
DAVID SWANN BACK ROW AND HIS TEAM PLAYS AGAINST HALA LANGI'S TEAM IN THE FINAL FOR THE BANKSTOWN/CANTERBURY BULLDOG'S COMPETITION 2009. MOST OF HIS TEAM ARE PLAYING REPS FOR DIFFERENT CLUBS
PISSAM SPORT EXECUTIVE
OFFICER: David Swann: Assistant Hala Langi of Berala Bears:
PISSAM RECREATION, SPORT & YOUTH WORKER’S DUTY STATEMENT
POSITION: HOURS: (40hrs per week part-timers 4 people)
AWARD: Social and Community Services Award Category 6, 4,
RESPONSIBLE TO: The PISSAM Management Committee
SUMMARY OF RESPONSIBILITIES
· To coordinate and supervise the overall functioning of the PISSAM Youth Resource Centre Inc. according to the philosophy and recognised policies and procedures.
· To be accountable for the planning, delivery and evaluation of the services offered by the Centre including the Facility Management.
· Together with the Management Committee, be responsible for the service meeting budgetary and service guidelines as determined by the funding bodies.
· To vouch for the organisation in its attempts to uphold a high quality service and a positive image and reputation by the community it serves.
DUTIES: Coordination and Supervision
· Provide regular supervision to all youth workers employed and any other project worker under the auspice of the organisation. This will include:
* Negotiate individual workplans with workers
* Monitor progress of such workplans
* Support and assist workers on staff development and training needs
* Endeavour to maintain a mutually satisfying work environment for the organisation
· To oversee the Facility Management including hiring of hall, maintenance and security of building
· Be responsible for the organisation of regular Team Meetings for the purpose of:
* Planning, implementing and evaluating overall service objectives as well as short term objectives
* Discussing administrative and managerial issues
* Ensuring good communication between different specialist areas of work, eg. Financial Administration, Links to Learning, Facility Management, Special Projects and Young Women’s and Men’s Projects as well as any paid and unpaid consultants/student placements
* Communicating more generally about relevant youth matters occurring locally and on a broader level
* The exchanging of information and education gained on staff training exercises undertaken by team members
* Dealing with relevant matters arising from Management Committee meetings
· Be responsible for the coordination of Team Supervision, which may involve:
* Planning an agenda for meetings
* Writing up notes from meetings
* Following up issues from discussions at Team Supervision
ALL Administration WILL TAKE CARE BY PISSAM’S CO-ORDINATOR
· Be responsible for the day to day running of the Centre, which includes:
* Staff time keeping and any rostering of relief staff/consultants
* Supervision of bookkeeping, payment of salaries and other expenses
* All incoming and outgoing correspondence
* Preparing of funding submissions to appropriate bodies as necessary in conjunction with the Management Committee
* Keeping records, reports, relevant statistics about Centre programs, activities and participants
* Preparing a written report to Management Committee on a monthly basis
* Preparing an agenda for the Management Committee in conjunction with the President or Secretary
* Servicing the Management Committee as appropriate
Promotion and Public Relations
· Be responsible for the appropriate representation of the Service at local community forums
· Be responsible for appropriate representation of local youth concerns at relevant youth forums
· Be responsible for the promotion of this Youth Centre throughout the local government area, particularly with regard to schools, health centres, employment services and community services
· Assist in the promotion of the new initiatives of local youth services
Direct Youth Service Involvement
· Be involved in the development and implementation of programs for young people
· Offer support and assistance to young people attending programs as required
Personal Development
· Participate in professional supervision of managerial and coordination skills
· Participate in staff development and training activities as appropriate, approved by the Management Committee
· Use the Management Committee as a source of advice and support
· Participate in an annual staff evaluation process with a delegated Management Committee representative
PISSAM YOUTH RESOURCE MANAGER
PACIFIC ISLANDERS STRENGTHENING SUPPORTING ADVOCATING & MENTORING NETWORK (PISSAM) is a Pacific Islanders based youth service committed to improving skills and opportunities for young people in the Canterbury and beyond surrounding suburbs, as well as the development of positive community participation and action. The Centre provides services to Pacific Islanders, culturally and ethnically diverse population, both through specific core funded programs and collaborative partnerships.
