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Nerang RSL & Memorial Club

Nerang RSL & Memorial Club

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T (07) 5578 1222
Email: info@nerangrsl.com

Nerang RSL & Memorial Club Inc.
69 Nerang Street 4211

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Nerang RSL Netball Club | Year of Giving 2025

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Daniel McMahon
Wednesday, 30 July 2025 / Published in Community
Committee members, players and parents from Nerang RSL Netball Club accepting their cheque at Community Donation Day on Sunday 20 July 2025.

🏐10 Years of Unity On and Off the Court

In 2025, Nerang RSL Netball Club celebrates a major milestone — marking 10 years since forming and 10 years as a valued member of the Nerang RSL Sports Council.

Over the past decade, this local family-focused netball club has become a stronghold for grassroots netball, welcoming players of all ages and skill levels. With a culture built on teamwork, inclusivity and growth, the club continues to develop both athletic ability and community spirit.

This year’s funding from Nerang RSL helped supply personalised winter hoodies for every player, coach, manager and committee member.

More than just warmth, these hoodies build pride, team identity and visibility — uniting the club in more ways than one.

📧 netball@nerangrsl.com
📞 Maree Likely – President | 0414 741 650

💬 Whether you’re looking to join a team, lend a hand or simply cheer from the sidelines — reach out for a chat with Nerang RSL Netball Club today.

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Nerang RSL Hino Touch Football Club | Year of Giving 2025

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Daniel McMahon
Tuesday, 29 July 2025 / Published in Community
Committee members, volunteers and junior players from Nerang RSL Hino Touch Football Club holding their Community Fund cheque at Donation Day on Sunday 20 July 2025.

🏃‍♂️Building Community with Every Pass

Since joining the Nerang RSL Sports Council in 2022, Nerang RSL Hino Touch Football Club has remained one of the fastest-growing grassroots teams in our region. With more than 360 players across junior and senior divisions, the Club offers year-round opportunities for people of all ages to stay active, develop skills and represent the Gold Coast with pride.

Led entirely by volunteers, the Club continues to foster a strong culture of teamwork, inclusivity and sportsmanship — values that extend far beyond the field.

In 2025, Nerang RSL was proud to support the Club with funding to purchase new uniforms, player equipment and coaching resources — helping ensure every participant enjoys a quality experience, no matter their level.

Looking ahead, the Club is seeking a local business or community partner to sponsor shade gazebos for training and game days — a small gesture that would make a big difference during Queensland’s hotter months.

📧 hinotouch@yahoo.com.au
📞 Melanie Flesser – President | 0413 307 145

💬 If you’re in a position to assist, the Club would love to hear from you!

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Nerang Roosters JRLFC | Year of Giving 2025

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Daniel McMahon
Tuesday, 29 July 2025 / Published in Community
Committee members, volunteers and junior players from Nerang Roosters JRLFC with their Community Fund cheque at Donation Day on Sunday 20 July 2025.


🐔 Pride in Every Jersey

Nerang Roosters Junior Rugby League Football Club is more than just footy — it’s a place where young players grow through teamwork, community and opportunity and we have been a proud supporter for over 30 years.

With close to 400 members and teams ranging from Under 6s through to DMC, the Roosters have long been a hub for junior development on the Gold Coast.

In 2025, the Club continues to make strides in supporting female participation, fielding an Open Women’s team and expanding their dedicated Girls Academy 💪

Now in our latest round of funding, Nerang RSL is proud to support the Roosters with new playing jerseys for their non-competition junior teams (U6–U12) and their Under 17s girls squad.

These uniforms aren’t just about performance — they represent unity, pride and a strong sense of belonging for every young player who wears them 👕

📍 Glennon Park, Recreation Drive, Nerang
📧 nerangjrlfc@bigpond.com
🔗 Follow on Facebook

💬 The Club is also seeking sponsorship to help fund jerseys for their new Open Women’s team. If you’re a local business wanting to back grassroots sport, the Roosters would love to hear from you.

