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- Newsgroups: soc.culture.australian,soc.answers,news.answers
- Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!nic.hookup.net!swrinde!sgiblab!brunix!aen
- From: aen@cs.brown.edu (Ann Nicholson)
- Subject: soc.culture.australian FAQ (Part 2 of 2) (monthly posting)
- Message-ID: <1994Feb11.165301.27811@cs.brown.edu>
- Followup-To: soc.culture.australian
- Summary: This posting contains a list of Frequently Asked
- Questions (and their answers) on soc.culture.australian,
- mainly information about Australia, including studying
- in Australia, immigration, songs, recipes, where to
- find Australian things overseas, and so on. It should be
- read by anyone who wishes to post to the soc.culture.australian
- newsgroup.
- Sender: news@cs.brown.edu
- Reply-To: aen@cs.brown.edu (s.c.a. FAQ maintainer)
- Organization: Brown University Department of Computer Science
- Date: Fri, 11 Feb 1994 16:53:01 GMT
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Expires: Fri, 11 Mar 1994 00:00:00 GMT
- Lines: 3298
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu soc.culture.australian:9150 soc.answers:876 news.answers:15076
-
- Archive-name: australian-faq/part2
- Last-modified: 4 Feb 1993
- Version: 1.1
-
- Contents:
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- PART I (separate posting)
- 1. About soc.culture.australian
- 2. How to find Australians, Australia Information
- 2.1 on the net
- 2.2 elsewhere
- 3. Studying in Australia
- 3.1 Postgraduate Study
- 3.2 Miscellaneous Questions
- 3.3 "Classification" of Australian Universities
- 3.4 Addresses of Australian Universities
- 4. Coming to Australia
- 4.1 Immigration Addresses
- 4.2 Immigration Criteria
- 4.2.1. Getting a Job in Australia
- 4.2.2. Academic Addresses
- 4.2.3 Immigration Points System
- 4.3 Quarantine
- 4.4 Standards
- 4.5 Prices
- 4.6 Cars
- 4.7 Shipping Information
- 4.8 Spouse/fiance(e) immigration
- 4.9 Re children
- 4.10 Housing
- 4.11 Public Transport
- 4.12 Roads
- 4.13 Shopping Hours
- 4.14 Crime
- 5. For Australians Overseas
- 5.1 Radio Australia
- 5.2 Public access sites
- 5.3 Newspapers:
- 5.4 Australiana in the USA
- 5.5 Video Conversion
- 5.6 Expatriate organisation
-
- PART II (this posting)
- 6. Information about Australia
- 6.1 Australian (Dual) Citizenship
- 6.2 Political System; Current governments
- 6.3 National Holidays
- 6.4 Geographic Facts and other statistics
- - including weather reports via ftp and gopher
- 6.5 Sport
- 6.6 Travel
- - Answers to Questions
- - A view on Travel in Australia
- 6.7 Health Care
- 6.8 Miscellaneous
- - spelling of Sydney
- - Tasmanian aborigines (who was Truganinni?)
- - What is Mabo?
- - Tasmanian devils and Tasmanian Tigers
- - Australian Flag
- - Why is Australia called Australia?
- - What is the source of ".oz" in internet addresses
- - Viller-Bretonneuve
- - What visas do you need for France?
- - What is vegemite?
- - skin cancer
- 7. Culture
- 7.1 Songs
- - "Waltzing Matilda", by Banjo Paterson
- (3 versions :-)
- - "Advance Australia Fair", National Anthem
- 7.2 Recipes and food
- 7.3 Language
- - pronounciation of "Aussie"
- - origin of "Pom"
- 7.4 National heroes
- 7.5 Literature
- 7.5.1 Fiction
- 7.5.2 Poetry
- - "My Country" by Dorothea McKellar
- - "The Man From Snow River" by A.B. (Banjo) Paterson
- 7.5.3 Children's Literature
- 7.5.4 Non-Fiction
- 7.6 Films
- 8. Contributors
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- 6. Information about Australia
-
- 6.1 Australian (Dual) Citizenship [CW]
-
- Here are some excerpts form the "Hints for Australian Travellers"
- booklet produced by the Dept. of Foreign Affairs - its the little
- booklet you get when you get your passport (at least it was a
- year ago...) I had a part- icular interest in this as when I
- became an Australian Citizen I wanted to keep my NZ citizenship
- (which fortunately I could...). I don't have any details on
- exactly what the requirements for gaining Asutralian citizenship
- are, but I know that 21 years of permanent residency was good
- enough...
-
- Portions in [...] are my comments. [CW]
-
- Nationality or Citizenship
-
- Each country is free to determine who it will regard as its
- citizens, and under what conditions its citizenship can be
- aquired or lost. Citizen- ship laws are often complex and they
- can be quite different from Australiann laws.
-
- In many countries, for example, citizenship is not considered to
- be lost simply because the person has acquired Australian
- citizenship. The laws of some countries require people who wish
- to renounce their citizen- ship to make formal written
- application to do so.
-
- Because of such laws many Australian citizens are also citizens
- of other countries and therefore, possess what is internationally
- referred to as "dual nationality".
-
- [translation - dual citizenship is possible; whether or not you
- retain your original citizenship upon becoming an Australian
- depends on the laws of the original country.]