PISSAM part/time (35 hours per week) a coach/manager and assistant, youth manager and assistant. The position holders are responsible for all activities, programs, staff supervision volunteer or paid, planning, development and the overall functioning of these programs. Mostly direct work with young people at all times, either by training, coaching or social activities or sport development. These are the Manager’s experience and ethics:
1. Demonstrated experience in the management of a community-based service and in the management of a small team
2. Management skills and experience in:
· Strategic planning of the development, implementation and evaluation of programs and services
· Coordination of policies and program delivery
· Human resource management
· Overseeing financial accountability
3. Demonstrated experience in leading and assisting staff and clients to achieve successful outcomes
4. Excellent interpersonal skills; high level oral and written communication skills; networking with community, government and private stakeholders.
5. Ability to network and research local trends in order to foreshadow future programs development.
6. Demonstrated knowledge of and commitment to: the OH&S Act and its relevance to service provision; equity and social justice principles.
7. Working knowledge of current education, training and employment strategies and programs particularly relating to young people.
8. Relevant tertiary qualifications and/or demonstrated equivalent experience.
9. Computer literacy, particularly proven experience in MS Word, Email and Internet
· Experience working with young people and/or in a Youth Centre environment
· Understanding the role of community based organisations and their management structures
· applying and obtaining funding from a range of sources this is done by the PISSAM CO-ORDINATOR
· Current LR drivers licence
Conditions are those under the SACS Award, Category 6, 4.
CALLING & INVITATION TO ALL PACIFIC ISLANDERS
Pacific Islanders children, youths-anyone in Canterbury Local Areas, Lakemba areas wishes to attend PISSAM homework classes on every second Wednesdays, at the Lakemba Senior Citizens, Earlwood Senior Citizen every Mondays 6pm to 9pm please email annelatu@hotmail.com for more information. Anyone who wishes to play touch football can attend Clempton Park (Moorefield Road) every Tuesdays and Thursdays. 5. pm to 8.30 pm. Please come enjoy the activities and be ready for the “Across Canterbury Pacific pride living ACROSS Canterbury AND BEYOND “
Many thanks to PISSAM SPORT EXECUTIVE OFFICER: David Swann: for his hard work on running the program for 2009.
The Sport Co-ordinator Senior Coach for St George Dragon Junior League is young and he knows his PI community so well. He spends 3 afternoons approximately 3 to 4 hours training, transporting and mentoring PI Youths in our local Clemton Park. This club is attended by more than 100 PI children and youths. David is doing a good job and most of the Pacific Islanders children that live across Canterbury are members there. He is well respected by the youths and he is a good mentor with the disciplining of difficult Youths and he has excellent knowledge’s of the Pacific Islanders and the general Community.
Most weekends after a footy match, the clubs executive committees, parents and children are back at the club to enjoy footy on the big screen, barbecue, drinks, discos and PISSAM is so proud working in Partnership with the kind support of the Dragon President George Kalifa and his teams of hard workers, and sponsors Classic kebabs PRIDE & Pizza 9 758 3951, Stone box Tile & Stone Solutions www.stonebox.com.au 9 572 7122, Premium Bookkeeping – Danny Ghalie 0414 606 225, Pacific Mortgage Group www.pmgonline.com.au, All West Auto Body Repairs 9 707 3437, Sydney Granite Pty Ltd 0414 817 098, and last but not the least Sydney Builders Link Pty Ltd 0405 324 558. PISSAM are very thankful to David in persevering with building confidence and keeping our PI youths from troubles. David will run a footy friendly competition for all Pacific Islanders just after the junior league competition with the support of Alana Haangana and Regan Buckland. The program have been drafted by the Co-ordinator and ready to advertised locally through schools, clubs and the wider Pacific Islanders community from the age of 15 to 22 a team of under 16, 18 and 20 and 22 combine. The under 18 will have cheer girls leaders and under 7 boys to do a hula for girls and Haka for boys and will be judge by professionals PI and will win major Prizes. The quests will be High flyers sport people, disabilities, children, parents and grandparents. Sponsors will be appreciated from the wider communities.
Pacific Nation annual Rugby League Cultural Cup Festival across Canterbury and beyond.
(A project of PISSAM program under the umbrella of Canterbury Harmony Group Inc. & Australia Pacific Islands Services auspice by Riverwood Community Centre.)