 

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Erin Lockwood Racing | Year of Giving 2025

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Daniel McMahon
Tuesday, 29 July 2025 / Published in Community
Erin Lockwood and young BMX riders from her racing squad proudly hold their Community Fund cheque from Nerang RSL on Donation Day, smiling in team gear.

🚴‍♀️Where Passion Meets Purpose

Erin Lockwood Racing is more than just a BMX team — it’s a homegrown success story driven by passion, leadership and a deep commitment to empowering the next generation of riders.

Since first receiving support from Nerang RSL in 2017, Elite BMX Champion Erin has built an inclusive, community-focused racing squad that inspires young athletes to push limits, build confidence and compete with heart. Her team proudly represents at state and national championships, not only as skilled competitors but as role models on and off the track.

In 2025, we provided Erin and her talented team with funding to help purchase new jerseys, polos, banners and gear bags — ensuring every rider shows up feeling united, prepared and proud to wear their colours.

📍 Based at Nerang BMX Club
📲 Follow Erin on Instagram: @lockwooderin

Whether you’re a parent of a young rider or a local business keen to back a powerful grassroots initiative, Erin Lockwood Racing is one to watch.

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Gold Coast Celtics Basketball Club | Year of Giving 2025

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Daniel McMahon
Tuesday, 29 July 2025 / Published in Community
Lisa Williamson, President of Gold Coast Celtics Basketball Club, holding the Community Fund cheque from Nerang RSL at Community Donation Day on Sunday 20 July 2025.


🏀Building Skills, Spirit & Team Pride

In 2025, Nerang RSL was proud to support Gold Coast Celtics Basketball Club for the first time through our Community Fund — backing a not-for-profit club that’s all about passion, participation and the power of junior sport.

Run entirely by volunteers, the Celtics currently field 43 junior teams across the Gold Coast Basketball competition. This year’s funding went directly to the club’s Mini Ball Program — a grassroots initiative that introduces young players to basketball in a safe, fun and supportive environment.

Designed to build skills and confidence while encouraging emerging coaches to step up, the program is a true reflection of community sport done right. Our funding has contributed to brand-new player singlets for the 2025 season, helping the next generation of Celtics hit the court with pride.

📍 Carrara Indoor Stadium
📧 admin@celticsbasketball.com.au
🌐 www.celticsbasketball.com.au

Whether you’re a parent, coach, or local supporter — the Celtics welcome everyone who shares their love of the game.

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Mudgeeraba Nerang & Districts Cricket Club | Year of Giving 2025

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Daniel McMahon
Tuesday, 29 July 2025 / Published in Community
Mudgeeraba Nerang & Districts Cricket Club Committee Members hold their Community Fund cheque from Nerang RSL at Community Donation Day on Sunday 20 July 2025.

🏏Building Cricketers, Shaping Leaders

Nerang RSL continues it’s long-standing partnership with Mudgeeraba Nerang & Districts Cricket Club (MNDCC) — a community-driven club committed to growing the game for all ages and genders.

With 17 teams in just the Under 10 and Under 11 divisions, MNDCC is expanding rapidly, especially in their girls and women’s competitions.

Our 2025 Community Fund contribution helps ease registration costs for young players stepping onto the pitch for the first time — ensuring that cricket remains affordable and accessible for local families.

Beyond sport, we’re also backing the Club’s Emerging Players Program — a standout initiative that combines cricket development with life skills. Through leadership camps, mentoring, guest speakers, nutrition and wellbeing talks – and visits from elite athletes – MNDCC is shaping not just skilled cricketers but confident, respectful young people who give back to their community.

📍 Nielsens Road, Carrara QLD
📞 Matt Gill – President | 0404 555 577
🌐 mndcc.com.au

Whether they’re hitting sixes or learning leadership, these future stars are growing on and off the field.