-
- Dual Nationality
-
- Australian citizens who hold another citizenship are likely to be
- those who:
-
- o were not born in Australia;
- o were born in Australia but had one or both parents or grandparents
- who were not born in Australia;
- o are married to a person with another citizenship.
-
- [stuff deleted about being citizen of certain countries may make
- you subject to certain laws if you return...]
-
- Loss of Australian Citizenship
-
- Australia provides in its own citizenship law that an Australian
- citizen, who is 18 years of age or over, who does an act or
- thing, the sole or dominant purpose of which is to acquire the
- citizenship of another country, ceases to be an Australian
- citizen from the date he or she becomes a citizen of that
- country.
-
- If you marry a citizen of a foreign country you may, under the
- law of that country, automatically become a citizen of that
- country. Under these circumstances you will not lose your
- Australian citizenship provided you are not required to take any
- further action yourself (eg. registration) to acquire your
- spouse's citizenship.
-
- If you lose Australian citizenship as a result of doing an act or
- thing to acquire another citizenship, you can apply to regain it
- by grant any time after 12 months from the date of loss, provided
- you are in Australia and have been present there as a resident
- for 12 months in the 2 years immediately prior to lodging your
- application. Alternatively, you can apply to resume Australian
- citizenship by making a declaration to the Minister for
- Immigration, Local Government and Ethnic Affairs that at the time
- you did the act or thing:
-
- 1) you did not know that by doing it you would cease to be an
- Australian citizen; or
-
- 2) if you had not done it, you would have suffered significant hardship
- or detriment.
-
- The person making the declaration must:
-
- 1) have been legally present in Australia for a period, or periods,
- amounting in aggregate to not less than 2 years; and
-
- 2) intend to continue to reside in Australia or, if living overseas,
- intend to return to reside in Australia within 3 years of making
- the declaration; and
-
- 3) have maintained a close and continuing association with Australia
- whilst abroad.
-
- If the Minister believes the statement is true, he may register
- the declaration and you may become an Australian citizen again.
-
- Persons needing up-to-date information should consult the
- Department of Immigration, Local Government and Ethnic Affairs or
- an Australian mission overseas.
-
- A child under 18 years of age loses Australian citizenship if
- his/her responsible parent or guardian ceases to be an Australian
- citizen, and
-
- o he/she possesses another citizenship at the time, and
-
- o his/her other responsible parent is not an Australian citizen
- at the time.
-
- Should you lose Australian citizenship before your 18th birthday,
- as a result of a responsible parent ceasing to be an Australian
- citizen, you can, within one year after your 18th birthday (or
- later if special circum- stances apply), make a declaration that
- you wish to resume Australian citizenship on the date the
- declaration is registered.
-
- Anyone who loses Australian citizenship is no longer entitled to
- hold an Australian passport. If you think you may acquire another
- nationality in some way, you should seek advice about the effect
- this would have on your Australian nationality from Australian
- authorities.
-
- Children born overseas
-
- A child born outside Australia may be registered as an Australian
- citizen by descent at the time of birth of the child.
- Registration must be made within 18 years of the child's birth by
- a responsible parent or guardian. Applications can be obtained
- from any Australian mission overseas or the department of
- Immigration (etc.) in Australia.
-
- [translation - if an Australian deliberately acquires citizenship
- of a foreign country, they lose citizenship for at least a
- year... if it is involuntary then there is no problem...]
-
- [SW] Personal experience on dual citizenship for Australians with
- children born abroad. The child automatically has the
- citizenship of the foreign country. To register as an Australian
- by descent, you have to provide originals of both parents birth
- certificates, the child's birth certificate, the parent's
- marriage certificate (if appropriate) and parent's passports.
- Send all of this plus the correct form and $80 USD (in the USA)
- to the appropriate consulate for the region you live in and then
- eventually you get a Certificate of Australian Citizenship by
- Descent for the child. To get a five (5) year child's passport
- you must present yourself (in Person) at a consulate with the
- passport photos, the application form and the appropriate
- endorsement on the photos. They'll then give you the passport.
-
- 6.2 Political System; Current governments
-
- Australia is an independent commonwealth of 6 states, 2
- territories and a number of island and territorial dependencies.
- It is a member of the Commonwealth of Nations, United Nations,
- ANZUS, OECD. The form of government is a constitutional
- monarchy. The Queen Elizabeth II of Great Britain is also Queen
- of Australia, and Head of State. Her representative in Australia
- is the Governor-General, Bill Hayden since 1989.
-
- The federal parliamentary system consists of two houses of
- Parliament. The lower house is the House of Representatives. The
- party which has the most representatives in the lower house forms
- a government. The leader of that party becomes Prime Minister,
- and he (no women PMs as yet) forms a Cabinet. The current Prime
- Minister is Paul Keating, and we have a Labor government. They
- have been in power since 1983 (mostly with Bob Hawke as PM). The
- usual term of office is 3 years, although the PM may call an
- election early. The Upper House is the Senate, consisting of 12
- senators from each state and 2 from each territory. They have 6
- year terms and half face re-election every 3 years. The upper
- house is generally a house of review.