Sydney has a large Pacific Island community and this is one of the biggest events they've ever held in early December 2009 at Bagnel oval, Belfield, at 8 am till 4 pm. Every Pacific Island who wishes to participate will have under 15, 16, and under 18 & 20 as one team, Prices for the winners will be presented at Punchbowl Ex-Servicemen’s Club at the Corner of the Boulevard and Punchbowl at a ball where Football celebrities, all the 3 levels of government representatives, sponsors, community leaders, business leaders, professionals, principals of schools, nonprofit organisations, congregations leaders, children, parents, grandparents, senior citizens, Pacific people, communities, Pacific Leaders and many others will be there to celebrate our Pacific Islanders Australian Youth’ talents, in sports, cultures, education and to appreciate our being Pacific Islanders Australian. It's part sport, part culture - a celebration both of tradition and of life in a new country.
This is the Sydney's first's Pacific Nation Rugby League Cultural Cup Festival and it will be an annual event
If you wish to register in each Category under your Pacific Nation will pay $100.00 per each category. You are welcome to set up your own tent, and coaches, managers, team members, players, ball boys, cheerleaders, performers and Children under 10 are free. The Winners for under 15 and 16 will be $1000.00 and a trophy 2nd $500.00 3rd $250.00 all participants will be awarded a certificate.
The Winners for under 16 and 17 will be $1200.00 and a trophy 2nd $700.00 and 3rd $500.00 all other participants will be awarded a certificates.
The Winners for under, 18, 19, and 20 will be $1500.00 and a trophy 2nd $1000.00 and 3rd $600.00 all other participants will be awarded a certificates.
Sponsors will be given priority for stalls; otherwise it will be $150.00 for a stall to sell food and other stuffs. Organisations are welcome to set up any stalls for advertising as well.
Each Pacific nation can pick a representative to perform their traditional dance a boy and a girl and must be 18 and is in year 12 sitting for HSC and they can do a speech and answer some questions draw from a hat and they can parade as a partner and parade on their own. The winner will name Mr Pacific Australia, and Miss Pacific Australia. Prizes will be $1000.00 each for their textbooks going to University and a return trip to their grassroots pacific Island nation with. Second will be $500.00 and third will be $ 250.00.
JUDGES WILL BE NON PACIFIC ISLANDERS FROM THE FASHION INDUSTRY & LAW ACCESS & LEGAL AID NSW & CANTERBURY COUNCIL, REPRESENTATIVE FROM THE STATE & FEDERAL MP OF LAKEMBA, CANTERBURY, BANKSTOWN, AUBURN, AND GRANVILLE.
There will be a special prize for the Pacific Islander who hold the highest HSC mark for 2009 and will be awarded on a special night after the HSC Results in LATE January 2010.
David Swann: Normally islands like Fiji or Samoa, Tonga may have a competition, but not a whole South Pacific competition. So this is so important for us. We are not big in Sydney. Getting all the islands to unite and do something together especially rugby and culture - our two favourite things we like to do.
David Swann: The focus of the cultural festival is our young Pacific islanders.
Organisers are concerned that many of our youths are losing their way in dark environment.
David Swann Recreation and Sport Manager with his Assistant Hala Langi: There's a lot of peer pressure on children these days, young people, there's so many different lifestyles out there in terms of night clubs and all that. Alcohol makes a major contribution to our young people. And what we're trying to do is bring them back.
David Swann: The event also aims to bring young and old together.
Event co-ordinator, Anne Latu: We decided that the biggest draw card for the South Pacific islanders is the rugby - if we can get the rugby up straight away, we get the younger generation in it that the play the game. We then connect that with the older generation, who respect them for the pride and the fact that they are playing for their own countries. We can also add Debate, culture & Performing, a bit of fashion and Reward the good work of our children that are sitting for their HSC.
David Swann: Festival organisers hope Pacific islanders living in Australia will reconnect with their heritage and find new pride in their community here in Canterbury all Bulldog’s fans (and beyond)..
Katalina Moimoi: We do have the young generation born overseas. And they do start to lose our identity. So it's important to bring back all these performances and remind them.
Australian Tongan, Regan Buckland:
I think it’s a lot to do with identity as well, an appreciation of their
cultural heritage, getting them involved in the community - saying, you guys
are valuable at a young age, affirming them for who they are. Being whatever,
whoever they're Samoan, whether they're Tongan, whether they're Fijian,
whatever background they are, saying you guys are valuable, we want you to be a
part of this.
