inflexible Playwright, ... Simon Macho Small change Delivery vehicle 135 down opera house, La ... Uncovered (facts) (3,2) Elevators Police klaxon Also known as (1,1,1) Skip Run off to marry Half Queens' seats Bops Potato Brown pigment Principle Phoned Jug Styles Stairs, apples & ... Hurl ... & lows Shrieked Rent out again Slum area Nail Judges Nasty Sections The Constant Gardener's ... Fiennes Longbow timber Skating stadium Hitler's Third ... Golfing stroke CDs, compact ... Beliefs Thus far, as ... Neatly Yasser Arafat's group (1,1,1) Salesmen Double agent Sit idly Windies batsman, ... Richards Prima donna Writer, ... Hemingway Itemises Carnival car Seed Fashionable, ... mode (1,2) Movie examiner Religious sister Scene of event Clever Irish paramilitary force (1,1,1) Thai food ingredient, ... grass Composer's work Bombardments Dishes Viola flower Solid Tenancy agreements Snagged First Collar folds Prayer ending Rugby player Ocean phase (3,4) Balderdash Garden water feature Twice Master of Ceremonies Reckoned Stylish Louts Ordered about Scraped (river bottom)

Down

Down 1. Continuing 2. Sad play 3. Flavour enhancer (1,1,1) 4. On top of 5. Cut (lawn) 6. Debauched 7. Bonier 8. NCO rank, ... corporal 9. Engrave 10. Caviar base 11. Sofa footstool 12. Bosom 13. Gently touch 14. Cricketer, ... Gilchrist 15. Fuel oil 16. Property 17. Little bit 18. Engage 19. Dryly humorous 20. Rude driver (4,3) 21. Encumbered (with) 28. Considered 30. Yemen port 31. Males 33. Nuzzles 35. Betting organiser 36. Doled (out) 37. Namely (2,3) 40. Extinguish 41. Dirty looks 42. Mel Gibson movie, Mad ... 43. Footy Show personality, ... Newman 45. Employ (4,2) 47. Positive electrode 49. Mankind 50. Scorch 52. Tells good story 54. Fishing bait 55. Sighed sleepily 58. Pressed fabric folds 59. Windmill arms 60. Appalling 61. Chatter 62. Mixed (with poison) 64. 12 months 67. Irritating complainers 68. Chanted 70. Strong winds 72. Testosterone & oestrogen 73. Melted (of rock) 75. Contemplated 76. England's Isle of ... 78. Closes securely 81. Withholds vote 83. Tubs 84. Trims 85. Feebly sentimental 86. Vertical 88. Pilfer 90. Lecherous gaze 92. Greek & German currency unit 93. Hymn, Ave ... 94. Car hoists 95. Beauty parlour 97. Excited (3,2) 99. Baseballer, Babe ... 100. AD, ... Domini 102. Unclear 103. Fogs 105. Frenzied 107. SeaChange actress, ... Armstrong 110. Jumbo 111. Teething sticks 112. Contact 114. Number 116. Scurry 119. Book leaves 120. Mediterranean republic isle 122. Lebanese wood 124. 24 in a day 126. Opium source 127. Cares for 129. Fertiliser compound 131. Social outcast 133. Becomes tattered 134. Light rays 135. Northern Italian city 136. End 138. Jerk 140. Refurbish 142. Abandon 143. Siamese 144. Scooter 145. Bacon edge 146. Trudge 148. Hunger 150. Evil spirit 152. Monarch 154. Relinquished (4,2) 155. Election 156. Varieties 158. Longest river 160. Proportional, pro ... 163. Bygone 164. Strain (muscle) 165. "No" vote 167. Office casual 169. Lantern 171. Burrows 172. Integrity 173. Spray can 175. Inscribed 177. Romantic US falls 179. Kenya's capital 181. Sneeze noise (1-6) 182. Prepares (the way) 183. Irrigate 184. Stick-on symbol

186. 188. 190. 191. 192. 193. 194. 196. 198. 200. 206. 209. 211. 213. 214. 216. 218. 219. 221. 223. 224. 225. 227. 228. 230. 232. 234. 235. 236. 237. 238. 240. 242. 244. 246. 247. 248. 250. 252. 254. 256. 257. 259. 261. 263. 265. 266. 267. 269. 271. 273. 274. 275. 277. 279. 281. 282. 284. 285. 287. 289. 290. 291. 292. 293. 295. 297. 300. 301. 302. 305. 307. 309. 310. 312. 314. 316. 317. 318. 319. 321. 322. 324. 326. 327. 329. 331. 335. 337. 340. 341. 343. 344. 345. 347. 349. 350. 351. 352. 353. 354. 357. 358. 360. 361. 366. 367. 368. 370. 372. 374. 375. 377. 378. 380. 382. 383. 384.

