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matching f lind
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Port Melbourne Historical & Preservation Society
Book - Cricket score book, Melbourne Sports Depot, 1960s
... f lind... a hirt r miller norman f lind a wright l barry m hudson r ...Unidentified cricket score book, possibly from Fishermen's Bend Migrant Hostel (Absent from collection September 2023)Port Melbourne Hostelsport - cricket, port melbourne hostel, melbourne sports depot, g elliot, r featherby, r elliot, a turner, d sampson, j farrier, j roberts, g treble, c turner, g ellison, m featherby, l bailey, k fitzgerald, g hirt, a watt, a hirt, r miller, norman, f lind, a wright, l barry, m hudson, r mcauliffe, b ramsay, s ralph, n rowe, c campbell, d hill, b manton, r mccraig, p chisolm, moloney, sinclair, coop, crittenden, payne, hall, p morgan, t morgan -
Orbost & District Historical Society
newsletters, F. Edward Edsall, Ozoompah, Dec. 1976 -21 Mar. 1979
These newsletters belonged to the Orbost Municipal Band. The Orbost Workers' Band and the Orbost Town Band amalgamated in 1913 to form the Orbost Municipal Band under the conductorship of Mr Charles Spink. The Orbost Municipal Band played a major role in the Orbost community activities. Charles Spink made sure each soldier returning home from the 1914 to 1918 war was welcomed home in front of the Shire Hall to the music of the Orbost Municipal Band. The band played in the main street on most Friday nights and in 1929 the band played at the official opening of the Buchan Caves, by Sir Albert Lind.The various Orbost bands over the years played a major role in community activities providing entertainment and musical experiences for the many members.Eight newsletters titled "Ozoompah for amateur banding in Australia"orbost-municipal-band newsletters-ozoompah -
National Vietnam Veterans Museum (NVVM)
Book, Lind, Michael, Vietnam: The Necessary War: A Reinterpretation of America's Most Disastrous Military Conflict (Copy 1), 1999
A quarter century after its end, the Vietnam War still divides Americans. Some, mostly of the left, claim that Indochina was of no strategic value to the United States and was not worth An American war.A quarter century after its end, the Vietnam War still divides Americans. Some, mostly of the left, claim that Indochina was of no strategic value to the United States and was not worth An American war.vietnamese conflict, 1961-1975 - united states, united states - foreign relations - 1963-1969, president j f kennedy, president nixon, president lyndon johnson