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    Bulldogs And Trojans Battle In Track

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    • 24 Sep

    first_imgSunman Dearborn @ Batesville Middle School Track results from (4-19)Girls: Batesville  78  Sunman Dearborn 32For Batesville. Shot Put-1 Sarah Ripperger (25’10”); Discus-2 Alyssa Nobbe (57’1”); High Jump-2 Carley Pride (4’6”); Long Jump-1 Madelyn Pohlman (14’10”)  3 Elena Kuisel (12”7.25”); 100M Hurdles-2 Kate Walke (18.93); 100M-1 Madelyn Pohlman (13.19)  2 Lily Meyer (13.62)  3 Nadine Davis (13.67); 200M-1 Lily Meyer (29.58)  2 Nadine Davis (29.60); 400M-1 Carley Pride (1:05.32)  2 Ava Hanson (1:09.52); 800M-1 Katie Olsen (2:42.42)  2 Lily Pinckley (2:45.66); 1600M-1 Lily Pinckley (5:47.78); 400M Relay-1 BMS Elena Kuisel, Nadine Davis, Angela Diaz, Madelyn Pohlman (55.42); 800M Relay-1 BMS Cora Deputy, Elena Kuisel, Lily Meyer, Katie Olsen (2:02.71); 1600M Relay-1 BMS Madelyn Pohlman, Sarah Ripperger, Ava Hanson, Carley Pride (4:43.86); 3200M Relay-1 BMS Lily Pinckley, Sarah Ripperger, Jada Day, Katie Olsen (11:03.82).Boys: Sunman Dearborn  70  Batesville  40For Batesville. Shot Put-3 Chase Hamilton (33’2”); Discus-2 Ean Loichinger (88’10”)  3 Justin Alford (82’11”); Long Jump-3 Vonley Hund (15’4.75”); 110M Hurdles-2 Chase Hamilton (18.30); 100M-3 Evan Williamson (12.87); 200M-3 Evan Williamson (26.81); 400M-1 Vonley Hund (1:00.95); 800M-1 Ean Loichinger (2:13.50)  2 Daren Smith (2:32.23); 1600M-1 Ean Loichinger (5:14.85)  3 Will Nuhring (5:21.29); 1600M Relay-1 BMS Chase Hamilton, Daren Smith, Will Nuhring, Vonley Hund (4:17.22); 3200M Relay-1 BMS Vonley Hund, Will Nuhring, Daren Smith, Ean Loichinger (9:58.59).Courtesy of Bulldogs Coach Derek Suits.last_img read more

    Nations unite for Rugby League World Cup 2017 launch

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    • 26 May

    first_imgTournament CEO Andrew Hill, chairman Dr George Peponis, OAM, and Queensland Minister for Education and Minister for Tourism, Major Events and the Commonwealth Games, Kate Jones, were on hand to launch the 28-game series that culminates with the final in Brisbane on Saturday, December 2.The 15th Rugby League World Cup, which was first played in France in 1954, will kick-off in Melbourne on Friday night with the clash of century-old rivals, England and Australia, coached by iconic Queensland league figures Wayne Bennett and Mal Meninga.The tournament will be contested by Australia, England, France, Lebanon (Pool A); New Zealand, Samoa, Tonga, Scotland (Pool B), Papua New Guinea, Wales, Ireland (Pool C), Fiji, Italy and United States (Pool D).The new international eligibility rules are expected to ensure RLWC2017 is the most competitive and most watched World Cup in history.Matches will be telecast by the Seven Network in Australia, Sky TV in New Zealand and EMTV in PNG.“The World Cup is huge for our game, we don’t have find memories of the last World Cup in Australia in 2008 so we want to turn that around,” Australian Captain Cameron Smith told the launch.It’s a celebration of our game and I think everyone who gets involved with this tournament and comes out and sees all the matches is going to be for a treat. There is going to be some great football played and there are some wonderful players on show throughout this tournament so I can’t wait.“All the guys are really looking forward to getting out there on Friday night, they are excited about this campaign.“I think a lot of the focus and a lot of the talk from Mal [Meninga] and from myself is going to be about playing a good game of footy on Friday night because if you get beaten in that first game you put yourself into a tricky position heading into quarter finals and semi-finals.”England captain Sean O’Loughlin said the English players were looking forward to playing in the tournament under master coach Wayne Bennett.“I think he just puts the boys under pressure to do the basic things well,” O’Loughlin said. He has a heap of experience and I think the boys are feeding off that.“From our point of view we want to get off to a good start but we also want to be building towards the knock out rounds and getting better week in and week out. “RLWC2017 chairman George Peponis said the World Cup would not only be the best ever but would leave a legacy for the game, with matches spread across Australia, New Zealand and in Papua New Guinea.“There has been plenty of hype around the eligibility rules which have shown that the Rugby League World Cup 2017 will be the most competitive world cup,” Peponis said.“I would like to thank all our corporate partners as well as our government partners. In particular I’d like to thank the Queensland Government for their support, with Brisbane set to host a semi-final and the final, which for the first time in history will feature the men’s and women’s World Cup finals.”Next weekend’s opening round matches are (local times):Friday, October 27: Australia v England, Melbourne Rectangular Stadium (8pm).Saturday October 28: PNG v Wales, Oil Search NFS, Port Moresby (3pm); New Zealand v Samoa, Mt Smart Stadium, Auckland (8.10pm); Fiji v USA; Townsville (7.40pm).Sunday, October 29: Ireland v Italy, Barlow Park, Cairns (2pm) and Scotland v Tonga (4pm) in a double-header; France v Lebanon, Canberra Stadium, Canberra (4pm).last_img read more

