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Juliana Village Activities Program – June 2019
Juliana Village
RESIDENTS’ NEWSLETTER
Country of the Month : ENGLAND
June 2019
Juliana Village Activities Program – June 2019
Diary dates to remember… Mon 3rd Monthly Shopping Trip to Southgate - Bus Departs at 10:15am Bingo at 1:45pm
Tues 4th Library Day, Nails with Julie , ,Men’s Shed with Mike at 10am-12pm
Laughter Yoga at 10:30am in Sharpe House Level 2 Julia’s Flutes- in Sharpe House Level 2 at 2pm
Wed 5th Podiatry Day in Sharpe House Level 2 at 9:45am Pentecost Devotion Service at 1:45pm in Georges Centre
Thurs 6th Hairdresser Day
Fri 7th Short Bus Trip, Bus Departs at 1:15pm
Residents Committee Meeting at 2pm in GC
Mon 10th Queens Birthday (Public Holiday).
Bingo at 1:45pm
Tue 11th Lunch Outing Audley Dance Hall Café -$25 pp Bus departs at 10:15am
Julia’s Flutes- in Georges Centre at 2pm
Wed 12th Art Appreciation with Alison Duff at 10:30am in GC
Devotion Service with Mike at 1:45pm
Thurs 13th Hairdresser Day Fri 14th Short Bus Trip, Bus Departs at 1:15pm Bus departs at 10:15am
Mon 17th Bingo at 1:45 Ppm
Tue 18th Library Day, Nails with Julie Men’s Shed with Mike at 10am-12pm
Wed 19th Podiatry Day ,“ Old Time Radio” with the Memory Man at 10:30am in Georges Centre. Devotional Service with Mike at 1:45pm
Thurs 20th Hairdresser Day, Birthday Party with the Jazz King at 2pm
Mon 24th Bingo at 1:45pm
Tue 25th Library Day, Men’s Shed with Mike at 10am-12pm
Laughter Yoga at 10:30am in Sharpe House Level 2
Wed 26th in Sharpe House Level 2 at 9:45am Devotion Service with Mike at 1:45pm Thurs 27th Hairdresser Day ,Happy Hour at 1:45pm Fri 28th Menai marketplace Shopping Trip,
Bus leaves at 1:15pm
Juliana Village Activities Program – June 2019
JUNE BIRTHDAYS Hostel and Sharpe House:
Self-Care 15th Joan Branson
19th Trish Broad
22nd John De Costa 24th Judith Wise
26th Jennifer Ellis
Staff birthdays: 4th Leanne Watts
9th Lily Gu
11th Kelvin Neave 17th Francis Alicabo
30th Sarita Maharjan
Volunteers 20th Lorna Mangin Famous People
1st Marilyn Monroe – Actress ( 1926 )
17th Barry Manilow – Singer (1943)
28th Mel Brooks -Actor (1926) .
1st Jeanette Kirby 5th Joyce Monk
12th Bert Drilsma 13th Ray Burnell-Jones
27th Janet Lester
28th Margery West 29th Jim Aked
Juliana Village Activities Program – June 2019
General Information To Our General Manager In mid-April, we welcomed Kelvin to his role as the General
Manager here at Juliana Village. Kelvin has been involved in the Healthcare sector for over 20 years, having worked both Hospital and Aged Care settings in Qld & NSW. He has been specifically involved in Aged Care Residential and Retirement Living areas for more than 12 years. Most of this period was with The Salvation Army in their Aged Care area in Sydney where he was managing two large complexes similar to Juliana Village. He also held Care Head Office. Kelvin comes to us also with experience from the banking and finance sector along with Procurement and Supply Chain Management roles. These roles have incorporated responsibilities
Australian, New Zeland and Pacific Island countries. He is very excited to be here with us all and because of his approachable style, visibility each day and engaging personality, we are sure if you not not already met him and conversed, you will do so in the very near future. _________________________________________________________________________
Our Lady Star of the Sea For those wishing to receive Catholic Communion,
Please Contact Ineke on 9524 9226
______________________________________________________________________________ The Village Shop has a variety of treats & gifts on sale. The shop is now open on Saturdays for 1hr. Shop hours are between 3pm - 4pm Monday to Friday. 10am -11am Saturdays
Your Mail For your convenience, there is an outgoing mail box situated in the Bruinsma Hostel (mail box area) .Please place any letters that you would like posted, into this box. Rose from the office clears this mail box throughout the week. If you have any questions regarding your mail please speak to Rose in the main office.
Hairdresser Day : Jean our Hairdresser is available Thursday’s for Perms, Blow Dries, Styling,
Haircut’s & Colours. Appointments can be made through Nurses Stations or
with our Recreation Staff. For Residents who are unable to attend the salon
due to immobility,
Jean will provide hairdressing services in their rooms.