Anne Latu: At the Inner West Area Tenant Council Reaching out Forum at the Burwood RSL (30/10/2009 one of the speakers was Officer Macdonald of the Youth and Safety (Liason officer Campsie Police) works with Canterbury’s young Pacific Islanders to try to keep them out of trouble. Programs for young Polynesians, Melanesians and Micronesians also emphasise culture. These include local Rugby team targeting future days, which involve a weekly rugby game with police - without any rules. David Swann will work on that program.
Campsie Police, If you are Polynesian/Pacific Islanders and I turn up with a rugby ball, and I pass a rugby ball to you and you pass it back, what have we done? We've broken down barriers. I could be in a police uniform and you would still pass the ball back to me. And that's the power of rugby.
Anne Latu: The police connected future rugby program underlined the importance of culture to troubled teenagers, leading to formation of a youth group to celebrate their origins.
Campsie: There was a lack of role models and mentors for our young people out on the streets. And that's because we are battling with 153 other communities. And when I say battling, we're trying to find a place here. This is one way of doing that. This is one way of sharing the greatness of the Polynesian, Melanesian, Micronesian culture and showcasing it to other young people.
Anne Latu: On the field, cultural pride translates to competitive spirit that will bring peace, joy, excitement and harmony to the Pacific Islanders children, youths and the Pacific Islanders Community.
David Swann: You'll see it with the players out there - they take it seriously because they are playing for their heritage. Because they're playing for the pride and heart of their Pacific Island of origin.
Katalina Moimoi: Rugby has a strong presence in the Pacific - and there are potent rivalries. Aren’t we so proud of knowing that we are producing the best of the best in the past, now and the future?
But at this competition, the emphasis is different.
PACIFIC ISLANDERS’ fan: It doesn't matter really who wins. Samoa or Fiji. This is the day for us. Samoans, Fijians, Tongans, Cook Islands and so forth.
DAVID SWANN: The guys have got their jerseys and they take it away with them. They wear it with pride because it says BULLDOGS across Canterbury and Bankstown Sydney; it connects them to Sydney - Samoa or Sydney- Fiji or Sydney – Tonga or Sydney – Maori or Sydney - Cook Islanders and Sydney – South Pacific or Sydney – Australia – Pacific Nations.
Katalina Moimoi: At the end of the day what do you want to see on the faces of people who leave this place?
Anne Latu: Smiling, happiness. You'll see at the end of the event, there'll be people going away from here, laughing smiling and realising they've been at an event without alcohol, we're able to do that. It's bringing it back to the grass roots again. At the end of the match we will all rush home and get ready to celebrate our win?
Where? AT THE PUNCHBOWL SERVICEMEN’S CLUB PUNCHBOWL.
When? Keep visit PISSAM SITE for confirmation
Keep visit PISSAM SITE for more information’s on the Sydney's first's South Pacific Rugby League Cultural Cup Festival.
A little bit of Rugby, A little bit of fashion, A little bit of Debate, A little bit of Cultural Dance, A little bit of Rewarding and A little bit of everything.
Every community will have Cheer leaders and someone to sing their Island’s Anthem and later will be the presentation and a ball to award the prices for the winning teams. Each Pacific Islanders Team partners with their cheer girls to produce a cultural dance mix girls and boys at the ball. Prices will be awarded for the winners.
Ball will be $100 for Government quests, organisations, community leaders and Sponsors.
$5.00 for youths
All Pacific Islanders Adults quests $25.00 (supper provided)
Open for Sponsors from Pacific Islanders Businesses or Individuals please contact:
All Sponsors by cheques directly to (Riverwood Community Centre and mark Pacific Islanders Program (the auspice body of the PISSAM Network and Acknowledgement and receipts will be forwarded to your address.
Contact Anne Sikimeti Latu Manager/Co-ordinator for PISSAM NETWORK
P.O. BOX 344 BELMORE. 2192 NSW AUSTRALIA.
Email: annelatu@hotmail.com Mob:
0401 305 877 after hours or 02 197 00 60 (office hours)
http://www.pacificislanderseducationalnetwork.com/
Please check website for confirmation of the date.________________________________________________________________________________________________________
I am a Tongan and I rather see the PNG people going topless and it is part of their tradition/Cultural dance than watching the filth that goes on TV.