-
- The main parties are the Labor Party, the Liberal Party (who are
- actually conservatives) and the National Party (formerly the
- Country party) who represent mainly rural electorates and are
- also conservative. The Liberal and National parties usually form
- some sort of coalition. The current leader of the Liberal party
- is Dr. John Hewson (a New Right person); current lead of the
- National Party is Tim Fischer.
-
- The most recent federal election was held on March 13th, 1993. The
- Labor Party, lead by Paul Keating was returned with an increased
- majority, to the surprise of many. The unpopular GST tax being
- proposed by the Opposition was considered a major factor in the
- outcome, as Labor came from behind in the polls at the start of
- the campaign. Hewson is still the leader of the Liberals, but
- the GST has been dropped from their platform.
-
- State Goverments (Length of Term 4 years, except Qld 3 years))
-
- State Party Premier Election due by
- Vic. Lib/Nat Jeff Kennett Nov '96
- NSW Lib/Nat John Fahey 25 March 1995**
- Qld Labor Wayne Goss 1996
- SA Lib/Nat Mr Brown late 1997
- WA Lib/Nat Richard Court Feb 1996
- Tas. Lib Ray Groom late 1995
-
- **NSW now has fixed 4 year parliamentary terms. The next
- election is to be held on Saturday 25 March 1995. Subsequent
- elections will be on the last Saturday in March every four years
- thereafter.
-
- To cast a postal vote. Write to the nearest embassy or consulate,
- or call them. They will send you a form to fill in (which has to
- be witnessed by an Australian citizen). They then send you the
- postal vote slip, which you have to return by a date usually
- before the election.
-
- The Australian Republican Movement is a non-political
- organisation. Membership is $35. They can be contact at:
- Australian Republican Movement
- GPO Box 5150
- Sydney, NSW 2001
- (02) 234 4726
-
- Peter Butler (peter_butler.its_2_po@central-gw.uow.edu.au) and James
- Mullens (jmullens@tansu.com.au) have part of the Constitution online.
-
- The House
- ---------
- State of the parties in House of Representatives:
-
- State Labor Lib Nat Ind Total
-
- NSW 33 8 8 1 50
- Victoria 17 17 3 1 38
- Queensland 13 7 5 - 25
- Western Aust. 6 8 - - 14
- South Aust. 4 8 - - 12
- Tasmania 4 1 - - 5
- ACT 2 - - - 2
- N.T. 1 - - - 1
-
- Total 80 49 16 1 147
-
-
- The Sentate
- -----------
- State of Parties in the Senate from July 1:
-
- Party NSW VIC QLD WA SA TAS ACT NT TOTAL
-
- ALP 6 5 4 4 4 5 1 1 30
- LIB 3 5 4 6 6 5 1 - 30
- NAT 2 1 2 - - - - 1 6
- DEM 1 1 2 - 2 1 - - 7
- OTHER* - - - 2 - 1 - - 3
-
- Total 12 12 12 12 12 12 2 2 76
-
- * Includes two WA Greens (Chamarette and Margetts) and Tasmanian
- Independent Brian Harradine.
-
- (Other tables indicate that only 36 out of the 76 senate seats
- were contested this election (the senate term is twice the length
- of the house of reps term BA).
-
- * History of Australian "Independence" [ZS]
-
- 1-Jan-1901 - Federation: The UK creates a British colony, the
- Commonwealth of Australia, as a federation of six existing
- colonies. This just means that now there are seven colonies
- instead of six.
-
- 1931 - The UK passes the Statute of Westminster act. This grants
- independence to Canada, Ireland, New Zealand and South Africa; it
- also authorises the Australian Parliament to declare independence
- whenever it feels like it. However, the Australian States are
- specifically excluded from the act.
-
- 3-Sep-1939 - WWII breaks out; nothing directly significant to
- independence happens, but this date will become significant
- later.
-
- 1942 - Australia passes the Statute of Westminster Acceptance
- Act, thus declaring independence; the Act is backdated to
- 3-Sep-1939. However, as mentioned before, the States remained
- colonies. From 3-Sep-1939, the Commonwealth of Australia is an
- independent country made up of a federation of six British
- colonies! The UK no longer has the power to make laws, give
- orders, or in any other way interfere with the Commonwealth of
- Australia; but it can, and occasionally does, interfere with the
- States.
-
- 1986 - Australia, the UK, and all six States pass the Australia
- Act, and the Queen comes out here to sign it. Among other
- things, this act finally grants independence to the States.
-
- 6.3 National Holidays
-
- (a) General Descriptions.
-
- Australia Day: January 26th (holiday often taken on the nearest
- Monday to this date to make a long weekend.) Jan 26th 1788 was
- the day the First Fleet arrived in Sydney Harbour to establish
- European settlement.
-
- Religious holidays:
- Good Friday, Easter Monday, Christmas (Dec 25th), Boxing Day (Dec 26th)
-
- Anzac Day: national holiday, April 25th (if it falls on a
- Sunday some states move it to Monday, most don't [JB]?).
- To remember those who died serving their country.
- April 25th, 1915 was the date of the first landing of ANZACs at
- Gallipoli.
-
- Other holidays (varies depending on State): New Year's Day (Jan 1st),
- - Queen's Birthday (June), Labour Day. Each state also has "Show Day".
