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To act, or not to act
BATHURST  1 Jan 2003

To act, or not to act

Theatre/media students at Charles Sturt University (CSU) and members of the public will be able to attend a Shakespeare masterclass by one of the great British actors, Mr Barrie Ingham, who was given his Broadway debut opportunity by Sir John Gielgud. Mr Ingham will perform his one-man show The Actor at CSU’s Ponton Theatre on the Bathurst Campus on Tuesday 26 August, and will present the Shakespeare masterclass on Wednesday 27 August. Mr Karl Shead, Theatre Technical Officer at the CSU School of Communication, explained that The Actor was devised by Barrie Ingham and Terry Hands during their time together at the Royal Shakespeare Company. “The play asks ‘who and what is an actor?’, and reveals how all of us are actors. It has been performed in New York and London, and toured to South Africa, Australia and throughout USA,” The performance and masterclass arise from the partnership between the Local Stages/Bathurst Memorial Entertainment Centre program in Bathurst, which provides performing arts development opportunities for artists in the region, and the theatre/media department at CSU’s School of Communication.

Charles Sturt University

CSU appoints new facilities boss
BATHURST  1 Jan 2003

CSU appoints new facilities boss

With a background in business planning and policy development, Mr Stephen Butt has been appointed the new Executive Director of Facilities Management at Charles Sturt University (CSU). Mr Butt, who is an experienced engineer and project manager, comes to CSU from the Greater Southern Area Health Service based in Wagga Wagga. The former fitter and turner who trained in Wollongong, has post graduate qualifications in engineering management. At CSU he will oversee the largest set of building projects ever embarked on by the University, with academic facilities and services and student residences worth $240 million being constructed over five years from 2007 on its campuses in Albury-Wodonga, Bathurst, Orange, Dubbo and Wagga Wagga. This includes nearly $45 million to be spent by 2009 on the expansion of the Albury-Wodonga Campus.

Charles Sturt University

CSU mourns the death of Mr Peter Hastie (7.10.28 - 29.1.08)
BATHURST  1 Jan 2003

CSU mourns the death of Mr Peter Hastie (7.10.28 - 29.1.08)

Charles Sturt University (CSU) is mourning the death of one of its founding fathers, Mr Peter Hastie, who passed away on Tuesday 29 January at Eltham Lodge in Victoria at the age of 79. Mr Hastie was appointed on 16 October 1969 as Chairman of the Interim Council of the Riverina College of Advanced Education (RCAE), and then as Chairman of the Council until 30 June 1982. At the time, he was the longest serving Chairman of the governing body of an institute of higher education in New South Wales. Under his Chairmanship, RCAE grew from a small single-purpose institution, with fewer than 450 students, to the ninth largest College of Advanced Education in Australia. Mr Hastie was also a driving force behind the relocation of the former Wagga Teachers’ College to land adjoining the Wagga Agricultural College. The CSU Boorooma site stands as direct evidence of Mr Hastie’s vision, energy and insight. The Peter Hastie Ovals, located at the CSU Wagga Wagga Campus, were named in his honour on 21 October 1992. A funeral service for Mr Peter Hastie will be held at the Le Pine Chapel at Eltham, Victoria, on Monday 4 February commencing at 12 noon. Mr Hastie is survived by daughters Janet Twigden, Fiona Cropley and son Warwick Hastie.

Charles Sturt UniversitySociety and Community

CSU students battling the bulge
BATHURST  1 Jan 2003

CSU students battling the bulge

Charles Sturt University (CSU) students are making the battle against obesity and eating disorders personal with a cooking competition to show healthy eating can be cheap as well as nutritious, quick, tasty and good looking. Three student groups – the Nutrition and Dietetics (or Nut) Club, the Social Workers Club and the Health Action Team – are gathering favourite student recipes for a recipe book, with the top 12 recipes entered into a cook-off competition to be held in October on the University’s Wagga Wagga Campus. A panel of local judges will name the winner of a $150 voucher for groceries. President of the Nut Club, Mr Kingsley Vance, hopes that initiatives like this will help the communities within CSU campuses – Albury-Wodonga, Bathurst, Dubbo, Orange and Wagga Wagga – to improve their food choices. “University students are often at risk of not eating a nutritious diet, so our competition is all about raising awareness of good nutrition in all our communities,” he said.