Juliana Village Activities Program – June 2019
Nail Service: Julie our nail lady Julie will be here on Tuesday’s every fortnight*
Julie’s fee for service is $20.00, If you would like a nail treatment, please advise the nurses station or RAO Staff.
________________________________________________________________________________
Juliana Village Resident Committee Meetings
Meetings take place in the Georges Centre on the First Friday of each month at 2pm.
Residents from Sharpe House & Bruinsma Hostel are part of the Village community & are welcome to join these meetings. _______________________________________________________________________
MOBILE LIBRARY BOOK SERVICE For your convenience the Sutherland Shire Library service
comes to the Village every fortnight ( 2 weeks ) to bring
books, Dvd’s & Cd’s to the residents who have requested
them. If you would like to become a member & receive any
of the above items, please speak to an RAO Staff Member (Wendy, Galina,
Leanne or Jeanette) or advise a Nurse and they will advise us.
Logeman Court & Self Care Residents:
A movie will be shown at 3pm in the Common Room of Logeman Court and afterwards (5pm) residents enjoy Happy Hour together. *** This may be subject to change, So for further information call Jo: 9540 5090 or Judy: 9525 6225. _________________________________________________________________
Julia’s Flutes Julia the Flautist plays a variety of flute pieces from various genres.
Sharpe House Level 2 : Georges Centre:
When : Tuesday 4th June When : Tuesday 11th June
Time : 2pm Time : 2pm
Juliana Village Activities Program – June 2019
Where: Sharpe House, Level 2
When : Tuesday 4th & 25th June
Time : 10:30am
WINNERS of the
MOTHERS DAY RAFFLE
A BIG Congratulations to our Winners this year- 1st - Pat Malone ( Logeman Court ).
2nd - Maureen Zarubin ( Self Care ).
3rd -June Murphy (Sharpe House).
__________________________________________________________
Celebration of Tenure
Juliana Village has several Staff who have been with our facility for 5 years. Recently, we celebrated their service and each of these valuable staff were given a certificate of service & a lapel pin displaying our iconic windmill emblem.
5 years – ( Pictured from Left to Right) with our General Manager Kelvin Neave.
Pragya Maharjan, Bruce Mellor, Jackie Qi, Leanne Sullivan & Christine Karaiskakis.
We wish them many more years with us and appreciate their efforts & loyalty.
Juliana Village Activities Program – June 2019
Annual Christmas in July Luncheon
When: Thursday, 18th July 2019
Where: Panorama House, Bulli Tops
Time: Bus Departs at 10:30am
Returns to Juliana Village at 3:30pm
** Please complete the form you have received with
your invitation by Monday 1st July, if you wish to
attend .
Or call to RSVP on either number listed below
Rose in the Main Office on 9541 3400
RAO Staff in Georges Centre 9541 3405
Please note that if you neglect to advise us of your attendance, we
will NOT be able to accommodate you on the bus or at the venue.
Thank you for your co-operation
Juliana Village Activities Program – June 2019
Interesting Facts About England
• Nowhere in the UK is more than 70 miles (113km) from the sea! A place called Coton in the Elms is the furthest place from the sea.
• England’s first telephone directory was published in 1880 and had only 248 names and addresses (there were no telephone numbers as you had to call the operator and ask for someone’s name to get connected).
• The city of London has not always had this name. In the past it has been called Londonium, Ludenwic, and Ludenburg!
• In 1945, a flock of birds landed on the minute hand of Big Ben and put the time back by 5 minutes.
• Big Ben is not actually the name of the clock; it is the name of the bell which is inside the clock.
• There are more chickens than people in England.
• Black cab (taxi) drivers in London have to memorise every street and important building in London within six miles from Charing Cross and they need to take a test called ‘The Knowledge’ before they can drive a cab.
•
• Windsor Castle ( Pictured )
is the oldest royal residence in the world that is still being used by the royal family.
Juliana Village Activities Program – June 2019
• In 1647, Christmas was abolished by the English Parliament. No-one was allowed to celebrate!
• The picture of the Queen on £1 coins show her age at the time they were made.
• England was part of the shortest war in history. They fought Zanzibar in 1896 and Zanzibar surrendered after just 38 minutes!
Land & People
• England is 74 times smaller than the USA, 59 times smaller than Australia and 3 times smaller than Japan. England is however 2.5 times more populous than Australia, and 1.5 times more populous than California. With 2.5 times less inhabitants than Japan, its density of population is slightly higher than the country of the rising sun.
• The highest temperature ever recorded in England was 38.5°C (101.3°F ) in Brogdale, Kent, on 10 August 2003.
• English people consume more tea per capita than anybody else in the world (2.5 times more than the Japanese and 22 times more than the Americans or the French).