-
- (b) Holidays for 1993 (as posted by DE)
-
- Jan 1: New Years Day
- Jan 26: Australia Day in the states of Qld, WA, NT and NSW
- Feb 1: Australia Day in the states of SA, Vic and Tas.
- March 1: Labour Day in WA, Eight Hour Day in Tas.
- March 8: Labour Day in Vic.
- April 9: Good Friday
- April 12: Easter Monday
- April 13: Easter Tuesday in Vic.
- April 25: ANZAC Day
- April 26: ANZAC Day holiday everywhere except Tas and Vic.
- May 3: Labour Day in Qld, May Day in NT
- May 17: Adelaide Cup Day in SA
- June 7: Foundation Day in WA
- June 14: Queen's Birthday everywhere except WA
- August 2: Picnic Day in NT
- Sept. ?: Melbourne Show Day in Melbourne only, (probably only in afternoon).
- Oct. 4: Labour Day in SA, Queen's Birthday in WA
- Nov. 2: Melbourne Cup Day in Melbourne only (same as election day in US)
- Dec. 25: Christmas
- Dec. 26: Boxing Day
- Dec. 27: Christmas Day holiday (Monday) in SA, Tas, Vic, WA.
- Boxing Day holiday in NSW and Qld.
- Dec. 28: Boxing Day holiday (Tuesday) in Tas, Vic, WA, NT.
- Proclamation Day in SA.
-
- 6.4 Geographic Facts and other Statistics
-
- AUSTRALIA - POPULATION
- ======================
-
- Source for all the following data: Australian Bureau of Statistics 1994
- Year Book. n/a = not available.
-
- State and territory populations are estimates as at June 1992. City
- populations are estimates as at June 1990.
-
-
- State/Territory Population Capital Population
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
- AUSTRALIA 17 528 982 Canberra 310 000*
-
- New South Wales 5 974 146 Sydney 3 656 500
- Victoria 4 458 895 Melbourne 3 080 900
- Queensland 3 037 405 Brisbane 1 301 700
- Western Australia 1 662 777 Perth 1 193 100
- South Australia 1 459 622 Adelaide 1 049 800
- Tasmania 471 118 Hobart 183 500
- Aust. Capital Territory 296 376 Canberra 284 000
- Northern Territory 168 643 Darwin 73 300
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
- EXTERNAL TERRITORIES
-
- Norfolk Island 2 000 Kingston n/a
- Christmas Island 1 275 Flying Fish Cove n/a
- Cocos Islands 586 Bantam n/a
- Aust. Antarctic Terr. c. 100 Mawson n/a
- Coral Sea Islands Terr. 3 South Willis 3
- Heard and McDonald Is. 0 - -
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
- *Includes Queanbeyan in NSW.
-
-
- AUSTRALIA - AREA, COASTLINE and HIGHEST POINTS
- ==============================================
-
- State/Territory Area (sq km) Coast (km) Highest Point (m)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- AUSTRALIA 7 682 300 36 700 Mt Kosciusko (2228)
-
- Western Australia 2 525 500 12 500 Mt Meharry (1251)
- Queensland 1 727 200 7 400 Mt Bartle-Frere (1611)
- Northern Territory 1 346 200 6 200 Mt Zeil (1510)
- South Australia 984 000 3 700 Mt Woodroffe (1440)
- New South Wales 801 600 1 900 Mt Kosciusko (2228)
- Victoria 227 600 1 800 Mt Bogong (1986)
- Tasmania 67 800 3 200 Mt Ossa (1617)
- Aust. Capital Territory 2 400 35 Mt Bimberi (1912)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- EXTERNAL TERRITORIES
-
- Aust. Antarctic Terr. 6 119 800 n/a spot height (4270)
- Heard and McDonald Is. 412 102 Mawson Peak (2745)
- Christmas Island 135 139 Murray Hill (356)
- Norfolk Island 35 32 Mt Bates (319)
- Cocos Islands 14 43 Horsburgh (6)
- Coral Sea Islands Terr. 3 3095 South Willis (7)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- STATE TERRITORIES
- -----------------
- Lord Howe Island is administered by New South Wales.
- Macquarie Island is administered by Tasmania.
- Ashmore and Cartier Islands are administered by the Northern Territory.
- Jervis Bay Territory is administered by the Australian Capital Territory.
-
- ORDER OF FOUNDATION
- -------------------
- The foundation date given for the states is the date of formal proclamation of
- the original colony as a self-governing political division in its own right.
- For territories, it is the date of proclamation as a Commonwealth territory.
