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Ardern led a trade mission and re-met Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese as part of the Australia-New Zealand Leadership Forum. She also had meetings with Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews and New South Wales Premier Dominic Perrottet. [65] Fiji: Suva: 11–14 July Ardern attended the 51st Pacific Islands Forum. [66] Samoa: Apia: 1–2 ...
Queen Elizabeth II reads a speech in Sydney, 1954. Since 1867, the British royal family has visited Australia over fifty times, with only six visits before 1954. Elizabeth II was the first reigning monarch of Australia to have set foot on Australian soil; she first did so on 3 February 1954, when she was 27 years old.
The 2009 end of year rugby internationals, also known as the Autumn internationals in the Northern Hemisphere, saw Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, and Argentina, tour the northern hemisphere. The headline event of the series was an attempted Grand Slam tour of the Home Nations by Australia.
22 February – 7 March 1977: Elizabeth II and the Duke of Edinburgh [1] [2] 1980: Duke and Duchess of Kent [1] 1981 31 March – 12 April: Charles, Prince of Wales [1] [3] [4] 12–20 October: Elizabeth II and the Duke of Edinburgh [1] [2] The Queen with the Cabinet during her visit to New Zealand in 1981; 1982–1983: Prince Edward [1] 1983
The high commissioner of New Zealand to Australia is New Zealand's foremost diplomatic representative in the Commonwealth of Australia, and in charge of New Zealand's diplomatic mission in Australia. The high commission is located in Canberra, Australia's capital city. New Zealand has maintained a resident high commissioner in Australia since 1943.
After the closure of the New Zealand feed, the Australian feed of Nick Jr. launched in New Zealand on 24 December 2010. [5] On 29 February 2012, a 60-second anthem aired. [6] On 3 December 2013, Nick Jr. became available on Foxtel's streaming service Foxtel Go. [7] On 1 January 2014, Nick Jr. launched on Australian IPTV provider FetchTV. [8] [9]
A Grade 5 was considered a minimum pass at Sixth Form level while a Grade 6 or 7 was the equivalent of a School Certificate level pass in that subject. The pre-allocation of grades available meant that the quality of teaching had no bearing on the overall results of a class.
The Beatles Down Under: the 1964 Australia & New Zealand tour. Glebe, NSW Australia: Wild & Woolley. Baker, Glenn A (1985). The Beatles Down Under: the 1964 Australia & New Zealand tour (2 ed.). Ann Arbour, Michigan: Pierian Press. ISBN 0-87650-186-2. Hutchins, Graham (2004). Eight Days a Week:the Beatles' tour of New Zealand 1964. Auckland, NZ ...