• Among the three ghosts said to haunt Athelhampton House (Pictured ), one of them is an ape.
• The Slimbridge Wildlife & Wetlands Trust is the world's largest and most diversified wildfowl centre. It has the largest collection of swans, geese, and ducks on Earth, and is the only place where all six species of Flamingo can still be observed.
Juliana Village Activities Program – June 2019
• Mother Shipton's Cave near ( Pictured )
Knaresborough, North Yorkshire, is England's oldest recorded tourist attraction. Its owner, Charles Slingsby, fenced off the site in 1630 and started charging visitors to gape at this so-called petrifying well. The mineral-rich water from this uncanny spring has the ability to give objects a stone-like appearance after a prolonged exposure.
• English people have the highest obesity rate in the European Union (22.3% of men and 23% of women). They also have the highest percentage of overweight women (33.6%) and the 6th highest for men (43.9%).
Culture & Language
• An official report of the European Union surveying universities in all member states ranked the University of London (Pictured) as the top performer in terms of publications and in terms of citations, and the University of Cambridge as top performers in terms of impact.
• French was the official language of England for about 300 years, from 1066 till 1362.
Juliana Village Activities Program – June 2019
• Public schools in England are in fact very exclusive and expensive (£13,500/year in average) private schools. Ordinary schools (which are free), are called state schools.
• The English class system is not determined by money, but by one's background (family, education, manners, way of speaking...). Many nouveau-riches, like pop-stars or football players, insist on their still belonging to the lower or middle class.
• Oxford University once had rules that specifically forbade students from bringing bows and arrows to class.
• Fish 'n chips are not much more a traditional English dish than Chicken Tikka Massala. The first fish & chips restaurant was only opened in 1860 by a Jewish immigrant, Joseph Malin.
• British police do not carry guns except in emergencies.
• The world's largest second-hand book market can be found at Hay-on-Wye, a small village at the border of England and Wales. The village is also famous for proclaiming itself independent from the UK in 1977.
• One of England's quaintest traditional event is the cheese rolling competition in Brockworth, Gloucestershire. Every year in May people chase Double Gloucester cheese down the steep Cooper's Hill. The tradition is said to have originated with fertility rites in Roman times. Other cheese rolling events exist in England, for example at the Uffington White Horsein Oxfordshire.
• The Rothschild art collection at Waddesdon Manor ( Pictured )is one of the world's most important, rivalling with that of the Louvres Museum and New York Metropolitan Museum.
Juliana Village Activities Program – June 2019
Coveting the title of England's oldest surviving festival alongside the cheese rolling of Gloucestershire, are the Horn Dances of Abbots Bromley in Staffordshire. Based on ancient Anglo-Saxon traditions, the present festival goes back at least to the 11th century, but might be much older. History & Monuments
• Silburry Hill ( Pictured
), in the English county of Wiltshire, is the largest man-made earthen mound in Europe. It was built about 4750 years ago.
• The stone circle at Avebury is the largest in the world. It was built between 5300 and 4600 years ago and covers 11 ha (28 acres). The outer circle is surrounded by a bank and ditch long of 1.5 km (1 mile).
• The so-called British Imperial system of measurement (English units in the USA) has its roots in Roman units. The Romans also counted in feet, which they divided in 12 inches (unciae in Latin, from which the English word is derived). 5 feet made a pace, and 1000 paces (mille passus) became a mile in English. The Roman gallon was the congius (worth 0.92 U.S. gallons). The word pint comes from Latin picta ("painted"), via the Old French pinte, and corresponded to a painted mark on a vessel indicating this measure. Other units like the pound only evolved in the Middle Ages.
• Colchester in Essex is the oldest recorded town in Britain, as well as the first Roman town and Roman capital of Britain. Colchester Castle ( Pictured ) has the largest keep ever built in Europe, having a land area 50% bigger than the Tower of London.
Juliana Village Activities Program – June 2019
• The Fossdyke, connecting the River Trent at Torksey to Lincoln, is the oldest canal in Britain. It was built by the Romans around 120 CE and is still navigable today ( Pictured ).
Middle Ages & Renaissance
• York was the first English city to become settled permanently by the Danish Vikings (in 867) and the last to remain under Viking rule (until 954). It served as capital of the Danelaw under the name of Jorvik.
• Windsor Castle is the oldest and largest royal residence in the world still in use. It was originally constructed in 1070 and rebuilt in stone in 1170.
• Berkeley Castle is the oldest English castle still inhabited by the family who built it. The founder of the Berkeley family was Robert Fitzharding (c. 1095–1170). He started building the present castle from 1153.
Winchester was the first capital of England, from 827 to 1066. Winchester Cathedral (Pictured) completed in 1070, has the longest nave of any medieval cathedral in Europe.