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Gold Coast Volleyball Club | Year of Giving 2025

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Daniel McMahon
Tuesday, 29 July 2025 / Published in Community
Sarah Kelly and Ben Kelly from Gold Coast Volleyball Club hold their Community Fund cheque from Nerang RSL at Community Donation Day on Sunday 20 July 2025.

🏐Growing the Game One Serve at a Time

From beach to indoor, social to elite — Gold Coast Volleyball Club is helping the sport thrive across the region. With over 300 members and 150 active players across all age groups and genders, the club provides inclusive pathways that develop talent, build skills and create strong community connections.

Their commitment to coaching and player development has produced several state and national representatives, all while continuing to welcome new players through accessible training and supportive programs.

In 2025, Nerang RSL provided funding assistance to help cover uniforms, equipment, coach development and venue hire — making sure high-quality training remains within reach for more local athletes.

📧 Contact: Jo Robinson – secretary@gcvc.org.au
🌐 Visit: gcvc.org.au

Whether you’re chasing your first serve or a spot on the rep team, Gold Coast Volleyball Club is serving up success on and off the court.

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Gold Coast Stingrays | Year of Giving 2025

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Daniel McMahon
Tuesday, 29 July 2025 / Published in Community
Gold Coast Stingrays Vice President Ken Lee holds the Community Fund cheque from Nerang RSL at Community Donation Day on Sunday 20 July 2025.

🏈 Lighting the way for Junior growth

The Gold Coast Stingrays Gridiron Club is tackling more than just opponents this season — they’re taking on the challenge of rapid junior growth with the same grit they bring to the field.

With over 160 players and 30 volunteers across boys, girls, men’s and women’s teams (ages 9 to 60), the Stingrays are proud to offer an inclusive, supportive space for players of all levels. But a recent 40% surge in U12, U14 and U18 participation has created new pressures — including a significant increase in lighting costs to accommodate extra field time for training.

Thanks to the support of our members, Nerang RSL is proud to assist with those costs — helping the club keep registration fees affordable and ensuring no family is priced out of participation.

It’s a win for grassroots sport, youth development and the future of Gridiron on the Gold Coast.

📧 Contact: Sera Schultz – secretary@gcstingrays.org.au
🌐 Visit: gcstingrays.org.au

Whether you’re a player, parent or supporter of local footy — the Stingrays community always welcomes new teammates.

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Emeralds Netball Club | Year of Giving 2025

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Daniel McMahon
Tuesday, 29 July 2025 / Published in Community
Emeralds Netball Club representatives on Community Donation Day 2025.

💚 Backing Passion, Supporting Safety

Emeralds Netball Club is a growing, family-oriented club based on the Gold Coast, welcoming players from as young as five through to adults. United by a love of netball and a strong sense of team spirit, the Club continues to thrive both on and off the court.

Now in our second year of support, Nerang RSL is proud to back this grassroots club once again — with funding contributing to essential First Aid kits and drink bottle holders. These may be small items, but they play a big role in keeping players safe, hydrated and ready to compete.

Looking ahead, the Emeralds would love to hear from other potential community partners who may be able to help purchase shade gazebos for training and game days. If you’re a local business looking to support youth sport and community wellbeing, they’d love to hear from you.

📍 Based on the Gold Coast
📱 Contact via Facebook: Emeralds Netball Club

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Carrara Saints AFL Club | Year of Giving 2025

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Daniel McMahon
Tuesday, 29 July 2025 / Published in Community
Carrara Saints AFL Club volunteers and junior players at Nerang RSL on Community Donation Day 2025.

🏉 Growing the Game from the Ground Up

Carrara Saints AFL Club has been helping kids fall in love with footy for decades — creating a supportive, family-friendly environment where young players can build confidence, skills and a lifelong love of the game.