Resin glue Coronet Burns surface of ... & brace Humbly, ... in hand Mr & ... Wise men Drunkard Apply friction to Transgression Steak cuts (1-5) Tart Actor, ... Sharif Type of orange Yield, ... in Prompts (memory) Similar Roman garments Writer, ... Blyton Singer, ... King Cole Auction items Jostles Yeses NRL legend, Laurie ... Nick Door handle Cupid Weather feature, El ... Dossiers Cantaloupe Friend in war Pontiffs Less frequent Cover with gold Address to royalty (2'2) Caked with soil Stubborn animals Cunning tricks Graphic Inert gas Removes skin from Music guru, ... A Baker Quickly False Lived Dollars & ... Ram zodiac sign Piously Musty Timbuktu's river Thin biscuit Injures with horns Announces (5,3) Deadly sin Three Musketeers author Excavated Cat-like mammal Bullets Pen-points Greenfly Squeeze between fingers Mooed Facets Lethargy Actor, ... Russell Trial Famous Swiss mountain Send (payment) Sudden bumps Ooze Chirp Feels about Clemency Mucus Sharp-tasting Happy face Eject lava ... & crafts Speaks gratingly January birthstone Dry Blades Spurn Ski trail Lives without comforts, ... it Banish Ku Klux ... Submitted (application) Islamic governors Of kidneys Treats royally, ... & dines Dallied Holding dear Blood-sucking creature Dried coconut kernels Small chunk Folk heroes Dubious Male duck Zigzag-edge scissors, ... shears Listen attentively (3,4) Dirtied Wrinkle Floral arrangement urn Fellows ..., steady, go Assault weapon, battering ... Swimming places Truck's unladen weight Snow-covered peaks Vagrant South African conflict, ... War Belonging to it Jar top Chinese ... sauce Centre Liquid crystal display (1,1,1) Teeny-weeny


The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021 - Page 39

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Page 40 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021

www.LocalPaper.com.au

Magazine Crossroads By Rob Foenander info@countrycrossroads com.au

Viva Bob Vegas

■ Making his Memo debut, Bob Downe comes to St Kilda with his live band and a new show, Viva Bob Vegas. If you can't go to Vegas, let Vegas come to you, says the media release. Get on Downe to laugh and sing along to Bob's retro Las Vegas lounge act, in a hilarious evening of wild comedy and classic hits with Bob and his swingin' live band. Tickets at www.memomusichall. com.auGood

Nearest misses

■ Lachlan Bryan and The Wildes have released their new live album, Nearest Misses. Lachan says “it's kind of our 'greatest hits. To be honest, I'd much rather spend my day practicing piano or guitar than plugging a record and I'm really proud of this one, it captures us doing what we love.” www.lachlanbryanandthewildes.com

The Guild

■ Melbourne band The Prairie Oysters will return to the Country Music Guild's iconic Friday night country show at the Pascoe Vale RSL on April 30. It will be the first time back for the band since July 20, 2018 after an extended break due to lockdown and some travelling. Contact Keith, 9338 7902. Members $5, Non-Members $10. Bookings essential. - Rob Foenander

‘The Cane’ by Red Stitch ■ Both the family and the school become microcosms of social dysfunction in Mark Ravenhill’s The Cane. Anna (Jessica Clarke) is unwelcome when she returns home to visit her mother, Maureen (Caroline Lee) and her father, Edward (Dion Mills). Theirs is a difference over schooling philosophies where contemporary practice in gearing students for the commercial realities of the world clashes with the traditional. But in his day, Edward has used the cane as a means of discipline, a practice for which he is now being pilloried, blighting his 45 year career. This now unacceptable practice, however, is being replaced by the equally ardent application of ‘student voice’. One cannot help but wonder if this too will be seen as inappropriate when examined with hindsight. The changing norms find themselves mirrored in the family dynamic. Anna and Maureen compete for recognition from Edward but unite as he resorts to aggression. Anna offers to help Edward only to manipulate those who would belittle his teaching legacy. At every level, Ravenhill seems to be highlighting how society’s changing social practices are grounded in the very foundation of human nature; love, jealousy, frustration and an-

ger. Kirsten von Bibra’s direction has enabled the actors to achieve an intense performance as allegiances segue from one individual to another. The audience is kept on edge as a rationale is found for the cane at one moment only to be undercut by some form of aggression suggesting inappropriateness. The same could be said for the new contemporary approaches to discipline which are undermined as being an anodyne of meaningless words. The interplay between the actors is flawless. This is a play of words fired relentlessly at and over each other. Self interest holds sway as each character asserts his or her own agenda. Clarke, Lee and Mills capture the fractiousness of a family seeking each other’s affection but constantly pulled apart, trying to reconcile but swayed by past grievances. This, in many ways, is the nature of present day society held to account for past wrongs which were not seen as such at the time and wondering how best to move forward. Anna’s cynicism about current educational terminology is sufficient proof of that. The Cane is Red Stitch at its best performing contemporary works of relevance. Red Stitch. Rear 2 Chapel St. St Kilda East. Until May 9 - Review by David McLean