• York Minster is Britain's largest medieval cathedral, has the largest Gothic nave in the country, and the largest expanse of medieval stained glass in the world.
Juliana Village Activities Program – June 2019
• The first building in the world to overtake the Great Pyramid of Giza in Egypt was Lincoln Cathedral, completed in 1280. Had its spired not been destroyed by a storm in 1549, it would have remained the highest construction ever built in the world until 1884, when the Washington Monument was erected.
• The world's largest and oldest chained library is in Hereford Cathedral, which also contained the best preserved of the four Mappa Mundi.
• The mathematician Thomas Harriot (1560–1621) invented the symbols for "is less than" [<] and "is greater than" [>].
The county of Kent is home to England's oldest church -St Martin's in Canterbury ( Pictured ) .
• Founded in 1534, Cambridge University Press is the world's oldest printing and publishing house, and the second largest university press in the world.
• Opened in 1660, the Royal Armouries in the Tower of London ( Pictured )is the oldest museum in the United Kingdom, and one of the oldest in the world (possibly the first in Europe outside Italy). The Ashmolean Museum in Oxford, inaugurated in 1683, was the world's first university museum.
• Champagne was invented in England, not in France. In 1662 scientist Christopher Merret presented a paper to the Royal Society in London describing how the addition of sugar and molasses to wine make it brisk and sparkling. This method, now known as méthode champenoise, was adopted by Dom Pérignon over 30 years later to produce the first sparkling wine in Champagne.
Juliana Village Activities Program – June 2019
18th century to present
• The national anthem of the United States ("The Star-Spangled Banner") was composed by an Englishman, John Stafford Smith (1750-1836) from Gloucester.
• The claim for the world's oldest
working railway is disputed between Tanfield Railway in County Durham, which oldest section dates from 1725, and Middleton Railway in West Yorkshire, which has been working continuously since 1758. Middleton Railway ( Pictured above ).
• The world's first modern encyclopedia was Chambers' Cyclopaedia, or Universal Dictionary of Arts and Sciences, published in 1728 in London. It pre-dates the Encyclopédie of Diderot and D'Alembert by over two decades.
• Established in 1734, Bennett's of Irongate in Derby is the oldest department store in the world, pre-dating by over 100 years the first department stores in the USA, France or other parts of Britain. It is still trading in the original building.
• The Caen Hill Locks, a flight of 29 locks on the Kennet and Avon Canal (between Bath and Reading) rising 72 m in 3.2 km, making it the steepest flight of locks in the world. The locks were built in the early 1800s ( Pictured).
• During the first three decades of the 19th century, West Cornwall produced two thirds of the world's copper. The smelting of copper ore was subsequently transferred to Swansea, in South Wales, which became the global centre for the trade during most of the century.
Juliana Village Activities Program – June 2019
• It is in England that the first postage stamps appeared. The first Penny Post was invented by entrepreneur William Dockwra in the 1680's for delivery of packets within London. The first nation-wide stamp (and first adhesive stamp) was the Penny Black, introduced in 1840 as part of Rowland Hill's postal reforms. Because Britain was the first country to issue national stamps, British stamps still have the unique distinction of not mentioning the country's name on them.
• The custom of afternoon tea was devised in 1840 by Anna Russell, Duchess of Bedford, who felt the need for an extra meal between lunch and dinner. She began inviting her friends to join her, and the custom quickly spread around British society and throughout the British Empire. Britain's first tea room was opened in 1864 by the Aerated Bread Company at London Bridge.
• In 1884, Charles Parsons invented the steam turbine, which made cheap and plentiful electricity possible. In 1894 he launched the first steam turbine-powered boat, the Turbinia, by far the fastest ship in the world at the time. The steam turbine engine revolutionised marine transport and naval warfare.
• The statue of Anteros on Piccadilly Circus (1892) was the world's first statue to be cast in aluminium ( Pictured ).
• The world's first modern Olympic Games were not held in Athens in 1896, but in the small town of Much Wenlock(Shropshire) in 1850, which inspired French Baron Pierre Coubertin to launch the Athens Olympics half a century later.
• The English invented and developed the world's earliest railways. In 1901, Hornby became the first maker of model railways. The British love of train also gave birth to Thomas the Tank Engine, originally in books in 1946, then on TV from 1984 onwards.
• The man behind the construction of the world-famous Sydney Opera House was Sir Eugene Goossens (1893-1962), an English conductor and composer of Belgian origin, who was director of the NSW State Conservatorium of Music at the time.
Juliana Village Activities Program – June 2019
• The world's first electronic, digital, programmable computer was made at Bletchley Park, Buckinghamshire, in 1943-44. Nicknamed Colossus(Pictured below
), it was used by British codebreakers to help read encrypted German messages during World War II. Colossus was kept a state secret until 1974, which is why Americans have been credited with the invention of computers.