Pacific Islanders, Children, Parents and the Pacific Islanders People!!!!!! as Pacific Islanders, we Decide which Pacific Islanders we want and we will teach, lead , encourage, empower leadership in our actions and roles to take Pacific Islanders to the next level.
What (they) ancestors began yesterday, are emerging and are shining today, and tomorrow’s generation will enjoy the warmth of the sunrise they have created.
There has to be a yesterday, today to develop a tomorrow.
God never take away our rights, We have the freedom to speak, and to say whatever we want to, and to do whatever we feel like doing and I totally agreed wholeheartedly.
I love the passion and pride of our Pacific Islanders ancestors who have left their energies, strengths, wealth and foundation behind that have developed in us Pacific Islanders which we are so proud of.
Although we are in a generation of many changes we are so honoured and so proud that as Pacific Islanders we are uniquely have elements on us that we kept and treasured for ever. In our hearts, in our, souls, in our minds, in our body, in our bloodlines that we stood together perpetually and will pass on to our generations.
We are connected, united as Pacific Islanders and let us acknowledge, appreciate and celebrate our rich cultures and be united but not divided.
Pacific Islanders’ lives are our families, religion & our communities & our families are our lives! We all belong to one family and one community. Let us work together as a family as a Pacific Islander community and be united to bring peace, good luck, prosperity and harmony everyday to all Pacific Islanders in Australia, across the Pacific and beyond.
Ofa atu
Anne Sikimeti Latu
Sydney Australia
Recommendation
Sydney to be the venue for next Pacific festival
***
So, what actually happened? We may never know,
By David Roth
To describe the life of former Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver Chris Henry as turbulent is to engage in understatement. Henry’s brief NFL career featured five arrests, three NFL suspensions and a host of second chances. At age 26, Henry seemed finally to be straightening things out off the field while contributing steadily on the field before suffering a season-ending injury in Week 9. On Wednesday, news broke that a domestic dispute with his fiancee somehow led to Henry falling or being thrown from the back of a pickup truck and suffering serious injuries. Henry died of those injuries on Thursday morning, leaving Bengals fans and teammates to puzzle over the confusing legacy of his short, troubled life.

- Reuters
- Chris Henry, seen during a playoff game against Pittsburgh in this 2006 file photo.
There surely will be more to read about Henry and his strange story in days to come, but for the time being we have to substitute emotional response for context. “I saw a tall, lean, quiet, kid who wanted to get better as a football player and was doing all the right things to make it happen,” the Cincinnati Enquirer’s John Erardi writes. “A kid.”
Longtime Bengals beat writer Chick Ludwig writes at Cincinnati.com that he’s having a hard time maintaining journalistic detachment this morning. “I’ve never come across an athlete as talented or as troubled as Chris Henry,” Ludwig writes.
Garey will have more on this topic tomorrow.
* * *
Only the most ardent and blinkered of college-football loyalists are under the illusion that their coaches of choice are particularly admirable people. There are exceptions to the general rule, of course, but for the most part football coaches — leaders of men and master strategists though they might be — are as flawed as any/everyone else. While it’s not necessarily surprising to hear about college-football coaches being brutish or churlish, the scandal currently surrounding University of South Florida coach Jim Leavitt stands out. That’s partially because of the allegations against Leavitt — that he throttled and twice struck in the face a sophomore walk-on named Joel Miller at halftime of a Nov. 21 game — but more notably for the way the story has changed shape in recent days.
Former Tampa Tribune reporter Brett McMurphy based the FanHouse story that broke the whole thing on quotes from five eyewitnesses as well as Miller’s father and Miller’s high-school coach. The story raised some eyebrows because of Leavitt’s alleged bad behavior and what McMurphy described as the coach’s subsequent attempt to snuff the story out.

- Getty Images
- Jim Leavitt
The confusing part came later, as Miller and his father — who, remember, was a quoted source in the original story — disavowed the whole thing. (Leavitt has always denied any wrongdoing.) On Wednesday, McMurphy reported that Miller’s brother was not entirely willing to toe the family’s new line on the incident, and stuck to a version of the incident in which Leavitt was decidedly the villain.
So, what actually happened? We may never know, in large part since Miller’s football life depends on him continuing to stick to his latest story. In the Tampa Tribune, Martin Fennelly hopes that the truth in this strange tale will out. “There needs to be a real investigation here,” Fennelly writes. “There are coaches, bigger names, longer legends, who have been fired for doing what Leavitt is accused of doing. … It’s hard to imagine something more serious than a coach bullying his players. It’s hard to imagine why any university would want such a coach, or why any parent would send their son to such a university.”