Crossword Solution No 6 O N G O I N G

P T R L A G D E OD U Y S EM O E L U T R E ON

I MUM DU L L E R OP E C P A DD L S POR E E A T OU T H E A D I S G OW P R A N C E T AME T A L E N N B R A NCH MOD E S T M SO A S GOA T E E MEME N T OS B E S P L OV E R S A T A N WA Y L E P E A K E D V I X E N A N I MA L S F L OR I D N A N D SWA T R AG H E P E E MA NGE WA F T I NC A S O V A L S P UR E E M I NU T E S E L E R A T E MA S K S J UGG L E R S D E A R E AM S L M T S MA R E S MA S H O S L UR E D R I CH T E R C L A D S P A R I S MU S K Y E T ON I C N E P A R K A MA S T S E S A U N I GE L BOGGY M I L K S H CR Y C I D E S T E P E E M I N T S R A P H E A L T A P CH A P S GO L D A P I L L S A NON R E AMY P A P A S PON T OON K N I T R T I S H A V E N A U L D DR AW G L E N U POS E D WE L L D T Y R E EM I T B A N T U C A R L ME S S OP S P A I N P L A T O ORC A T OO L GA N A I V E B E S S P E SO S AG N E X T GA R E L S T OA T ROME L E N A Y L I R A S A D Y U KON L A N K S A V E NOV A Y A P R I GOR R I NG T E RM I T E M B E L OW N A T A L DO I N L OA N S P U S E P I A S CRU B B L E D S AO C E D D Y E L P S H E R O N D OW M WE E D E S E A T S R I G I D N E I L MA N L Y V A N S C A L A DUGU P L L I F T S OM I T E L OP E S EM I T HRON E S J UMB E R E T H I C R A NG EWE R MO T OS S A H I GH S S CR E AME D R E L L T A C K D E EMS HORR I D P A R T Y EW R I N K R E I CH P U T T D I S C S X T I D I L Y P L O R E P S W S P Y V I V D I V A C E RN E S T L I S T S D A L A C E N SOR NUN V E NU E B R L EMON S OP U S B A RR AGE S P L A U P T F I RM A L E A S E S HOOK I N I T I A L L A P E L S AME N HOOK E N R T R I P E L POND DOU B L E GU E S S E D DR E S S Y YOB S BOS S E

E T HWA R T S T A I R O T DR Y L A N A R E D T T MA H A EWA Y ON OK A Y GO CR EWE D D MON A WE S N E RO T H D GR A E E K B L UN A T E S E T N L URCH HO P ROO F R YOUR S E D T R A C K F E R S Y R I I V A L S A N T I T A N PG L AMA S R P I E S UN T R A I N B B J ORN BOOB S F UNG I MA I ME S ME L L P S GU L L E S A L L OY S GR E E N CO I N S S I R E N A K I V E S S P U D E S P E A R E T GH E T T S R A L P H L OR E Y E L OUNGE M ODGEM P I I GH T I R T E S P A N S E D B K R L OW T I D EMC E E N D DR E DGE

Cousin Tara: Wukkas

■ The Melbourne International Comedy Festival publicity shot of Cousin Tara evokes hints of 1970’s Aunty Jack. Can Cousin Tara (aka Tara Leigh Dowley) be her offspring? If this be so, she has the wacky humour but presented with a 21st century tilt. If it not be so, she delivers a high energy night of satirical theatre having burst out the shadows of her 2020 digital Comedy Festival show. Using the title Wukkas, Cousin Tara references the Aussie variants of ‘no worries’ to express the anxieties of contemporary society and herself, a self-confessed worrier. She achieves this through dance and her talent as a skilled songstress. Her words give a humorous voice to anyone or anything she thinks isn’t getting ‘fair crack of the whip’ as she brings to the surface our own fleeting-moment, deeper thoughts. We feel for the wukkas of Pip the Platypus swimming in his creek: a toxic slurry of polypharmacy. We feel for Koali the koala, as Cousin Tara finds sustenance for the bush-fire affected creature. We laugh at her parody of the little soy sauce fishies whose skeletal remains are trapped in the netting of her imaginative costume resembling the Statue of Liberty. Whether it’s the importance of friendship in a world of defriending, the success workplace Eid luncheon dependent on RSVP’s or the weight of societal and personal expectations, Cousin Tara takes us into her fold. She may or may not be the progeny of the ‘old Aunt’ but she has the knack to shake us out of apathy with a lusty communal laugh among a bunch of friends through her original take on the world. Cousin Tara transports us with her delightful singing voice, original lyrics, fearless dance moves and character changes. Presented at The Butterfly Club, Melbourne. - Review by Sherryn Danaher ■ Victoria Chorale makes a joyous return to singing by performing Fauré’s sublime Requiem, his exquisite Cantique de Jean Racine and much loved Pavane. The concert also includes Haydn’s Symphony No 1. 5pm, Saturday May 22. All Saints Church. 2 Chapel St, East St Kilda. - Rena Padman

Observations S A D D L E D

with Matt Bissett-Johnson

A B S T A I N S A A T I S H O O Y R E A D S O U T P A Y H E E D

Mike McColl Jones

Top 5 THE T OP 5 W ORD S THA T TOP WORD ORDS THAT SHOULDN’T BE USED IN THE SAME SENTENCE 5. “Quarantine” and “Hotel”. 4. “Soapie” and “Star”. 3. “Eloquent” and “Bay13”. 2. “Vaccine” and “Longevity”. 1. “Tabloid” and “Accuracy”.