• The world's first drive through safari park opened at Longleat House (Wiltshire) in 1966.
• Liverpool Cathedral ( Pictured Below ), Britain's newest cathedral (completed in 1978), holds many records. It boasts the world's the largest (though not the highest) belltower, with the world's highest and heaviest peal of bells, and the largest organ in the UK. It is the second longest church on Earth after St. Peter's Basilica in Rome, and the biggest cathedral in England.
Economy
• Harry Ramsden's holds the Guinness World Record for the largest fish and chip shop in the world, seating 250 people, serving nearly a million customers a year. It is Britain's longest established restaurant chain ( Pictured
). Its first shop opened 1928 at Guiseley, West Yorkshire.
• The Equitable Life Assurance Society, founded 1762, is world's oldest mutual insurer. It pioneered age based premiums based on mortality rate, the basis of modern life assurance upon which all life assurance schemes were subsequently based.
Juliana Village Activities Program – June 2019
• Britain has the highest per capita consumption of cider, as well as the largest cider-producing companies in the world. Over half of England's cider is produced in Herefordshire. The world's largest producer of cider is H. P. Bulmer, based in Hereford. Cider making was introduced by Viscount Scudamore in 1639, who brought the recipe from France. In 1674 he built the county's largest house with cider money at Holme Lacy, near Hereford.
Food:
England is known for traditional middle-class notions of diet with meats at the heart of the main meal, which usually was eaten at midday. Along with this main course, there might be a dish such as a meat casserole, and fish also was consumed. Heavy sauces, gravies, soups and stews or puddings (savoury and sweet), and pasties and pies also were eaten. Vegetables included potatoes and carrots, turnips and cabbage, and salad vegetables. Fruit was also part of the diet, though in small proportions.
Lighter meals included variations of the sandwich. Breakfast foods ranged from hot cereals to tea, toast, and marmalade, to steak, eggs, and kidneys. These foods were not available to most people before World War II. The rural poor, for example, ate a diet based on cheese and bread, with bacon eaten a few times a week, supplemented by fresh milk if available, cabbage, and vegetables if a garden was kept. All the classes drank tea; beer was drunk by the working classes and other alcoholic beverages were drunk by the middle
and upper classes.
Since 1950, the English have eaten less red meat, more poultry, and about the same amount of fish. The consumption of fats is down, and that of alternatives such as margarine is up. Fresh fruits are in favour, while vegetables are not, and the focus is on salad vegetables. The main meal is now eaten in the evening and is likely to consist of frozen or ready-made food. In addition to eating out in pubs, inns, and restaurants, people consume fast food. There has been a dramatic increase in the variety of foreign cuisine, ranging from Chinese and Indian to French and Italian.
Juliana Village Activities Program – June 2019
Meghan Markle and Prince Harry welcome Baby Sussex as Duchess gives birth to a son
Prince Harry and Meghan
Markle‘s newborn son, Archie, is seventh in
the line to the British throne, but
his parents are determined to give him a
normal childhood.
The couple – who celebrated their first
anniversary on May 19 – have already taken measures to ensure their firstborn
leads a typical life. Among them: moving away from Kensington Palace in
favour of a home in the country, Frogmore Cottage, and opting not to give Archie
a royal title.
Meghan, had a childhood out of the spotlight growing up in L.A. But Harry’s
mum, Princess Diana, also made sure to expose her children to life outside the
palace walls. While it was typical to see Harry and Prince William on the balcony
of Buckingham Palace for events like Trooping the Colour, the boys also rode the
London Underground, ate at McDonald’s and visited theme
parks. And when the princes met Santa at London’s Selfridges
department store, they waited in line like the rest of the
children. (Pictured Princess Diana and Prince Harry
at Thorpe Park in 1992).
Meghan and Harry are already adjusting to life as a family of
three – and friends say they are overflowing with gratitude.
Juliana Village Activities Program – June 2019
“Like any father, he lights up when he speaks about his son and how proud he is
of his wife,” says his friend and former Invictus Games competitor JJ Chalmers.
“I can see the buzzing smile on his face still.”
The family made their first appearance as a trio on May 8, stepping out before a
small press pool at Windsor Castle’s grand St. George’s Hall, where the couple
had their wedding reception last year.
“Parenting is amazing,” Harry gushed as he held Archie in his arms, wrapped in a
traditional G.H. Hurt & Son wool blanket. “We are just so thrilled to have our
own little bundle of joy and to be able to spend some precious times with him as
he slowly, slowly starts to grow up.”
Seeing Harry hold his newborn son “was the most enchanting thing,” says a
family friend.
And Meghan called being a
mother “magic.”
“I have the two best guys in the
world so I’m really happy,” she
said.