-
- Order State/Territory Foundation Date
- ----- ----------------------------- -------------------------
- 1 New South Wales 7 February 1788
- 2 Tasmania 14 June 1825
- 3 Western Australia 18 June 1829
- 4 South Australia 28 December 1836
- 5 Victoria 1 July 1851
- 6 Queensland 10 December 1859
- 7 Northern Territory 1 January 1901
- 8 Australian Capital Territory 1 January 1911
- ----- ----------------------------- -------------------------
-
- * Climate Information for each city [JO]
-
- January
- Temperature Rainfall
- (mean in Celsius) (mean in mm)
- ____________________________________
- Sydney 22 102
- Melbourne 20 47
- Brisbane 25 164
- Adelaid 23 20
- Perth 24 8
- Hobart 17 48
- Darwin 28 409
- Canberra 20 60
- ____________________________________
- July
- Sydney 12 101
- Melbourne 10 48
- Brisbane 15 57
- Adelaid 11 66
- Perth 13 174
- Hobart 8 53
- Darwin 25 1
- Canberra 5 39
-
- Sydney in September October (useful for Sept Sydney 2000)
-
- Quoting from the 'Australian Weather Calendar':[MJ]
-
- September October
- av max temp 20.2 22.3
- av min temp 9.8 12.8
- days > 35C 0 0
- days < 2.3C 0 0 (no frosts)
- av hrs/day of sunshine 7.8 8.0
- av monthly rainfall (mm) 60 76
- no of rain days (av) 10 11
-
-
- [MJ] The following climate data was copied from the Australian
- Weather Calendar. If you see a number that is clearly wrong it
- is because I mistyped it. Please note that these are statistical
- averages over (long) records (more than 100 years for the state
- capitals). As such they do not indicate what you may necessarily
- expect. Much of Australia has variable weather, particularly the
- south (e.g. Melbourne in January has an average maximum
- temperature of 25.7 but can expect 4 days over 35).
-
- Also note that over the 100+ years of data there have been "cool"
- and "warm" decades. Average temperatures for the last 20 years
- will, for several cities at least, be a little higher than the
- figures quoted here. Finally, the column giving number of days >
- 35 refers to maximum temperature, and the column of days < 2.3
- refers to the minimum temperature. This corresponds to an
- expected number of days of frost. A "rainday" is any day on which
- at least a trace (0.1mm) of rain is recorded in a standard rain
- guage.
- January
-
- Where av max av min days>35 days<2.3 Sun rainfall raindays
- C C # # hrs/day mm #
-
- Adelaide 28.5 16.6 5 0 10.6 20 4
- Alice Springs 36.0 21.2 21 0 10.2 35 5
- Brisbane 29.1 20.9 0 0 8.3 164 13
- Canberra 27.7 12.9 2 0 9.7 58 7
- Darwin 31.7 24.8 0 0 5.7 414 21
- Hobart 21.5 11.7 0 0 8.0 48 11
- Melbourne 25.7 14.0 5 0 8.6 48 8
- Perth 31.5 16.7 9 0 10.7 8 3
- Port Headland 36.3 25.3 19 0 10.5 56 5
- Sydney 26.2 18.4 1 0 7.5 100 11
- Townsville 31.2 24.1 1 0 7.8 283 15
- Weipa 31.9 23.9 1 0 5.5 448 21
-
- February
-
- Where av max av min days>35 days<2.3 Sun rainfall raindays
- C C # # hrs/day mm #
-
- Adelaide 28.5 16.8 4 0 10.3 21 4
- Alice Springs 34.9 20.6 16 0 9.9 42 5
- Brisbane 29.0 20.8 0 0 7.7 174 14
- Canberra 27.0 12.9 1 1 9.3 56 7
- Darwin 31.4 24.6 0 0 5.9 349 20
- Hobart 21.6 11.9 0 0 7.2 39 9
- Melbourne 25.7 14.3 3 0 8.5 47 7
- Perth 31.7 17.4 7 0 10.2 14 3
- Port Headland 36.2 25.3 17 0 10.2 98 7
- Sydney 26.2 18.7 1 0 7.4 111 11
- Townsville 30.9 23.8 0 0 7.1 296 16
- Weipa 31.4 23.9 0 0 4.8 410 20
-
- March
-
- Where av max av min days>35 days<2.3 Sun rainfall raindays
- C C # # hrs/day mm #
-
- Adelaide 26.0 15.2 2 0 8.4 24 5
- Alice Springs 32.5 17.4 9 9 9.7 37 3
- Brisbane 28.2 19.2 0 0 7.6 142 14