The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021 - Page 17

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Sport

Top galloper is the one to beat

■ Smart sprinter Masked Crusader is among the entries for the All Aged Stakes to be run at Randwick this Saturday, and should be the one to beat. The distance of 1400 metres for the classic is right up his alley. His recent run in the T.J.Smith Group One race at Randwick was a beauty, beaten by the world's best sprinter, Nature Strip. Kerrin McEvoy, aboard the Hawkes trained four-year old, was in more trouble than the early settlers in the straight, when he was jammed in between two runners and was spun sideways. Without a doubt he was beaten by one of the best sprinters in the land, and if they decide to run him, will the 1400 metres be too far for Nature Strip? Nature Strip has been entered but the distance of 1400 metres will be against him. Masked Crusader is by the boom sire, Toronado, the Irish stallion, who is taking all before him. Prior to his big run in the T.J.Smith, he won the William Reid Stakes at Moonee Valley over 1200 metres. It was a big run coming from sixth at the turn, a short run in, running away to win by 2.5 lengths. The classy mare, Savatiano, is very good on her day, and Randwick suits the mare. Prepared by James Cummings for the Godolphin team, she impressed greatly in winning the Canterbury Stakes over 1300 metres back on March 6, a Group One race. Now a six-year-old mare, she has won 13 races, with twelve minors placings from her 38 starts, and always puts in. The John Thompson trained eight-year-old gelding, Dream Force, produced his best second up, with a big win in the Group One George Ryder Stakes at Rosehill back on March 21. He has been a grand campaigner, having won 14, of his 38 starts, with 11 placings and a winner of nearly $2.5 million. The James Cummings trained galloper, Cascadian, had a bit of luck go his way for a change with a big win in the Doncaster at his last start. Victoria's leading rider, Jamie Kah, booted home the six-year-old gelding, much to the delight of many punters on course. The win atoned for his unlucky run when fourth in the George Ryder Stakes behind Dream Force, coming from last at the turn. From his 25 starts he has now won six, with seven minors. If he goes around in the All-Aged, he could be right in it, as the 1400 metre trip will suit him admirably. Probabeel, a top mare, in the care of Jamie Richards, from New Zealand, is a top- rated mare, having won the Epsom Handicap over a mile back on October 30t last year. She took out the Futurity Stakes at Caulfield on February 20. . As I mentioned in my last column, she doesn't like damp conditions, but given a good track, she has got to be right in this. She is heading for $3 million in stakemoney. The Trent Busuttin-Natalie Young trained three-year-old, Tagaloa, is a tough nut, having

the Newmarket back on March 6 in great style. Prepared by Matt Ellerton and Simon Zahra at Flemington, he is a horse with great speed as proved in the classic. Now a five-year-old, by the top sire Zoustar, he has won eight of his 26 starts, with six minor placings, and with his win in the Newmarket, he took his earnings to over a million dollars. If he does go around, he will step up 1400 metres in a class field.

Happy chappies

● Tagaloa winning the Blue Diamond Stakes.Racing Photos. always gives of his all. You can never leave him out of the placings. Then you have the good South Australian galloper Dalasan. The Leon McDonald-Andrew Gluyas trained four-year-old, put his best foot forward in the Doncaster Mile with a fast finishing third to Cascadian and Icebath. He is a horse with plenty of talent, but has been mixing it with the very best. At his two previous runs he finished well back in the Newmarket at Flemington up the straight six over 1200 metres, but they were just too quick for him and he finished well back. In the George Ryder in Sydney, he finished seventh behind Think It Over, in the Group One at Rosehill, but finishing only 2.5 lengths from the winner. Zoutori is an interesting runner, having

Ted Ryan

■ Moonee Valley Racing officials were all smiles at news about the record figures established at might meetings, despite no crowds at the track due to the Virus. Nearly $400 million was wagered over the 16 Ladbrokes Friday Night-Light race meetings, an increase of 31 per cent on last season (15-night meetings), and an increase of 24 per cent, on a like-for-like comparison, a record wagering result since the inception on Night Racing at the Valley in 1998. Due to the lockdowns in Melbourne and restrictions placed on crowds, the gates were opened for the first time in December for a restricted number of owners and members, with the numbers increasing and the public allowed on course late in January until the season ended with the Group One Keogh Homes, William Reid Stakes on March 19. The Cheering for Charity initiative also continued in great style this season. Moonee Valley was able to raise nearly $8000 for the nine charities that took part. The 2021/2 Ladbrokes Friday Night Lights Season will be back bigger and better under lights on September 24, the Group One Moir Stakes meeting. Let us hope that we can get through this Virus curse, and get crowds back to Moonee Valley for all the great action. - Ted Ryan