Pictured above : Prince Harry and Meghan, joined by her mother Doria Ragland, show their new son to
Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Phillip.
The royal baby is just a month old, but fans have already learned a
lot about Meghan Markle and Prince Harry's first child.
He was born on May 6.
The Duchess of Sussex gave birth to her son at 5:26 a.m.
He weighed 7 pounds, 3 ounces at birth.
Juliana Village Activities Program – June 2019
His cousin Prince Louis, who was born in April 2018, weighed in at 8 pounds, 7
ounces for his royal arrival.
His name is Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor.
The name was somewhat surprising, as
British oddsmakers’ top picks for potential
names included more traditional monikers like
Arthur, James, Philip and Albert.
Archie, of
course, is a
shortened version of the name Archibald,
meaning genuine and bold or brave. Using
the nickname as a first name gives it a more
casual, American vibe — while the baby’s
middle name, Harrison, originated in the
Middle Ages as a patronymic meaning “son
of Henry” or “son of Harry.tory
(Pictured:Harry & Princess Diana).
Meghan and Harry waited two days to announce their son’s name.
The world waited four days after the birth of Prince William and Kate
Middleton‘s third child to learn the royal baby boy’s name: Louis Arthur
Charles. William and Kate announced Prince George’s and Princess Charlotte‘s
names two days after their royal arrivals. And these reveals are fairly quick by
royal standards: Princes William’s name wasn’t announced for a week and Prince
Charles’ for an entire month!
Archie is seventh in line to the throne.
Juliana Village Activities Program – June 2019
That’s behind grandpa Prince Charles, uncle Prince William, William’s three
children – Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis – and dad Prince
Harry.
His arrival came late.
Appearing just hours after his son’s birth, Prince
Harry said they were “still thinking about names” for
the baby.
“The baby’s a little bit overdue, so we’ve had a little
time to think about it. That’s the next bit,” he said.
During his big world debut on May 8, Archie
appeared to be peacefully sleeping in his father’s
arms. “He has the sweetest temperament,” the proud new mum shared about her
son. “He’s really calm.”
Harry then quipped, “I don’t know where he gets that from!”
Archie’s looks are “changing every single day.”
So does baby Archie look more like Mum or Dad?
“We’re still trying to figure that out,” Meghan said during their first outing as a
family of three at St. George’s Hall in Windsor Castle (where the couple had
their royal wedding reception!).
“Everyone says babies change so much over two weeks. We’re basically
monitoring how the changing process happens over this next month really,”
Harry added. “His looks are changing every single day so who knows.”
Archie did not receive a royal title.
Juliana Village Activities Program – June 2019
While there are courtesy titles that Their Royal Highnesses The Duke and
Duchess of Sussex could apply to their son, they have chosen not to give him a
“courtesy titles” at this time, a royal source tells.
But he could get a royal title someday.
When his grandfather, Prince Charles becomes king (in
the event of Queen Elizabeth‘s death), the title of “prince”
will be automatically given to him as the child of a son of
the king.
But just as his parents have chosen not to give Archie a
courtesy title upon his birth, they can also choose not to
use the title that would be conferred to him after Charles
becomes king.
He’s a good sleeper.
Harry travelled to the Netherlands last month to kick off the official countdown
to the Invictus Games, and he opened up about his son’s first few days at home.
The world got their first glimpse of Archie meeting his great-grandmother Queen
Elizabeth in a history-making photo that also included Meghan’s mother, Doria
Ragland. The occasion marks the first time in royal history that a British monarch
has been pictured alongside a royal baby’s Black grandmother.
Juliana Village Activities Program For Georges Centre – June 2019
Time Saturday 1st
Sunday 2nd
9:30am Exercises Exercises
10:00am Morning Tea Morning Tea
10.30am
Painting
& QUIZ with Jeanette
Remember
When …
&
Painting
1.45pm - 3.00pm
1:45pm
1:45pm
Juliana Village Activities Program For Georges Centre – June 2019
Time
Monday 3rd
9:00-9:30am
Monthly Shopping
Trip to Southgate,
Bus Leaves at
10:15am
Tuesday 4th
9:00-9:30am
Julie -Doing Nails
Library Day
Wednesday 5th
9:00-9:30am
Podiatry Day
Staff Meeting 2:15pm
Thursday 6th
Hairdresser Day
Friday 7th
Saturday 8th Sunday 9th
9.30am
Exercises Exercises Exercises Exercises Exercises Exercises Exercises
10.00am Morning Tea Morning Tea Morning Tea Morning Tea Morning Tea Morning Tea Morning Tea
10.30am Painting
&
Painting
&
With Mike
10:00am – 12pm
Painting
&
Painting
&
Art Therapy
with Janine
&
Painting
& QUIZ with Jeanette
Remember
When …
&
Painting
1.45pm - 3.00pm
BINGO
at 1:45pm
DARTS
1:45pm
Devotion Service with Mike at 1:45pm
Sing-a-long
with Olivia
2pm
Short Bus Trip (Bus Leaves at 1:15pm).