Charles Sturt UniversityHealth

Rotary scholarships for CSU Dubbo nursing students
BATHURST  1 Jan 2003

Rotary scholarships for CSU Dubbo nursing students

Two third year nursing students from Charles Sturt University (CSU) have been awarded 2007 Australian Rotary Health Research Fund Rural and Remote Nursing Scholarships. Ms Susie McCalman, from Peak Hill, and Ms Janet Paine, from Warren, won the only two scholarships available for country NSW, each worth $12 500. Ms Cathy Maginnis, lecturer in nursing and course coordinator at the University’s Dubbo Campus, said this was a great achievement for the students and for CSU’s nursing course on the campus. “We are very proud of these two students, and their achievement confirms why CSU is the University of inland Australia. The Rotary scholarships acknowledge their hard work and commitment to nursing, as they are both are from rural properties and travel long distances to attend the University,” she said. The students are currently undertaking their final clinical placements in hospitals in rural and remote NSW.

Health

Equine influenza – be vigilant and compliant
BATHURST  1 Jan 2003

Equine influenza – be vigilant and compliant

Members of the Riverina equine community at a Charles Sturt University (CSU) Equine Influenza (EI) forum have been urged to work together so that NSW Department of Primary Industries (DPI) quarantine restrictions, imposed in response to Australia’s first EI outbreak, are upheld by everyone in the community. Participants emphasised that the disease poses a threat to all horses, ponies and donkeys. Around 130 people attended the forum which was organised in Wagga Wagga by the CSU School of Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences. A panel of CSU equine health experts, led by Director of Veterinary Science Professor Kym Abbott, outlined the status of the EI outbreak, how the highly contagious virus is transmitted and ways to prevent its spread through the nation’s equine population. CSU veterinary science lecturer Dr Sharanne Raidal stressed the importance of community vigilance and compliance to halt the advance of equine flu, which can be transmitted by humans, vehicles and equipment.

Agriculture &Food ProductionVeterinary ScienceScience &IT

Cross-boundary farming
BATHURST  1 Jan 2003

Cross-boundary farming

Lessons from agriculture in the Middle Ages could today help farms in Australia become more sustainable. Back in that era, farmers didn’t hold individual titles over land but farmed collectively on common property or "commons". A modern day adaptation of this concept is cross-boundary farming, where farmers agree to pool their land resource and manage it as a whole. A free one day forum on cross-boundary farming will be hosted by the Institute for Land, Water and Society (ILWS) at Charles Sturt University (CSU), Wagga Wagga Campus, on Friday 7 September. The forum will consider the opportunities and pitfalls of cross-boundary farming, the environmental benefits, property rights, relationships between and within farming families as well as workloads. There will be two panel sessions presenting various practical and political points of view on the practice.

Agriculture &Food ProductionBusiness &CommerceEnvironment &Water

Equine influenza – surveillance succeeding
BATHURST  1 Jan 2003

Equine influenza – surveillance succeeding

The most recent Department of Primary Industries (DPI) figures suggest that, in NSW, there are 835 horses infected with Equine Influenza on 119 confirmed properties. An additional suspect 2900 horses on 319 locations are also in quarantine. Charles Sturt University (CSU) senior lecturer in equine medicine, Dr Sharanne Raidal says most importantly, the NSW Deputy Chief Veterinary Officer reports that every one of these cases has been traced from known contact with affected horses. This means that, to date, the disease has not escaped surveillance measures. Dr Raidal warns that only by containing the virus within a small proportion of the total horse population, and allowing the disease to "burn itself out", will "we succeeded in eradicating EI". Continued careful attention to quarantine restrictions and prompt identification of new cases is required for this to happen. A number of horses with high temperatures, but no known risk of disease, have been tested negative. It is important that all such horses are examined as part of routine, ongoing surveillance for spread of the disease.

Agriculture &Food ProductionVeterinary ScienceScience &IT

CSU graduates and Circus Monoxide for Catapult Festival
BATHURST  1 Jan 2003

CSU graduates and Circus Monoxide for Catapult Festival

Graduates of Charles Sturt University’s (CSU) theatre/media course have returned to Bathurst with Circus Monoxide for the Catapult Festival in Bathurst on Thursday 13 to Sunday 16 September. CSU lecturer Jerry Boland, coordinator of the theatre/media course and chair of the Catapult Festival Steering Committee, said “Circus Monoxide is a performance company which prides itself on providing exciting entertainment and education for up and coming circus performers and quality live performances, particularly to people living in regional and rural areas.” About 30 current CSU theatre/media students will be involved in the Catapult Festival, which received $26,900 from Festivals Australia. The Catapult Festival will see over 300 young people from NSW and ACT attend 23 workshops over four days as a part of the program.

Society and Community

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