3NRG (actual ACMA call sign: 3FUN) is a community radio station in Sunbury, Victoria, Australia. It was founded as Bulla FM, and changed its name to 3NRG in 1999.

3NRG is a not for profit community broadcaster.

The Australian Broadcasting Authority (ABA) issued a radio licence area plan for the Sunbury region on 22 June 2000, which determined that a community radio station license should be granted for the area. 3NRG was the only applicant, and was granted a permanent licence to replace the temporary licence under which they had previously operated, which had just expired.

The station was established to provide local news, information and community access to the township of Sunbury, in outer north west metropolitan Melbourne, as well as to the surrounding localities of Diggers Rest, The Gap, Couangult and Toolern Vale. 3NRG broadcasts on frequency 99.3 MHz FM.

With 28,794 (15+) people in their service area, 3NRG is estimated to share in a community radio audience reach of 6,047 in a typical week (21% of the 15+ population) and s estimated to share in a community radio audience reach of 13,245 in an average month (46% of the 15+ population).[1]

Contents

Management [link]

Community broadcasters are required (as part of the conditions for licencing) to have open membership policies. The Management Team of the radio station—as is typical of community based radio Australian—is determined by the members of the Association at an Annual General Meeting.The present Committee of Management of 3NRG-FM community radio is:

  • President: Alan Olson
  • Vice President: Maureen Bent
  • Secretary/ public officer: Sharyn Tyers
  • Treasurer: Bill Kirk

Committee Members [link]

  • John Bent - Sponsorship
  • Steve Tyers - Technical / Outside Broadcasts / Production
  • Mike Cherriman - Production/Station Manager/ Newsletter/Social Activities
  • Jacinda Truscott
  • Gus Gleason

Presenters [link]

Presenters for 3NRG include:

  • Ron Bourke, former 3AW newsreader, began working at 3NRG after his retirement as a presenter on the famous Melbourne radio station, 3AW, Ron hosts a morning program featuring Sport with Bill Kirk at 7.10 and The World According to Sam with his own grand daughter, Samantha.
  • Maureen Bent, hosts the popular country music segment, and is also vice president

See also [link]

References [link]

  1. ^ [1] 2010 Australia National Listener Survey

External links [link]



https://wn.com/3NRG

Fun 9

Fun 9 is a 1999 album by Takako Minekawa, pronounced as "Fun-ku"

Track listing

  • "Gently Waves" - 1:50
  • "Plash" - 4:11
  • "Flow in a Tide" - 3:42
  • "Fantastic Voyage" - 4:56
  • "Tiger" - 4:46
  • "Shh Song" - 1:52
  • "Spin Spider Spin" - 2:56
  • "Flash" - 1:21
  • "Fun 9 (french)" - 0:09
  • "Soft Graffiti" - 4:58
  • "Fancy Work Funk" - 5:36
  • "Etoufée" - 2:53
  • References

    Good (play)

    Good is an award-winning play in two acts written by British playwright Cecil Philip Taylor. First published for Methuen Drama in 1982, it was originally commissioned by the Royal Shakespeare Company in 1981 and was subsequently seen all over the world.Good has been described as the definitive piece written about the Holocaust in the English-speaking theatre. Set in pre-war Germany, it shows how John Halder, a liberal-minded professor whose best friend is the Jewish Maurice, could not only be seduced into joining the Nazism, but step-by-rationalised-step end up embracing the final solution justifying to his conscience the terrible actions.

    Plot overview

    Good (Morphine album)

    Good is the first album recorded by the Boston based alternative rock trio Morphine. It was originally released in 1992 on the Accurate label, and then re-released by Rykodisc in 1993.

    Track listing

    All songs written by Mark Sandman (except as noted).