Looking for a Professional to run the show? had 12 runs, for 3 wins, including the Blue Diamond Stakes as a two-year-old, and five placings, which included his recent third in the Australian Guineas over 1600 metres. Tagaloa is certainly a strong customer, and

★ Compere/Host ★ Auctioneer ★ Promotions ★ A-Grade Journalist ★ Voice-Over Commercials ★ Race Caller All Sports, Race Nights ★ TV, Radio, Press ★ Respected Member of the Media

Ted Ryan Phone 9876 1652 Mobile: 0412 682 927 E-Mail: tedryan@australiaonline.net.au ted.ryan@optusnet.com.au ● Masked Crusader in the William Reid Stakes. Racing Photos.


Page 42 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021

Dave’s Dirt Works

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Firewood and Garden Supplies 209 High St, Broadford 0427 921 304 5784 3330


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Come to our Coffee Shop

Grand Central Hotel, Yea

Indoor and Outdoor Garden Seating Open every day except Wed. 9.30am-2pm. Bar meals (lunch) available in Coffee Shop LUNCH AND DINNER Lunch: 12 Noon-2pm Dinner: 6pm-8.30pm Private Functions Aavailable in either Hotel or Beer Garden

Beautiful accommodation upstairs. Reasonable rate. Large car park and beer garden at rear of hotel. Bike friendly. Friendly atmosphere. Semiors meals now available.

Parma Nights Wednesdays Best In Yea HAPPY HOUR AT THE GRAND CENTRAL EVERY FRIDAY. 4PM-6PM $4 POTS, MEAT RAFFLES, BAR SNACKS 50 IN BEER GARDEN • Beer Battered Flathead • Angus Steak Sandwich • Chicken Schnitzel • Pub Chicken Parma • Rissoles, Bacon & Mash Grill • 300gm Angus • Lamb Cutlets Ve g e t a r i a n , Gluten Free Desserts • Apple Pie & Ice Cream • Ice Cream • Coffee, Tea Carlton Draught Great Nor thern Carlton Dry

Home-made pies, pasties, sausage rolls, quiches, cakes and much more. Home-made apple pies Enjoy Patrice’s piano playing on Parma Night. Patrice will be happy to play requests. Come in and enjoy the familiar surroundings of the Grand Central Hotel, Yea - bring the family. Enjoy a sit-down meal with table service. It’s a good idea to phone ahead to make booking. (Maximum 10 per table under current rules.) You can now order a casual drink. There’s soup of the day, and plenty for the kids: chicken strips, fish, party pies and sausage rolls. All with chips. Wednesdays: Parma Night. $18 each. Parma, Chips and Salad available to take-away. $18

GRAND CENTRAL HOTEL

64 HIGH STREET, YEA. www.grandcentralhotelyea.com.au Find us on Facebook: grandcentralhotelyea

BOOKINGS: 5797 2513


Page g 46 - The Local Paper p - Wednesday, y, April p 21, ,2021

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The Local Paper

Classifieds

Incorporating the ‘ Melbourne Trader Trader’’ and ‘Melbournewide’ ‘Melbournewide’.. Melbourne-wide readership - and beyond. Appearing weekly in the following editions of The Local Paper : Eastern Division: Knox-Sherbrooke News, Manningham News, Maroondah Mail, Monash Gazette, Progress News, Whitehorse Gazette. Northern Division: Diamond Valley News, Heidelberger, Northcote Budget, Preston Post, Reservoir Times, Whittlesea Post. North-West Division: Brimbank Messenger, Hobsons Bay Edition, Hume Observer, Maribyrnong Edition, Moonee Valley Gazette, Moreland Courier, Sunbury Regional News. Peninsula-Frankston-Dandenong Division: CaseyCardinia Edition, Cranbourne Sun, Dandenong Advertiser, Frankston Edition, Mornington Peninsula Post, Southern Peninsula Gazette, Western Port Gazette. Southern Cross Weekly Division: Bayside Times, Boroondara Weekly, Glen Eira Standard, Kingston Standard, Stonnington Weekly, Port Phillip Times, Yarra Times. Victorian Division: Dindi Local (Murrindindi), Lilydale and Yarra Valley Express, Melbourne Observer, Mitchell Shire Edition.