Elsewhere in the Tribune, Joe Henderson decries South Florida’s stonewalling on the story. “The longer everyone waits for a resolution, the more likely that positions will be hardened,” Henderson writes. “The damage to the football program and university, while already substantial, will get worse. Then when USF finally does have something to say, you wonder if anyone will be listening anymore.”
In the St. Petersburg Times, Gary Shelton argues that only a thorough inquiry into the charges can repair the damage to Leavitt’s reputation. “At this point, only a vigorous, determined investigation will convince everyone that Leavitt’s side of the story is the truth,” Shelton writes. “And at this point, only such a truth can clear Leavitt’s name.”
* * *
The Fix picks the NFL’s Thursday game, ahead of its Friday picks for the weekend:
It’s a nice debate to face: Should you turn your perfect regular season over to the scout-teamers and headset-wearers while resting the stars for the postseason, or gun for the win? The New Orleans Saints could be mired in their own Cajun-inflected version of this debate if they keep winning and clinch home-field advantage in the playoffs over the Minnesota Vikings. In Indy, the debate has arrived early, because the rest of the AFC didn’t put up much of a fight for the No. 1 seed.
Indianapolis (-3) at Jacksonville: Indianapolis hasn’t lost yet this season, as you might’ve heard. But Jacksonville might be the more admirable team in this game. The Jaguars’ roster is loaded with rookies, their home stadium is regularly half-empty and their fate seemingly was sealed before the season’s first coin flip. But the Jags have worked their way into the playoff picture by beating teams worse than them while losing to more talented teams with such predictability that it’s hard not to admire the extent to which they have fulfilled — if never really surpassed — their potential. The bad news for Jacksonville is that the Colts are also playing up to their potential, and are by far the better club — and one seemingly inclined to follow the pundits’ decree and play their stars down the stretch, record be damned. The good news? The Jags are officially this year’s NFL working-class heroes. That counts for something, right?
Pick: David: Indianapolis, Garey: Indianapolis, Al Toonie: Jacksonville
* * *
That the NFL has a head-injury problem is news only to those who went out of their way not to know it over the last decade or so. But while the NFL has acknowledged and addressed that problem recently — breaking from a years-long “more research needed” slow-walk that was impressive even by congressional standards — the National Hockey League has generally ducked its own concussion issue. In the San Francisco Chronicle, Ray Ratto suggests that the NHL address its serious and seriously under-addressed brain-trauma problem as soon as possible.
“People are in just that sort of mood on skull shots — even football fans, who grew up worshiping them as the highest form of entertainment, are getting the message,” Ratto writes. “The NHL needs not to get the message, it needs to give it, and it needs to give it with a knee right to the nethers, so that no owner, general manager, coach, player or fan can mistake it for anything other than what it should be.”
* * *
So much sports journalism is about reaction and overreaction: trashing players, calling for the heads of coaches or GMs, over and over and over. While that stuff can be entertaining sometimes, none of us would be following sports — or reading the Fix, most likely — if the bigger narratives of sports didn’t matter to us at least a little bit.
While ESPN’s 24-hour news cycle does much to keep the more unsatisfying elements of the sports discourse front and center with its ginned-up debates and facile controversies, it’s worth taking a moment to credit ESPN.com’s E-Ticket, a unique Web feature that allows ESPN’s stable of writers to stretch out and write long features on stories that don’t fit within the instantaneousness that defines ESPN. Wright Thompson’s fascinating story on Jimmy Robinson, a boxer who fought Muhammad Ali before facing some much scarier demons later in life, is a fine example of just how good E-Ticket can be. It’s a great, sobering read.
— Tip of the Fix cap to Fixer emeritus Carl Bialik and fellow Fixer Garey Ris.
Found a good column from the world of sports? Don’t keep it to yourself — write to us at dailyfix@wsj.com and we’ll consider your find for inclusion in the Daily Fix. You can email David at droth11@gmail.com.
mypacificstory.com/2008/07/festival-farewells/ - Cached - Similar
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PISSAM NETWORK MANAGED BY ANNE SIKIMETI LATU