1:45pm
1:45pm
Logeman Court
Praise &
Devotion
with Mike
1pm
with Judy at
2:15pm
Movie at 3pm & Happy Hour
at 5pm
Afternoon Tea at 1:30pm
Juliana Village Activities Program For Georges Centre – June 2019
Time
Monday 10th QUEENS BIRTHDAY
Public Holiday
Tuesday 11th
9:00-9:30am
Wednesday 12th
9:00-9:30am
Thursday 13th Hairdresser Day
Friday 14th
Saturday 15th
Sunday 16th
9.30am Exercises Exercises Exercises Exercises Exercises Exercises Exercises
10.00am Morning Tea Morning Tea Morning Tea Morning Tea Morning Tea Morning Tea Morning Tea
10.30am Painting
&
Lunch Outing to:
Audley Dance
Hall Café Bus Leaves at
10:15am
$25pp
Painting
Art
Appreciation
Class with
Alison Duff
&
Painting
&
Art Therapy
with Janine
&
Painting
& QUIZ with Jeanette
Remember
When …
&
Painting
1:45pm -3:00pm
BINGO
With Jeanette at 1:45pm
Julia’s
Flute Pieces
2pm
Devotion Service with Mike
at 1:45pm
MOVIE
1:45pm
Short Bus Trip
(Bus Leaves at 1:15pm).
1:45pm
1:45pm
Logeman Court
with Judy at
2:15pm
Movie at 3pm
Afternoon Tea at 1:30pm
Juliana Village Activities Program For Georges Centre – June 2019
Time Monday 17th
9:00-9:30am
Tuesday 18th Library Day Julie -Doing Nails
9:00-9:30am
Wednesday 19th
Podiatry Day
9:00-9:30am
Thursday 20th Friday 21st
Saturday 22nd
Sunday 23rd
9:30am Exercises Exercises Exercises Exercises Exercises Exercises Exercises
10:00am Morning Tea Morning Tea Morning Tea Morning Tea Morning Tea Morning Tea
Morning Tea
10.30am Painting
&
Painting
&
With Mike
10:00am – 12pm
Memory Man “Old Time Radio “
10:30am
Painting
&
Art Therapy
with Janine
&
Painting
& QUIZ with Jeanette
Remember
When …
&
Painting
1.45pm - 3.00pm
BINGO
at 1:45pm
TEN PIN BOWLING
1:45pm
Devotion Service with Mike
at 1:45pm
Birthday Party
With the
Jazz King 2pm
SHUFFLE
BOARD
at 1:45pm
1:45pm
1:45pm
Logeman Court
Praise &
Devotion
with Mike
1pm
with Judy at
2:15pm
Movie at 3pm & Happy Hour
at 5pm
Juliana Village Activities Program For Georges Centre – June 2019
Time
Monday 24th
9:00-9:30am
Tuesday 25th
9:00-9:30am
Wednesday 26th
9:00-9:30am
Thursday 27th Friday 28th Saturday 29th
Sunday 30th
9:30am Exercises Exercises Exercises Exercises Exercises Exercises Exercises
10:00am Morning Tea Morning Tea Morning Tea Morning Tea Morning Tea Morning Tea
Morning Tea
10.30am Painting
&
Painting
&
With Mike
10:00am – 12pm
Painting
&
Painting
&
Art Therapy
with Janine
&
Painting
& QUIZ with Jeanette
Remember
When …
&
Painting
1.45pm - 3.00pm
BINGO at 1:45pm
Quoits
1:45pm
Devotion Service with Mike
at 1:45pm
Happy Hour 2pm
Short Shopping
Trip to Menai
Marketplace
Bus leaves at 1:15pm
1:45pm
1:45pm
Logeman Court
Praise &
Devotion
with Mike
1pm
with Judy at
2:15pm
Movie at 3pm
Juliana Village Activities Program For Sharpe House Level 2 – June 2019
Time Saturday 1st
Sunday 2nd
9:45am
10:15am Morning Tea Morning Tea
10:30am Residents
Choice
Residents
Choice
11:00am Movie
Movie
1:00pm Rest Time Rest Time
1:20-2:00pm
Residents Choice
Residents Choice
Juliana Village Activities Program For Sharpe House Level 2 – June 2019
Time Monday 3rd
Southgate Shopping
Trip 10:15am
Tuesday 4th
Library Day Julie -Doing Nails
Wednesday 5th
Podiatry Day
Pentecost Devotion Service in GC at 1:45pm Staff Meeting 2:15pm
Thursday 6th Hairdresser Day
Friday 7th
Short Afternoon Bus
Trip 1:15pm
* Residents Committee Meeting 2pm in Georges Centre
Saturday 8th
Sunday 9th