Phone: 1800 231 311. Web: www.LocalPaper.com.au and www.AdvertiseFree.com.au E-Mail: editor@LocalPaper.com.au Deadline: 5pm Friday GARAGE SALES

WHAT’S ON

GARAGE SALE. 15 Duke St, Yea. Household items, furniture, book shelves, computer desk, kitchen table, baby items, plants, more. Some free stuff. NPQR

SOMERVILLE SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB. 21 Black Camps Rd, Somerville. Phone 5977 7759 (between 1pm and 3pm). Annual membership is $5. Activities for Senior Citziens, including day trips. • Indoor Bowls and a Movie or Cards, $2. Tuesday, Friday and Sunday at 1pm. • Bingo and a Movie or Cards, $2. Wednesday at 12.45pm. Bingo books - $3 per game book. • Barbecue followed by indoor bowls and a movie or cards. $5. Every third Sunday of the month. For further information, contact Merna, Club Secretary, 0447 333 966. PQRS

HOUSE TO RENT

GLENROY. 3BR. Schools and transport close. Bond and references. $1650 per calendar month. Denis, 0422 637 596. PQ

PERSONALS JACINTA. Please contact 0407 204 589 or 35 Stanley St, Bulleen. I’ll explain all. Can nearly promise that you’ll be glad you did. Remember you helped find keys at Danaher’s , November. You bought bags of soil. You were sad because job in HR finished. 55 yo, medium length blonde. Tony. PQRS

WANTED TO BUY LOOKING for old record vinyl and audio collection. Cash paid. Hawthorn, Balwyn, Kew, Canterbury, Camberwell, Toorak. 0450 060 362. PQRS

WHAT’S ON

KINGLAKE DISTRICT CRICKET CLUB. Annual General Meeting. Monday, April 26. 7.30pm. At Kinglake Memorial Grounds Rooms. All welcome. nmca. kinglake@gmail.com www.kinglakecc.vic. cricket.com.au Phone: 0474 831 127 PQ LET’S TALK ABOUT SEX. Mebourne Panel. Thursday, April 22. 6.30pm. $35 for solo ticket, $60 for couples ticket. At 29 Chapel St, Windsor. sarahellenhartwright@ gmail.com PQ PRIVACY POLICY

Our Privacy Policy includes important information about our collection, use and disclosure of your personal information. The personal information we request from you enables us to provide you with the services you require.

FOR SALE ARC WELDER. Goodwell. Australian made. 130 amp. GC. $50. Greensborough. 0406 939 273. NPQR AKARI. 4-cyl. auto. BGU-391. Reg. 4/6/ 21. Japan 02/20. White snowflake pearl, black leather electric seats inc. warmer. Sunroof plates B&W, bonnet protection, mats f&b, door and boot scuff plates. New car warranty. Roadside service 4/6/25. Garaged during lockdown. 600 kms on odometer. RWC. PC. $34,500. Eltham. Rob, 0428 270 937. MNPQ BIKES. Two. New, not used. $180. East Kew. 0433 795 996. MNPQ BLOWER. Ryobi. Twostroke. GC. $30. Boronia. 0433 309 507. PQRS BOTTLES. Old. 50s60s. Various shapes. $10 a box. Seaford. 0409 975 368. PQRS BREAD BASKET. Granny Davis. Wire metal type. Boronia. 0433 309 507. MNPQ CAMERA. Pentax MZ60, uses film, plus 2 lens, 28-80mm and 100-0300mm and 2 filters. New, never used, still in the box. Purchased about 8 years ago.$300. Cranbourne. 0401 898 413.

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

CARAVAN. Galaxy. 2012. 17’ single axle, one owner. 120L fridge. Microwave, air cond, QS bed, electric brakes, mirrors, towing hitch, solar panels, van cover, table, chairs, privacy screens, very clean. 21” TV. Ready to go. Rego: U51-490. GC. $26,500. Hastings 0466 252 967, QRST CARAVAN. Jayco Heritage. 2003 model. 18’8” tandem. Double island bed, combined shower/vanity/toilet. Fold out awning plus annex. TV, radio, microwave, fridge, oven and hotplates. Centre dinette/childs bed. Needs some TLC. $21,000. Call 0418 334 416 for details and pics. QRST CARPET Shampooer. 500W Max Power, Godfreys. Only used once and have original box and instructions booklet. Easy to use and light to handle. VGC. $120. Cranbourne. 0401 898 413. QRST

CUPBOARD. white, half display and half storage. Top half is Georgian style glass panes. Bottom half is two white doors. Versatile with new or old styles of furniture. $2500 ONO. Bernie, 0414 205 133. MNPQ CUSHIONS, Cushion Covers, Aprons, Soft Toys, Story Books, Love Your Pet. Send a picture of your beloved pet to have a cartoon drawing done to hang on your wall for $45. Custom made soft toys available. Mernda. 0407 846 563. MNPQ DOG KENNEL (for large dog). Hard, plastic, roof lifts off. Clean condition. $40. Seaford. 0409 975 368. PQRS ELECTRIC ORGAN. Electon 2-tiered mulfunction, with stool. Beautiful cabinet in pristine condition. $200 ONO. Sandringham. 0449 841 449. MNPQ FENCE POLES. 3, aluminium, square type, like Stratoc fence poles. 210 (7 ft) x 50 (2 in.) FC. $30. Boronia. 0433 309 507. MNPQ FORD Fairlane Ghia BA 6cyl 340,000-km, new tyres, black with black interior. Electrics all good. Dual fuel. SPE-844. Reg. till June 21. VGC. $3800 ONO. Mornington Peninsula. 0429 075 108. NPQR FURNITURE. Dark Timber Buffet. Four large drawers. Two smaller drawers. Two document drawers. 1500 wide, 900 high, 500 deep. Can send pictures. Pick-up only. Great Cond. $250. Doreen. 0417 118 739. PQRS GARDENIAS. 30cm high. $25, larger sizes available $35. Helathy, ready for planting out. Croydon. 0408 332 181. PQRS