- Canberra 24.4 10.7 0 0 7.9 55 7
- Darwin 31.8 24.4 0 0 6.7 312 19
- Hobart 20.1 10.7 0 0 6.3 47 11
- Melbourne 23.8 13.0 1 1 6.8 52 9
- Perth 29.5 15.7 4 0 9.1 15 4
- Port Headland 36.7 24.4 22 0 9.8 44 4
- Sydney 25.2 17.2 0 0 7.0 127 12
- Townsville 30.4 22.8 0 0 7.3 212 14
- Weipa 31.6 23.5 0 0 5.3 337 20
-
- April
-
- Where av max av min days>35 days<2.3 Sun rainfall raindays
- C C # # hrs/day mm #
-
- Adelaide 22.1 12.7 0 0 7.2 44 9
- Alice Springs 27.9 12.5 1 0 9.4 14 2
- Brisbane 26.4 17.1 0 0 7.4 94 11
- Canberra 19.7 6.7 0 4 6.9 52 12
- Darwi 32.6 23.9 1 0 8.7 99 9
- Hobart 17.2 8.9 0 0 5.2 52 12
- Melbourne 20.2 10.6 0 0 5.6 58 12
- Perth 25.2 12.7 0 0 7.3 46 8
- Port Headland 35.1 21.1 17 0 9.8 22 2
- Sydney 22.8 13.9 0 0 6.6 109 11
- Townsville 29.4 20.4 0 0 7.7 68 8
- Weipa 31.9 22.6 0 0 7.1 112 10
-
- May
-
- Where av max av min days>35 days<2.3 Sun rainfall raindays
- C C # # hrs/day mm #
-
- Adelaide 18.6 10.4 0 0 5.3 68 13
- Alice Springs 22.9 8.3 0 2 8.4 18 3
- Brisbane 23.5 13.8 0 0 6.4 87 11
- Canberr 15.2 3.1 0 13 5.5 49 9
- Darwin 31.9 22.1 0 0 9.5 21 2
- Hobart 14.3 6.9 0 1 4.2 49 14
- Melbourne 16.6 8.5 0 1 4.4 58 14
- Perth 21.4 10.3 0 0 6.0 108 13
- Port Headland 30.3 17.1 2 0 8.9 29 3
- Sydney 19.9 10.5 0 0 5.8 98 11
- Townsville 27.4 17.5 0 0 7.3 37 6
- Weipa 31.5 21.3 0 0 7.5 16 3
-
- June
-
- Where av max av min days>35 days<2.3 Sun rainfall raindays
- C C # # hrs/day mm #
-
- Adelaide 15.8 8.5 0 0 4.6 72 15
- Alice Springs 19.8 5.2 0 9 8.4 14 3
- Brisbane 21.2 11.0 0 0 7.3 76 8
- Canberra 12.0 0.9 0 18 5.0 38 9
- Darwin 30.5 19.9 0 0 9.9 1 1
- Hobart 11.9 5.2 0 4 3.9 56 14
- Melbourne 13.9 6.7 0 3 4.0 50 14
- Perth 18.7 9.0 0 1 5.0 177 17
- Port Headland 27.4 13.9 0 0 8.7 19 3
- Sydney 17.4 8.2 0 0 6.1 129 11
- Townsville 25.4 14.3 0 0 7.9 22 4
- Weipa 30.6 19.6 0 0 7.4 4 1
-
- July
-
- Where av max av min days>35 days<2.3 Sun rainfall raindays
- C C # # hrs/day mm #
-
- Adelaide 14.9 7.5 0 0 4.8 67 16
- Alice Springs 19.4 4.0 0 12 9.0 15 3
- Brisbane 20.6 9.5 0 0 7.5 66 7
- Canberra 11.1 -0.2 0 22 5.6 42 10
- Darwin 30.4 19.3 0 0 10.0 1 0
- Hobart 11.5 4.5 0 6 4.4 54 15
- Melbourne 13.3 5.8 0 4 4.5 49 15
- Perth 17.6 8.0 0 1 5.4 163 18
- Port Headland 26.9 12.0 0 0 9.1 10 2
- Sydney 16.8 6.6 0 1 6.6 69 9
- Townsville 24.8 13.6 0 0 8.4 15 3
- Weipa 30.5 18.9 0 0 7.5 2 1
-
- August
-
- Where av max av min days>35 days<2.3 Sun rainfall raindays
- C C # # hrs/day mm #
-
- Adelaide 16.1 8.0 0 0 5.8 62 16
- Alice Springs 22.3 6.1 0 7 9.7 11 2
- Brisbane 21.7 10.1 0 0 8.5 43 7
- Canberra 12.7 1.0 0 19 6.6 48 12
- Darwin 31.2 20.6 0 0 10.2 7 1
- Hobart 12.9 5.1 0 4 5.0 52 15
- Melbourne 14.8 6.5 0 2 5.2 51 16
- Perth 18.3 7.9 0 1 6.4 116 16
- Port Headland 28.9 13.0 0 0 10.2 4 1
- Sydney 18.0 7.7 0 0 7.9 80 10
- Townsville 25.9 14.7 0 0 8.3 2 1
- Weipa
-
- September
-
- Where av max av min days>35 days<2.3 Sun rainfall raindays
- C C # # hrs/day mm #
-
- Adelaide 18.4 9.2 0 0 6.6 51 13
- Alice Springs 26.6 9.9 1 1 10.0 9 2
- Brisbane 23.8 12.6 0 0 9.1 32 7
- Canberra 15.9 3.0 0 13 7.4 51 10
- Darwin 32.4 23.1 2 0 9.8 17 2
- Hobart 15.0 6.3 0 1 5.9 52 15
- Melbourne 17.1 7.8 0 1 5.7 59 15
- Perth 20.0 8.8 0 0 7.4 68 13
- Port Headland 32.2 15.2 5 0 10.8 1 1
- Sydney 20.2 9.8 0 0 7.8 60 10
- Townsville 27.5 17.1 0 0 9.5 10 2
- Weipa 33.3 20.0 4 0 8.6 6 1
-
- October
-
- Where av max av min days>35 days<2.3 Sun rainfall raindays
- C C # # hrs/day mm #
-
- Adelaide 21.3 11.1 0 0 8.4 44 11
- Alice Springs 30.8 14.7 7 0 10.0 21 5
- Brisbane 25.7 15.7 0 0 8.5 98 10