  • "Good" - 2:36
  • "The Saddest Song" - 2:50
  • "Claire" - 3:07
  • "Have a Lucky Day" - 3:24
  • "You Speak My Language" - 3:25
  • "You Look Like Rain" - 3:42
  • "Do Not Go Quietly Unto Your Grave" - 3:21
  • "Lisa" (Dana Colley) - 0:43
  • "The Only One" - 2:42
  • "Test-Tube Baby/Shoot'm Down" - 3:11
  • "The Other Side" (Sandman, Colley) - 3:50
  • "I Know You (Part I)" - 2:17
  • "I Know You (Part II)" - 2:45
  • Personnel

  • Mark Sandman - 2-string slide bass, vocals, organ, guitar, tritar
  • Dana Colley - baritone sax, tenor sax, double sax, triangle
  • Jerome Deupree - percussion
  • Billy Conway - percussion (tracks 5 & 6)
  • References

    Summum bonum

    Summum bonum is a Latin expression meaning "the highest good", which was introduced by Cicero, to correspond to the Idea of the Good in ancient Greek philosophy. The summum bonum is generally thought of as being an end in itself, and at the same time containing all other goods. The term was used in medieval philosophy and in Kantianism, to describe the ultimate importance, the singular and overriding end which human beings ought to pursue. In the Thomist synthesis of Aristotelianism and Christianity, the highest good is usually defined as the life of the righteous and/or the life led in communion with God and according to God's precepts.

    Plato and Aristotle

    Plato's The Republic argued that, “In the world of knowledge the idea of good appears last of all, and is seen...to be the universal author of all things beautiful and right”. Silent contemplation was the route to appreciation of the Idea of the Good.

    Aristotle in his Nichomachean Ethics accepted that the target of human activity, “Must be the 'Good', that is, the supreme good.”, but challenged Plato's Idea of the Good with the pragmatic question: “Will one who has had a vision of the Idea itself become thereby a better doctor or general?”. However, arguably at least, Aristotle's concept of the unmoved mover owed much to Plato's Idea of the Good.

    Filthy!

    Filthy! is Papa John Creach's second solo album and the first with his band Zulu. The guitarist of Zulu would later be known as Keb' Mo'. The band Hot Tuna also makes an appearance on the album on the track "Walking the Tou Tou," written by Jorma Kaukonen.

    Track listing

    Side One

  • "Filthy Funky" (Miles Grayson) – 5:19
  • "No More Country Girls" (Grayson, Lermon Horton) – 3:42
  • "Don't Tell It To No One" (Papa John Creach) – 2:20
  • "Mother's Day" (Roger Spotts) – 3:16
  • "Walking the Tou Tou" (Jorma Kaukonen) – 3:16
  • Side Two

  • "Everybody Wants My Good Thing" (Grayson, Horton) – 4:12
  • "Far Out" (Spotts) – 3:19
  • "Give Me an Hour in Your Garden (And I'll Show You How to Plant a Rose)" (Grayson, Horton) – 5:30
  • "Time Out for Sex" (Spotts) – 2:59
  • "Up in the Alley" (Creach) – 3:30
  • Personnel

  • Papa John Creach – electric violin, vocals
  • Big Joe Turner – vocals on "Give Me an Hour in Your Garden"
  • Harmonica Fats (pseudonym for Harvey Blackston; 1927–2000) – harmonica on "No More Country Girls"
  • Zulu

    Plays on all tracks except "Walking the Tou Tou"

    Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    Good Fun

    by: Bass Bumpers

    The joy of laughter
    Together with fun
    Girl take your time
    You don't have to run
    Runnin' and runnin' and runnin'
    Keep me runnin', keep me runnin' for your love
    Higher and higher and higher
    Take me higher, take me higher, lift me up
    Baby, it makes me happy
    Just to know that I can be with you
    Sharing our time together
    That all I want
    Yeah that would make it true
    Just tell me why that things must change
    Why my life is so rearranged
    I don't know what I can do
    You make me feel I'm know good for you
    Girl c'mon know take your time
    So I can start to give you my
    All my love and affection
    You don't have to say my name
    And I'll fulfill your desire
    That's right I'll take you higher
    GI, I can recall, all of the times
    Good times we used to have
    Laughing at the pleasure, pleasure so fine
    Oh yes it blew my mind




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