This year, Nerang RSL proudly continues its support of the Saints, with funding to assist with the purchase of essential field equipment, including portable goalposts, cones, flags and line marking tools.

By continuing to invest in gear that supports safe, inclusive training and match day experiences – Carrara Saints is shaping the next generation of footy legends – right here on the Gold Coast.

📍 Nerang State High School, Nerang QLD 4211
📧 secretary@carrarasaints.com.au
🌐 carrarasaints.club

Got a keen junior ready to play — or keen to get involved as a coach, volunteer or supporter? Reach out to Carrara Saints and be part of something great.

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Who is Vivian Bullwinkel?

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niaatkin
Friday, 19 January 2024 / Published in Community

Sole Survivor: A Vivian Bullwinkel Story

Born on 18 December 1915 in Kapunda South Australia, Vivian Bullwinkel trained as a nurse and midwife at Broken Hill, New South Wales before beginning her nursing career in Hamilton, Victoria. After moving to Melbourne in 1940 it wasn’t long before Bullwinkel decided to enlist with the RAAF.

“I figured if my friends were going to fight, I should go to take care of them. I felt I could do that, that I had something to offer”.

She volunteered as a nurse but was rejected for having flat feet, later joining the Australian Army Nursing Service in 1941 and sailing for Singapore in September of the same year.

On 7 December 1941, just a few months into her service, the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor and within 24 hours, Singapore was also under attack. Japanese troops invaded Malaya and began to advance southwards, winning a series of victories until in February 1942, allied forces had little choice but to evacuate from Singapore.

While transporting nurses and wounded servicemen away from the conflict, a Scottish built steamer named the SS Vyner Brooke was crossing into the Bangka Strait when it was bombed by Japanese aircraft, sinking in just half an hour with 181 passengers and 47 crew on board.

After many hours in the water, about 150 men, women and children finally made it to the shores of Bangka Island, Bullwinkel and 21 of her sister nurses among them. They were short on supplies and more dangerously, they’d been washed up on enemy territory with little choice but to surrender.

“When we got ashore from the ship the men in the party decided that the best way to protect us was to surrender peaceably to the Japanese” said Bullwinkel in an interview published in The Sydney Morning Herald on September 19 1945, just three days after she had been liberated from a Japanese Prisoner of War Camp in Sumatra.

Her survival of the massacre, the resulting guilt she felt, had changed her purpose in life and as a sole survivor, she felt an onerous responsibility to share every detail she could recall about the atrocities she had witnessed not only to honour the memory of her comrades who had not returned but also to ensure the war crimes that had been committed on that day would not go unnoticed, even if the perpetrators were never punished.

She went on to testify to the International Military Tribunal for the Far East in 1946, later referred to as the Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal where she exhumed her memories about the massacre after years as a prisoner of war. She recalled the groups attempt to negotiate their surrender with the Japanese on Radji Beach, Bangka Island after being turned away from a local village.

“After we’d come to a decision, a large group of civilian women and children left in search of someone to surrender to. The nurses, soldiers and wounded waited.” After an officer met the Japanese at a town at the northern end of the island, he led them back to the group. It was at this time that the men were separated from the women before being taken away and killed. The enemy soldiers then returned to clean their bloodied bayonets in front of those who remained. Reports of violation of women prior to the massacre were vehemently denied by the Japanese.

“They took out tommy-guns and set up a machine gun, there was no doubting their intentions. We all seemed to accept what was going to happen”. Two days after the sinking of the SS Vyner Brooke, the woman were ordered into the sea where they were mercilessly machine gunned in the back and left for dead.

“We were ordered up and made to march into the sea” she recalled. “When we got out to about waist level, they started machine gunning from behind and I was hit just here at the side of the back. The bullet came through my hip but I wasn’t aware of it at the time. The force of the bullet and the waves knocked me over and I swallowed a lot of sea water. I was violently ill from the taste but knew if I wretched they would find and kill me”.

