vimarsana.com

ஐயா வெளிப்படையான ப்யாகர் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Sydney property: Ex-UBS banker David Di Pilla buys $9 million house next door for Bellevue Hill compound

Former UBS banker buys $9m house next door for Sydney compound David Di Pilla, who is chairman of ASX-listed property investment group Home Consortium, has purchased his neighbour’s property in Bellevue Hill. The Bellevue Hill residence of Arabella and Damien Rayner sold for $9 million.  Lucy Macken Save Share There is no shortage of family compounds in Sydney’s Bellevue Hill, and another is taking shape thanks to the recent purchase of former UBS star banker David Di Pilla and his wife, Victoria, of the wealthy Salteri family. Di Pilla, who is founder and director of Aurrum Aged Care group and chairman of ASX-listed property investment group Home Consortium, has been a Bellevue Hill home owner for more than a decade, having bought the Kambala Road mansion that was home to designer Mark Keighery until he died in 2008. Records show that residence was sold by Keighery’s widow, Lisa, in 2009 for $9 million.

SILLIAC: machine that brought Australia into computer age

Date Time SILLIAC: machine that brought Australia into computer age A horse-racing benefactor with an interest in science made one of Australia’s first, and then most powerful, computers possible. It’s a story that’s easy to love. It was the early 1950s and the University wanted to build one the first and most powerful computers in the world, SILLIAC. But funds were short and it was only built because the race horse of a prominent donor had just won the Melbourne Cup. No Melbourne Cup win, no SILLIAC. A donor with a passion for science The truth is a little less cinematic. The donor, Adolf Basser, wasn’t a ‘colourful racing identity’. He was a man of modest disposition who happened to love horse racing: even more so when his horse, Delta, won the Melbourne Cup. But this was two years before he contributed to SILLIAC. In fact, Basser, who’d made his fortune through the jewellery business, was a long-time philanthropist supporting many causes, but he ha

PS Sydney:

Advertisement Early on in my career I learnt that for many, ahem, supposedly serious newspaper journalists, the term “gossip” is something of a dirty word. And yet just about every cracking scoop – from politics to football – usually starts with loose lips spilling the beans on something salacious and newsworthy that someone, somewhere is trying to hide. Gossip fodder: James Packer and his first fiancee, the former model Kate Fischer, were together for five years. Credit:Vince Caligiuri And gossips, along with whistleblowers, snitches, moles, insiders, “well-placed sources” or whatever else you want to call them, have played a critical role in how thousands of stories have made it onto

Ita was furious : Music legend s journalism days revealed

Doug Parkinson. Describing his best friend as a terrific bloke , LA-based television producer Mr Hill said he received the shock of his life when he heard of Parkinson s sudden passing on Monday night at his home in Sydney s northern beaches, at the age of 74. Mr Hill, an expat Aussie famous for helping Sir Kerry Packer revolutionise the game of cricket with broadcast innovations in 1977 and his work producing Academy Awards, said they both worked as copy boys and cadets on The Daily Telegraph in the early 1960s. David Hill at Sydney Football Stadium when he was USA Fox Television chief.

Ita was furious : Music legend s journalism days revealed

Ita was furious : Music legend s journalism days revealed
sunshinecoastdaily.com.au - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sunshinecoastdaily.com.au Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.