- Canberra 19.2 5.9 0 6 8.7 66 11
- Darwin 33.1 25.0 2 0 9.5 71 6
- Hobart 16.9 7.7 0 0 6.4 64 16
- Melbourne 19.6 9.3 0 0 6.8 68 14
- Perth 22.3 10.1 0 0 8.8 48 10
- Port Headland 34.5 18.0 15 0 11.5 1 1
- Sydney 22.3 12.8 0 0 8.0 76 11
- Townsville 29.3 20.5 0 0 9.8 23 5
- Weipa 34.8 21.4 15 0 9.2 27 2
-
- November
-
- Where av max av min days>35 days<2.3 Sun rainfall raindays
- C C # # hrs/day mm #
-
- Adelaide 24.4 13.1 2 0 9.1 31 8
- Alice Springs 33.5 17.8 13 0 10.2 26 5
- Brisbane 27.3 18.0 0 0 8.5 95 10
- Canberra 22.5 8.5 0 2 9.1 62 10
- Darwin 33.1 25.3 2 0 8.4 142 12
- Hobart 18.6 9.2 0 0 6.9 55 14
- Melbourne 21.8 11.0 1 0 7.4 59 12
- Perth 25.4 12.4 1 0 9.9 26 7
- Port Headland 36.1 21.1 18 0 11.8 3 1
- Sydney 23.9 15.0 1 0 8.1 83 11
- Townsville 30.7 22.8 1 0 9.4 53 7
- Weipa 34.6 23.2 13 0 9.1 105 8
-
- December
-
- Where av max av min days>35 days<2.3 Sun rainfall raindays
- C C # # hrs/day mm #
-
- Adelaide 26.8 15.1 4 0 9.5 26 6
- Alice Springs 35.4 20.1 18 0 10.3 37 5
- Brisbane 28.8 19.9 0 0 8.7 126 11
- Canberra 26.0 11.1 1 0 9.4 53 8
- Darwin 32.6 25.3 1 0 7.2 229 16
- Hobart 20.2 10.7 0 0 7.3 57 13
- Melbourne 24.1 12.7 2 0 8.1 59 11
- Perth 28.5 14.6 4 0 10.7 12 4
- Port Headland 36.6 23.7 20 0 11.4 19 2
- Sydney 25.6 17.2 1 0 8.3 77 10
- Townsville 31.4 23.9 1 0 8.9 127 10
- Weipa 33.3 23.9 5 0 7.4 253 15
-
- Here's some statistics from "Australia in Brief" from the
- Commonwealth Bookshop: [TN] "Weather in Australia's capital" (A
- rain day is a day on which rainfall is 0.2 mm or more)
-
- Hours Rain- # of Mean temp Mean temp
- sun fall rain hottest coldest
- /day days* month month
- Adel 7.6 559 122 23.0 11.1
- Bris 7.9 1217 123 25.0 15.0
- Canb 7.5 629 108 20.3 5.4
- Darw 8.5 1669 110 29.2 24.8
- Hoba 5.9 628 160 16.5 7.9
- Melb 6.3 655 147 19.9 9.5
- Pert 7.9 869 119 24.0 13.2
- Sydn 6.7 1219 139 22.1 12.0
-
- Online weather informationr [IC]
-
- It's possible to find out the current weather for any state of
- Australia from the Victorian Bureau of Meterology via telnet.
-
- % telnet vicbeta.vic.bom.gov.au 55555
- | ************ VIC WEATHER - MAIN MENU ************
- |
- | 1 = CURRENT MELB FORECAST
- | 2 = CURRENT VIC FORECAST
- | [...]
- | 9 = INTERSTATE FORECASTS .................(menu)
- | 10 = INTERSTATE CITIES MET OBS
- |
- |enter choice => 1
- |
- |***********************START MELBOURNE FORC*********************
- |
- | Forecast for Melbourne issued by the Bureau of Meteorology Melbourne
- | at 2145 on 21/09/1993 for WEDNESDAY.
- |
- | CLOUDY PERIODS WITH A FEW SHOWERS. COOL WITH A MODERATE WEST TO
- | SOUTHWEST WIND.
- ie Typical Melbourne Weather :-) [IC]
- | MIN = 8 MAX = 16
- |
- | OUTLOOK THURSDAY. FINE. MAX = ABOUT 17
- | OUTLOOK FRIDAY. FINE. MAX = ABOUT 19
- | OUTLOOK SATURDAY. MAINLY FINE. MAX = ABOUT 19
-
- | CURRENT OBSERVED TEMPERATURE (within last hour)
- | MELB MELBOURNE CITY 10.5
-
-
- GOPHER: The Bureau of Meteorology has just set up a Gopher server
- to provide forecast information for each state and territory
- around Australia. Currently only textual information is
- available, but we hope to add charts and satellite images
- sometime in the future. The server is known as
- "babel.ho.bom.gov.au" and should be accessible through AARNET at
- the normal Gopher port (i.e port 70). Please note : This service
- is initially purely experimental and will not be supported
- outside normal office hours. Contact : Justin Baker, Central
- Operations and Systems Branch, Bureau of Meteorology, Melbourne,
- Australia e-mail : justinb@bom.gov.au.
