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The Record Newspaper 03 July 1980

Page 1

****INSIDE WA'S OLDEST WEEKLY NEWSPAPER******.

tram PLUS tram 4 page family Crossword magazine

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Perth, WA: July 3-9, 1980 Telephone: (09) 328 1388

4144-11-44-41-444-11-41-4

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Number 21 Price 30 ce

on for -.(7.ids —page 13 •

* * * *** .,44,, ** , * -:,* guide ** , 9*** :Page ,,4, * * :• Letters to theI t : Editor, Page • *

4• 1 « Overseas news, : page 6 • Classi- I: fields, Page 14 * • Sport, Page : * 15. * * ,43434443444,4445

With over120 Savings Centres throughout Western Australia, we're near you. But no other building socie comes near us.

St. Cecilia's in Grantham Street is featured in the American World Book Encyclopaedia in full colour. The encyclopaedia has an international circulation. The unusually designed pentagonal church also attracts many tourists each year. The president of the parish council of St. Cecilia's, Mr. Ivan Colgan, is pictured here with the book. He says one of the main object in planning it was to have the nave close to the altar. Another was to focus the gaze of people entering the church onto the altar.

The dilemma facing you

Short On-the-spot week battle

Can Australia afford a 35-hour working week to apply through the whole of industry?

Town &Country. Setting the Pace. TOwrl & Country Building Society 297 Murray StreetPermanent Perth Telephone 327 3333

Employers see the proposed reduction in hours as a threat to many jobs and a cost additive that would trades unions heading the ments as well in support of destroy them in the campaign for the 35-hour their cases. keen field of interna- week see it as a creator of To help you to make up tional competition in additional employment your own minds about the the provider of some pros and cons of the conaddition to causing and measure of social and eco- troversy, The Record pubunbearable inflation- nomic justice. lishes on Page 5 of this issue ary pressures interna comprehensive summary ally. Protagonists of each side of the arguments "for" and Conversely, the metal advance many more argu- "against."

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The Record was a unique eyewitness at the Ned Kelly siege of Glenrowan. In 1874 Father Matthew Gibney founded The Record He established its printing works at the Orphanage, now the McAuley Centre, Wembley, and he became the staunch supporter of both. On June 28, 1880 he was in Victoria seeking financial help for his Catholic Orphanage and providentially his train pulled into Glenrowan station at noon on its journey to Albany. He became the unexpected priest-on-thescene for one of Australia's most celebrated moments of danger the death of the friends of Ned Kelly. His eye witness account taken from The • Record of 1880 is on page 16.


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