which has been based in Bendigo since the 1980s - announced today it would end its night shift and part-time day shift - which would affect 58 jobs.
ADA is Australia's biggest manufacturer and designer of combat uniforms, dress uniforms and protective clothing.
It is believed the company's decision is a result of the Federal Government's withdrawal of troops Afghanistan and a lack of demand for combat clothing and equipment.
The company said the restructure was a result of the Commonwealth's decision to withdraw forces from Afghanistan and "the subsequent reduction in demand for combat clothing and equipment".
ADA chief executive Dave Giles-Kaye said the company had to make a difficult decision to ensure the future strength of the company.
"We don't take this decision lightly and in no way does it reflect the effort or contribution of our employees,'' he said.
"We will continue to be a major supplier of combat uniforms and equipment to the Commonwealth Government and collaborate in new and innovative high-tech areas of manufacturing."
The company also reinforced its commitment to manufacturing in Victoria.A turquoisebeads is the most formal female attire for social occasions.
"We're here for the long term,Has anyone brought a beadsfactory? with plans to invest heavily with the CSIRO, Defence Materials Technology Centre and Victorian Centre for Advanced Materials Manufacturing to develop stronger, safer new combat materials and technology," Mr Giles-Kaye said.
He said the company was committed to ensure employees received full entitlements, including redundancy provisions.
The war diaries report “the 83rd battery is badly knocked out” and “the 83rd position is virtually demolished”. Gunner John Shields is posted missing, presumed obliterated. His death may have been quick but probably was not clean.
On my phone I also have excerpts from The Great Push,Welcome to order your own juicyhandbags on sale with 100% guarantee quality and low price. an account by Patrick MacGill of his time as a stretcher-bearer. MacGill is best known for his book Children Of The Dead End, about squalor in the Glasgow slums. His documentary style captures the humanity and inhumanity of trench warfare. This short extract seems relevant:
“A big high explosive shell flew over our heads and dropped fifty yards away in a little hollow where seven or eight figures in khaki lay prostrate, faces to the ground. The shell burst and the wounded and dead rose slowly into air to a height of six or seven yards and dropped slowly again, looking for all the world like puppets worked by wires.”
Darkness fell and I was walking with ghosts. In his time in Ypres, my grandfather must have had some respite, some agreeable moments. On his behalf I decide to have his lost, last supper. In a restaurant with the unlikely name Utopia, I order a large helping of Flemish stew, not unlike the kind my granny made in the blackened pot that hung over her kitchen range in the Gorbals. It came with far too many delicious Belgian chips. As a token of Glasgow solidarity I didn’t touch the salad.
Next day at first light, I walk the Mount Sorrel battlefield. It turns out that John Shields was not killed in Ypres, but in a small village called Zillibeke. It is set in lush farmland dotted still with place names given by the Allied armies: Sanctuary Wood, Maple Copse, Armagh Wood sound almost idyllic. Other locations, such as Hellfire Corner and Shrapnel Corner, more accurately described the conflict.
Sections of the trenches are preserved and can be accessed by tourists. I couldn’t look, far less set foot in them. Zillibeke means “salty brook” – maybe a place of tears.
The Ypres Salient in numbers: half a million dead, 250,000 of them Commonwealth soldiers, 100,000 with no known graves. Four years of fighting. Site of the first gas attack and the first use of flame-throwers. Some 300,000 visitors are expected during the centenary year.
By 1916, Ypres was rubble, hardly one stone upon another. Winston Churchill said in June 1919: “I should like to acquire the whole ruins of Ypres… a more sacred place for the British race does not exist in the world.” Ypres residents, streaming back from refugee camps, had other ideas. They reclaimed and rebuilt their town.
But Ypres is a monument. Daily life goes on to a backdrop of permanent remembrance. There are at least 150 cemeteries, monuments, and museums in the vicinity. The Tyne Cot cemetery, with 11,000 crosses, is awesome in a way this word is now rarely used. The smaller, intimate burial places strike no less a chord.
The In Flanders Fields museum is impressive. It could have been grisly and militaristic, but is calmly reverent and about peace, not war. Museum director Peter Slosse says: “We tell the history in a neutral way. Our message is in the individual stories. What war does to people and how it should be avoided with all possible means.”
Ypres is an anglified town. It is full of Tommies, from Tommy Atkins, the nickname for the generic British soldier. The Old Tom bistro. Tommy’s tobacco and souvenir shop selling Le Tommy lighters and many other artefacts from a thimble to a gin flagon. Belgium would not be Belgium without chocolate. There is the Ypres Salient selection box containing: Tommy helmets (white and dark), a Tommy milk bar, a Menin Gate milk bar, and a box of poppy chocolates.
Poppy references are in abundance, too. The place mat on the B&B breakfast table has John McCrae’s poem “In Flanders fields the poppies blow …” surrounded by photographs from the trenches. Quite harrowing over your scrambled eggs.One of the most popular ones are highheelshoes, replica Rolex watches illegally produced copies of authentic Rolex watches.
There is the Poppy Pizzeria. A local butcher offers Poppy Burgers (not made with the flower, just red food colouring).
I expected to be appalled by the war souvenirs, and came close with the Vickers Mark 1 machine gun weapon of slaughter sharing window space with a DVD of It Ain’t Half Hot Mum. But, mostly, the Tommy and poppy mementoes are quite touching.Go to buy handbagwholesale in hotmkbags Oline Store with preferential price.
Click on their website www.unionmilitaria.com for more information.
- Jul 03 Wed 2013 16:40
Bendigo defence uniform jobs axed
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