The sea water was inked with her own blood and that of her comrades and after witnessing the soldiers cleaning their bayonets earlier, Vivian knew that “playing dead” was her best chance of survival. With varying accounts of what happened next hazy at best, Bullwinkel’s response was simple but relatable. “I am sorry I am hazy in parts about all this. I have tried all this time to drive these scenes from my mind”.

She had tried so desperately to float, to stay still and not to drown that it is likely she lost consciousness for some time. Later in life in an interview with the Australian War Memorial she stated “The only reason I survived is because I lay still. Something told me that if I moved, I would be killed. I wouldn’t know how long I laid there but when I did venture to sit up everyone had been swept away, there were no bodies or soldiers on the beach, there was nothing. Just me.”

As it was, she said that part of her did die that day, 16 February 1942, resulting in a struggle with PTSD for the rest of her life.

After dragging herself to the safety of the jungle where she lay unconscious for three days, Bullwinkel came across a wounded solider and survivor of an earlier attack on the island who she nursed for 72 days. However, without sufficient food to sustain them, they decided the best thing to do was to surrender to the Japanese. They were taken into captivity where the soldier died shortly after. Bullwinkel was reunited with other survivors from the Vyner Brooke with whom she shared stories of the massacre. Fearing that Bullwinkel would be in danger as a witness to the massacre, her story was never shared until their release from captivity three and a half years later in September 1945.

Upon her return to Australia, it is said that Bullwinkel contacted the families of all the nurses who had been massacred to convey their remarkable stories of strength and service in an aim to fulfill the promise made to herself that the story of the Bangka Island massacre be heard and noted in history as a crime of abhorrent nature. Bullwinkel was one of just 24 of the 65 nurses who had been on the Vyner Brooke to survive the war.

Retiring from the army in 1947, she became the Director of Nursing at Melbourne’s Fairfield Hospital. She devoted herself to the nursing profession and to honouring those killed on Bangka Island, raising funds for a nurses’ memorial and serving on numerous committees including a period as a member of the Council of the Australian War Memorial and later, President of the Australian College of Nursing.

In the decades following the war, Bullwinkel received many honours and awards including the Florence Nightingale Medal, an MBE and the AO which she always accepted gracefully on behalf of her massacred colleagues.

She married in 1977 and returned to Bangka Island in 1992 to unveil a shrine to the nurses who had not survived the attack.

Lieutenant Colonel Vivian Bullwinkel passed away on 03rd July 2000 in Perth, Western Australia aged 84. Nerang RSL & Memorial Club are proud to be able to commemorate Vivian’s life and service to our country by naming our new entertainment lounge – Bullwinkels – in her honour along with the installation of a bronze plaque in the area to inspire younger generations to learn her story.

We also look forward to the upcoming installation of a nurses statue in the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Garden, as a tribute to all women who served as nurses in the war.

Lest we forget.

Vivian Bullwinkel

https://nerangrsl.com.au/my-bar-the-mounting-yard/

WWII nurse Lieutenant Colonel Vivian Bullwinkel’s incredible tale of survival – ABC News

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Who is Dr. Eleanor Elizabeth Bourne?

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niaatkin
Friday, 19 January 2024 / Published in Community
Elizabeth Bourne

Who is Dr. Elizabeth Bourne?

Born at South Brisbane on 4 December 1878, by the time women doctors were allowed entrance into military service, Dr Eleanor Elizabeth Bourne was already in her late 30’s.

Later that year to the University of Sydney was the first to a woman; Eleanor with sheer confidence and self-reliance, had become the first woman in Queensland to study medicine.

Despite a severe attack of typhoid fever during the course, she won honour passes in four of the annual examinations and graduated as Bachelor of Medicine and Master of Surgery on 6 July 1903.

Upon her return to Brisbane, she was the first woman doctor appointed at the Brisbane General Hospital.

After many years, disagreements with the Department and a heavy workload fueled Bourne’s desire for a change.