GREAT AGES OF MAN. History of world culture. Mint condition. 21 volumes. Each 200pp. Titles such as Ancient China, Early Islam, Birth of Europe, The Reformation and 17 more. Great study material by Time Life. $90. Glen Iris. 0407 276 973. PQRS HAND MOWER. Flymo H40. EC. $40. Box Hill North. 0401 494 336. QRST HAWTHORN Football Club jumper (not framed) signed by Jason Dunstall, Rayden Tallis, Dermott Brereton, Johnny Platten. 10 signatures in total, plus video, Hawthorn Too Old Too Slow. $600. Wesburn. 0407 314 246. MNPQ HIKING BOOTS. Size 13, leather, ‘Rivers’. Very little use. VGC. $35. Glen Waverley. 9560 8175. NPQR HEDGE TRIMMER. Electric. Ryobi. And Hedge Trimmer, Black and Decker. GC. $30 each. Boronia. 0433 309 507. PQRS ILL AWARRA Flame Trees, 2m high and 3m high. Healthy, ready for plating out. $60 and $90. Croydon. 0408 332 181. PQRS

MOUNTAIN BIKE. Old Diamond back Outlook. Needs servicing. $40. Thomastown. 0415 640 760. PQRS NAILER. Paslode Impuse Compact Nailer with charger. 2 batteries in hard carry case, Box 75mm nails and gas cylinders. Model No B20544. VGC. $450. Oak Park. 0409 267 624. PQRS OUTDOOR SETTING. Table and 6 chairs. EC. $110. North Essendon. 0419 384 496. NPQR OUTDOOR UMBRELLA. 2.5M. Canopy windup operation with metal base. Used. $60. Banyule. 0416 000 424. NPQR OUTDOOR Wooden Lounge Seat. Solid, under seat storage. L 230cm. EC. $600. North Essendon. 0419 384 496. NPQR PERSONALISED PLATES: MISUBI. For Mitsubishi or Subaru. VGC. $1500. Frankston. 9789 9634. NPQR

SCOOTERS. 2. Kids, sturdy, rubber tyres, pink and black, suitable for girl and boy. GC. $20 each. Croydon. 0408 332 181. PQRS SPORTS BOOKS. Olympics, Commonwealth Games, Cricket, Tennis, Football Records Finals 1960-1991. GC. Various prices. Box Hill South. 9890 7904. PQRS SWING SET. $35. Frozen bike with training wheels, $10. AFL 2019 card collector album, $30. Boronia. 9762 4050. PQRS TABLE SAW. Makita. 260mm. Model No MLT100. Photos available. VGC. $600. Oak Park. 0409 267 624. PQRS TILES. Wunderlich, two-one, roof-glazed tiles. 40cm x 27cm. Approx. 250. Enough for carport or single agrage. 15-17 capping tiles. $375. Macleod. Text: 0420 433 162. MNPQ TIMESHARE through Classic Holidays in Queensland. 16,500 points per year. $10,000. 0407 314 246. MNPQ TOYOTA Trax Ute. 2019. Turbo. Only 7000 km. 12 months rego. Extrase sunroof, seat warmers and new car warranty till 2025. Towing capacity. Garaged since new. IRE-8JR. As new. $27,500. Essendon. 0412 160 475. QRST TREADMILL. Electrica. Broken, easy fix. Not working. $200. East Kew. 0433 795 996. MNPQ VHS MOVIES. 60. Wide variety. In boxes. Ready for conversion to DVD. VGC. $50. Frankston. 9789 9634. NPQR

VINTAGE CERAMIC Gutter Pieces. 300 mm long., About 100. GC 50 cents each. Research. 9437 1253. QRST WATER TANK. 1000-litre, plastic. One metre square approx, with tap. GC. $80. Greensborough. 0406 939 273. NPQR WEDDING DRESS. White, full-length, off shoulder with matching bolero-type jacket. Size 10. Photo can be supplied upon request. Suitable for person 5’1”-5’6” (approx. 152-162 cm). EC. $450. Wantirna South. 0415 886 496. PQRS WEIGHT LOSS Machine. Belt massager. Stand-on. GC. $40. Boronia. 0433 309 507. MNPQ WELDER. CIG Transarc Easy welder on wheels. 4 boxes of rods. VGC. $50. Boronia. 0433 309 507. PQRS WHIPPER SNIPPER. Ryobi. Improved line feder. Two stroke. GC. $30. Boronia. 0433 309 507. PQRS