    Barks and Marbles one cause

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    • 21 Sep

    first_img Facebook Twitter: @NeosKosmos Instagram In front of a packed Greek Centre in Melbourne last week, Aboriginal activist and historian Gary Foley made a stinging rebuke of not just the British Museum – and its actions in retaining stolen sacred items such as the Parthenon Marbles – but the connivance of the Australian Labor Party for introducing legislation in 2013 that makes it impossible to challenge loans to Australia of stolen Aboriginal artefacts.After reflecting on the long history of support experienced by Aboriginal people from the Greek community in Australia, in an impassioned speech to launch the 2015 Greek History and Culture Seminars organised by the Greek Orthodox Community of Melbourne, Dr Foley drew on the shared experience of cultural loss – and the unavoidable parallel between the ongoing campaign for Aboriginal artefacts to be returned by the British Museum and the Parthenon Marbles.Dr Foley’s presentation coincided with the news that the British Museum is preparing to lend a bark etching from its collection (created by Dja Dja Wurrung people in central Victoria, that was taken by a Scottish settler in the 1850s) to the National Museum of Australia for an exhibition called ‘Encounters’ that will open later this year.As he told the attentive Greek Centre audience, the ‘Encounters’ project is salt in the wound to a loan ten years ago made by the British Museum to the Melbourne Museum – a situation in which Dr Foley was intimately involved.In 2004, Dr Foley resigned as a senior curator of the Melbourne Museum after his employer resisted legal attempts – under the then Federal Cultural Heritage legislation – to keep the bark etchings in Australia. At the time, Aboriginal groups sought – and got – the assistance of the Greek community to support their campaign.The items in question – believed to be the only surviving examples in the world of Victorian Indigenous bark art – have been in storage at the British Museum for over 150 years until their display ten years ago in Victoria. At least one of the items is due to return, with a host of other Indigenous artefacts, just for the duration of the ‘Encounters’ show.Faced with history repeating itself, Dr Foley says changes to legislation under the The Protection of Cultural Objects on Loan Act, enacted by the Gillard/Rudd Labor government, makes it harder today to contest the British Museum’s actions – and those of its Australian partners.“You would expect the conservatives to support the Act, but what wasn’t expected was that a Labor government would be involved in such an exercise,” Foley told Neos Kosmos shortly after the Greek Centre event.“They were the government in power. Peter Garrett was the relevant minister at one point, and the whole legislation went through a period of both Rudd and Gillard governments, and they’re the ones who need to be called to account.”After the 2004 controversy, it appears the legislation was initiated at the call of Australia’s major cultural institutions who were keen on obtaining a legal guarantee to foreign partners (such as the British Museum) that items on loan in Australia would always return; so avoiding the fractious legal wranglings that took place a decade before.Dr Foley says the Act ensures Australia’s even greater compliance with the British Museum’s anachronistic “colonial” position.“We had legislation which went some way towards protecting Aboriginal people’s interest when it comes to cultural heritage, and that was removed.”Repealing the legislation, says Foley, would be a way “to highlight the outrageous position of those at the British Museum who refuse to return anything to anybody, because they’re scared of the precedent that might be, in terms of the Parthenon Marbles.”It’s clear that the ‘Encounters’ exhibition – the most ambitious show in the 14-year history of the National Museum of Australia – could not be mounted without the protection of the Act.Despite its Australian curators’ ambitions for it to enliven a new discussion about the ownership and custodianship of Indigenous cultural objects, it is likely to be the museum’s most criticised and controversial show.Reflecting the complexity of the debate around it, some might be surprised that the London version of the exhibition is being curated by an Indigenous Tasmanian – Gaye Sculthorpe, who previously worked at the Melbourne Museum and was appointed the curator of the British Museum’s Oceania and Australia section in 2013.After five years of planning, ‘Encounters’ is due to open at the National Museum of Australia in November, after a related show at the British Museum which opens next month. Meanwhile, Dr Foley and others are adamant that their only course of action is to draw the attention of the Australian people to the debate.“The British Museum grew out of the era of colonialism. The rest of the world grew out of those ideas a hundred years ago,” says Foley. “Their position has no credibility in the modern world. It’s really that simple.”last_img read more

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