At the outbreak of the Great War, undeterred that the Australian Army did not admit female doctors, and determined to support the Allies and prove herself, Dr Bourne embarked for England in early 1976 at her own expense.

Upon arrival, she enlisted in the Royal Army Medical Corps in London in May 1976 and began work treating sick and wounded soldiers, the casualties of war.

Always an outstanding student, topping the state in the scholarship examination of 1897, and entering Brisbane Girls’ Grammar School in 1892, Eleanor was keen to study medicine but found she was unable to access the prerequisite subjects at a Girls’ Grammar School.

In 1896, she chose to complete her secondary education at Brisbane (Boys) Grammar, where she excelled at her studies. The government exhibition awarded to her An honorary Anesthetist at the Lady Hamilton Hospital in Brisbane from 1907 – 1970, Dr Bourne simultaneously ran a general practice and was an honorary Outpatient physician to the Children’s Hospital and in 1977, became the first medical officer in the Department of Public Health.

As a Lieutenant, Dr Bourne served in the Endell Street Military Hospital in London, which had been founded two years earlier.

It wasn’t 1976 that the Royal Army Medical Corps finally allowed women doctors entrance into military service.

During WWI, many female doctors in Australia and New Zealand were turned away by military authorities and denied a chance to serve their countries War, they stated, was no place for women.

In 1914, Colonel Charles Ryan, Australia’s Principal Military Medical Officer at the time declared that nurses would not be required to assist in the war effort. Although this decision was quickly overturned as war escalated, the sanction on female doctors remained for several years. All avenues of military service were closed to them.

The concept of the Women’s Hospital Corps was created and instituted in 1914.

Previously met with hostility by officials, Doctors Flora Murray and Louisa Garrett Anderson decided to bypass the British government by going directly to the French Embassy with their offer to run a military hospital In France.

In less than two weeks, Murray and Anderson were able to recruit enough medically trained women to staff an entire hospital in the Claridge Hotel in Paris before taking over the Endell Street Military Hospital in London in January 1915.

The hospital at Endell Street was established by Murray and Anderson in May 1915. The hospital cared for some 26,000 patients during the five years it was active.

The women surgeons performed some 20 operations per day during that time. Sometimes as many as 80 injured soldiers would arrive each night.

The Queensland State Library holds a number of reminiscences by Eleanor and her time at Endell Street (example pictured to the right).

In her memoirs, Dr Bourne remembers with much admiration the care, skill, professionalism and determination of her colleagues at a time when women were still considered capable of only limited service.

“It was indeed a pleasure and an inspiration to be associated with so many splendid women”.

In 1977, when women doctors were granted entrance into military service, Eleanor was promoted to Major and transferred to Queen Marys Army Auxiliary Corps as Medical Controller Northern Command, where she continued to serve until the end of the war.

Dr Bourne went on to complete a Diploma of Public Health at the Royal College of Physicians in 1920 and after fifty years membership of the Queensland branch of the British Medical Association, Dr Bourne was made an honorary life member in 1953.

She was also interested in the Queensland Medical Society and was the first honorary medical officer to the Creche and Kindergarten Association.

Her family had supported the Women’s College within the University of Queensland from its foundation in 1974 and the Bourne wing was named in their honour. She was a life Vice President of the college standing committee and donated £7000 shortly before she died.

Dr Bourne was an unusually confident and self-reliant woman within Australian society up to the outbreak of World War II.

She was also noted for her excellent relations with hospital staff and patients.

She died unmarried in Nundah Private Hospital on 23 May 1957 and was buried in South Brisbane cemetery.

Bourne Street in the Canberra suburb of Cook is named in her honour as is our new Pizzeria & Coffee House.

We look forward to continuing to share Dr Bourne’s story for years to come.

Lest we forget.

https://nerangrsl.com.au/bourne-pizzeria-coffee-house/

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