Deadly Awards 2004

Deadly Awards 2004[1] the awards were an annual celebration of Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander achievement in music, sport, entertainment and community.

Music

Sport

  • Most Promising New Talent in Sport: Brett Lee
  • Outstanding Achievement in AFL: Gavin Wanganeen
  • Outstanding Achievement in Rugby League: Amos Roberts
  • Male Sportsperson of the Year: Joshua Ross
  • Ella Award for Lifetime Achievement in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Sport: Tony Mundine
  • Female Sportsperson of the Year: Michelle Musselwhite

The arts

Community

  • DEST Award for Outstanding Achievement in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Education: Chris Sarra
  • Outstanding Achievement in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health: Dr Ngaire Brown
  • Broadcaster of the Year: Bevan Rankins, WAAMA 100.9fm
gollark: New Earth shape belief?
gollark: Point is that it's not exactly a very significant hurdle for whoever is designing weapons, but is quite annoying for people working on cubesats and balloons and stuff.
gollark: It's a weird restriction, considering that presumably if you can engineer an entire missile you can also work out a way around restrictions in GPS hardware, to be honest.
gollark: Apparently the US was worried about GPS being used by enemy ICBMs (???) so now consumer GPS devices will refuse to work above certain speeds/heights.
gollark: You can do GPS with RTL-SDRs apparently, which gets around the weird height/speed restrictions in consumer devices.

References

  1. "Deadly Awards honour Indigenous achievements". ABC News. Australia. 23 October 2004. Retrieved 19 February 2018.
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