CHAINSAW. Stihl Wood Boss. 024V. 3.1HP, 16” bar and cover including sharpening tool kit, instruction/owner’s manual, visor, chain bar oil. Just had full service. Service report and photos available. VGC. $400. Oak Park. 0409 267 624. PQRS CHAINSAW SHARPENER. Electric. Still in box. Unused. New cond. $40. Boronia. 0433 309 507. PQRS COLUMNS. Structural, unused, 2.75 metre long. Six, new, capitals. Can send pictures. $185. Hastings. 0431 988 689. PQRS COMPUTER SUCCESS PLUS INDEX. Folders 1-4 plus 1 folder Paint Shop. EC. $20 for the set. Lower Templestowe. 0409 666 231. COMMERCIAL Freehold Property. 28 Church St, Whittlesea. Positioned in main street of Whittlesea. Strong investment opportunity. Has long term tenants. GC. POA. 0417 861 498 for more information. QRST

GAS BARBECUE. Two burner with mobile trolley and gas bottle. Used. $600. Banyule. 0416 000 424. NPQR GATE. Wrought iron. Heavy, 2nd hand, latch, W 137cm x H 1180-160cm. EC. $200. North Essendon. 0419 384 496. NPQR

KNIFE BLOCK SET. 8piece pro. 6 knives, knife block and knife sharpener. New condition, bever used. $280. Canterbury. 9836 5806. PQRS MICROWAVE. Sharp Carousel sensor, 23 litre, white inside and out. Still in use. GC. $40. Wantirna South. 0415 886 496. PQRS MITRE SAW. AEG 254mm Slide. 200W with Dust Extraction. Model No PS254 SB with AEG Mitre Saw Leg Stand Model No PSU 1000. Photos available. VGC. $500. Oak Park. 0409 267 624. PQRS MOBILE PHONE. Telstra, pre-paid. Essential Smart 3, new, in box, paid $90. Plus new leather punch to match phone, paid $25. Receipts and manual included. New Cond. Both for $90. Kinglake. 0401 443 208. NPQR

PHOTOCOPIER. Ricoh. Model MPC 2003. Works well. Needs black drum/developer unit. Open unit. Low copies. $750 ONO. Noble Park North. 0419 1127 392. PQRS PIANOL A. Antique 1926 Cable, completely re-conditioned with stook. Also 80 rolls. VGC. I paid $5000 in 1987. $1600 or near offer. Mornington. 0448 677 840. NPQR PORCELAIN DOLLS. Around 15 large collectable dolls. Some are certified with numbers. All in boxes. Can send pictures. EC. Various prices starting from $40. Hastings. 0412 618 193. MNPQ RADIATOR. Kerosene. Vintage Kayen. All parts, but needs a polish. Includes instruction book and remains of original box. GC. $75. Research. 9437 1253. NPQR ROLLER DOOR. Cream colour. 5 metres wide. Standard height. GC. $200. Launching Place. 5967 4412. QRST

WINDOWS. Pilkington Double Glazed, with grey tint. 6m x 19m x 4m, thickness 1x. Frame size: 1mtr x 1.83cm. 1 x 1 mtr x 135cm. $2000. Macleod. Text: 0420 433 162. MNPQ

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TUITION

VCE ENGLISH STUDENTS! Get ready now! Make every SAC count. I come to you. 30 Years Exp. English teacher. 1st Class Honours Grad. 10 years VCE Literature examiner.

Call Rick 0481 250 228

PQRS


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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. Free Ads: www.dindi.com.au/ wp/free-ads-form/ Free What’s On Ads: www.dindi.com.au/ wp/free-ads-form/ PRIVACY POLICY Our Privacy Policy includes important information about our collection, use and disclosure of your personal information. The personal information we request from you enables us to provide you with the services you require.

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EMPLOYMENT

SCHOOL CROSSING SUPERVISORS We are seeking dedicated individuals to work as School Crossing Supervisors located within the City of Stonnington.

You can advertise FREE. No fees, no commissions. FREE ADS are available for private/non-commercial advertisements, published at the discretion of the Editor. ☛ USE the FREE ADS FORM at our website: www.AdvertiseFree.com.au ☛ MAIL to: FREE ADS, PO Box 1278, Research, 3095 ☛ E-MAIL: editor@LocalPaper.com.au

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These areas include: Toorak, South Yarra, Malvern, Prahran, Windsor and surrounding areas. Ongoing Positions with a great hourly rate, providing full training and full uniform. Safety in the community is a priority. If this is you, please call Roberta (03) 8561 8833 for further assistance.

mulgrave-recruiters@chandlermacleod.com

Star Tree Services

QUALIFIED ARBORISTS • • • • •

Tree Removal Tree Surgery & Pruning Consultations & Reports Elm Leaf Beetle Control Mulch & Firewood Sales

5783 3170

Free Quotes. Full Insurance Cover www.treeservices.com.au mail@treeservices.com.au

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WATER TANK. G DETAILS BELOW NOT FOR PUBLICATION WATER TANK. G Name: ...................................................................................................... Address: .................................................................................................... ..............................................Phone: ........................................................


Page 48 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, April 21, 2021

Lilydale and Yarra Valley Express Edition


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