9:45am Exercises Exercises
Exercises Exercises
10:15am Morning Tea Morning Tea
Morning Tea Morning Tea
Morning Tea Morning Tea Morning Tea
10:30am Ball Games
with Cesar at 10:30am
Ball Games
Ball Games
Ball Games
Residents
Choice
Residents
Choice
11:00am MOVIE Residents Choice
Precious Pats
with Valette
11am
Pet Therapy
with Lorraine
& Retro
Sing-a-long
With Olivia
Residents
Choice: Musical DVD
Movie
Movie
1:00pm Rest Time Rest Time Rest Time Rest Time Rest Time Rest Time Rest Time
1:20-2:00pm
1:1 Time with Leanne
&
Movie
Julia’s
Flute Pieces
2pm
2pm
BINGO
2-3pm
1: 1 Time with
Leanne &
& Movie
Residents Choice
Residents Choice
Juliana Village Activities Program For Sharpe House Level 2 – June 2019
Time Monday 10th
QUEENS BIRTHDAY
Public Holiday
Tuesday 11th Lunch Outing to:
Audley Dance Hall
Café, Bus Leaves at
10:15am-$25pp
Wednesday 12th
Thursday 13th Hairdresser Day
Friday 14th
Short Afternoon Bus
Trip 1:15pm
Saturday 15th Sunday 16th
9:45am Exercises Exercises Exercises Exercises
10:15am Morning Tea Morning Tea
Morning Tea Morning Tea with
Chocolate Biscuits
Morning Tea Morning Tea Morning Tea
10:30am Residents
Choice
Ball Games
Ball Games
Ball Games
Residents
Choice
Residents
Choice
Residents
Choice
11:00am MOVIE
Precious Pats
with Valette
11am
Pet Therapy
with Lorraine
& Retro
Sing-a-long
With Olivia
Residents
Choice:
Musical DVD
MOVIE
MOVIE
1:00pm Rest Time Rest Time Rest Time Rest Time Rest Time Rest Time Rest Time
1:20-2:00pm
Residents
Choice:
MOVIE Residents Choice
Residents
Choice:
BINGO
2-3pm
Movie
Residents Choice
Residents Choice
Juliana Village Activities Program For Sharpe House Level 2 – June 2019
Time Monday 17th
Tuesday 18th
Library Day Julie -Doing Nails
Wednesday 19th
Podiatry Day
Thursday 20th Hairdresser Day
Friday 21st Saturday 22nd Sunday 23rd
9:45am Exercises Exercises Exercises Exercises
10:15am Morning Tea Morning Tea
Morning Tea Morning Tea with
Chocolate Biscuits
Morning Tea Morning Tea Morning Tea
10:30am Residents
Choice
Ball Games
Ball Games
Ball Games
Ball Games
Residents
Choice
Residents
Choice
11:00am MOVIE
Precious Pats with
Valette
11am
Pet Therapy
with Lorraine
& Retro
Sing-a-long
Residents
Choice:
Musical DVD
MOVIE
MOVIE
1:00pm Rest Time Rest Time Rest Time Rest Time Rest Time Rest Time Rest Time
1:20-2:00pm
1:1 Time with Leanne
&
Movie
Music Time
With Chaplain
Mike
at 2pm
Movie
Birthday Party
With Jazz King in Georges Centre
2pm
1: 1 Time with
Leanne
& Movie
Residents Choice
Residents Choice
Juliana Village Activities Program For Sharpe House Level 2 – June 2019
Time Monday 24th Tuesday 25th
Wednesday 26th Thursday 27th Hairdresser Day
Happy Hr in
Georges Centre
At 2pm
Friday 28th Menai Shopping Trip 1:15pm
Saturday 29th
Sunday 30th
9:45am Exercises Exercises Exercises Exercises Exercises
10:15am Morning Tea Morning Tea
Morning Tea
Morning Tea with
Chocolate Biscuits
Morning Tea
Morning
Tea
Morning
Tea
10:30am Residents
Choice
with Cesar at 10:30am
Ball Games
Ball Games
Ball Games
Residents
Choice
Residents
Choice
11:00am MOVIE
Precious Pats
with Valette
11am
Pet Therapy
with Lorraine
& Retro
Sing-a-long
Residents
Choice:
Musical DVD
MOVIE
MOVIE
1:00pm Rest Time Rest Time
Rest Time Rest Time Rest Time Rest Time Rest Time
1:20-2:00pm
Musical DVD
Music Time
with
Chaplain
Mike
at 2pm
Movie
BINGO
2-
2-3pm
Movie
Residents Choice
Residents Choice