-
- For anyone chasing facts and figures about Australia I would
- recommend The Book Of Australia Almanac, "The essential
- information book on everything Australian". (524 pages) My copy
- is the 1991-92 Ed. which cost me $2 at a sale in Melbourne, so I
- assume that there is a later edition out now. Published by
- Hodder & Stoughton, 10-16 South St, Rydalmere, NSW, 2116 [JN]
-
- Relative sizes of countries. Before the breakup of the USSR, the
- order was: USSR (by far the biggest, more than twice the size of
- any other country), then Canada, China, USA (inc. Alaska), Brazil
- and Australia, making Australia number 6 in area. That Brazil was
- slightly bigger than Oz was a bit of a surprise to me. I haven't
- seen the stats for Russia, but given that in round figures it was
- something like 22 for the USSR to 9 for Canada, the order seems
- unlikely to have changed. [JH]
-
- Time Zones. Australia has three basic time zones; Eastern Central
- Time (EST) (NSW, Vic, Qld, Tas) GMT+10, Central (SA, NT) GMT+9
- 1/2, and the west coast GMT+8. NSW, SA, Vic, Tas, ACT put their
- clocks forward an hour for "Daylight Savings" over the summer.
- (WA, Qld, and the NT do not. [SW] Queensland had a referendum
- for Daylight Saving in 1990 after a trial summer the year before.
- Due largely to the country vote, the referendum failed by
- something like 53%/47%.)
-
- * Comparative GDP etc [TvR]
-
- Some time ago there was a debate on Soc.culture.Australia about
- GDP at purchasing power per head expressed in US $ ... the
- Economist has compiled a list in its christmas issue . to set
- the records straight a lot of countries that would be high on the
- list Norway,Denmark,Netherlands, Belgium are not included in the
- sample.. here are some of the data.
-
- GDP per Pollution Cars Second Doctors Murders
- head at CO2 per per school per per
- $PPP head 1000 rate % 100.000 100.000
- 1991
-
- USA 22300 19.7 589 92 238 13.3
- Switzerland 21780 5.9 447 85 159 1.4
- Germany 19770 10.5 490 97 270 1.0
- Japan 19390 8.5 285 96 164 0.7
- Canada 19320 17.3 473 99 222 2.5
- Hong-Kong 18520 7.0 29 90 93 1.7
- France 18430 6.4 418 99 286 1.3
- Sweden 17490 7.0 419 91 270 1.7
- Italy 17040 6.8 459 79 476 3.6
- Australia 16680 15.5 435 83 229 2.7
- Britain 16340 9.9 403 84 164 1.0
- New Zealand 13970 7.8 455 89 174 3.4
- Spain 12670 5.2 308 90 357 1.2
-
- 6.5 Sport
-
- Australian Rules Football.
-
- This is the main football code played in Vic, SA, WA and
- Tasmania. The Australian Football League consists of 10 teams
- based in Melbourne, plus Geelong, Sydney, Brisbane, Perth and
- Adelaide. (It was established a few years ago from an expanded
- VFL.) Fixtures, results, statistics and match reports are
- available from rec.sport.football.australian. Pre-season night
- competition begins the end of February. Main season is end of
- March to August, with finals series in September. West Coast won
- in 1992, Essendon won the flag in 1993. (Carn the Ds in '94!
- [AN] :-).
-
- There is a competition of about 8 women's teams in Melbourne, and the
- sport does not seem to be growing.
-
- (If it isn't obvious, Melbourne is the home of this "sport".
- Melbourne's winter football mania is one great reason NOT to be
- there in winter! [CP, who probably still has cleat marks on his
- back from his school days] :-P.)
-
- Rugby.
-
- The main football code in NSW and Qld is rugby. Rugby League is
- the professional sport (reigning premiers are the Brisbane
- Broncos, who beat St. George 14-6 this year), rugby union is
- still "amateur". Rec.sport.rugby contains some postings about
- rugby in Australia (though is dominated by discussion of the
- rugby union 5 nations competition and the World Cup).
-
- As far as I know there is no organised women's rugby in Australia
- (we did not send a team to the 1991 World Cup held in Wales).
-
- [SW] Rugby League is played by girls up to age 12 or 13 in both
- schools and weekend competition in mixed teams with boys. I
- believe that after that age they are no longer allowed to play
- mixed. However, I did see an article on Wide World of Sports on
- Channel 9 in August 1993 depicting a Rugby League for Women Grand
- Final out of Sydney.
-
- Cricket.
-
- The most widespread summer sport is cricket. Australia plays
- regulars Tests against England (for the Ashes), NZ, India, the
- West Indies, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, and now that they have been
- re-admitted to the fold, South Africa. Each summer there are two
- touring teams which play in a 3-way One-Day series. The state
- competition is for the Sheffield Shield (4-day matches), which is
- only semi-professional. (Qld has never won this :-). Many men
- and boys play club cricket on the weekends (usually Saturday).
-
- Women's cricket has been established quite a long time (first
- Test versus England in 1934) but continues to be a minority sport
- for women. There are about 100 club sides in Melbourne. The
- Australian women's team is the best in the world; I believe there
- has even been some TV coverage of Test and/or One-day cricket
- recently.
-
- Note: live commentary of cricket matches is available via IRC
- (Internet relay chat). It is available on the channel #cricket
- and people discuss the match on #crickettalk. Information on this
- is posted reguarly to rec.sport.cricket. There is a cricket
- information service, called CricInfo, available on gopher - see
- rec.sport.cricket also for how to access it.
-
- Baseball.
-
- There is the ABL (Australian Baseball League). It is only 3-5
- years old. There are 8 teams - Brisbane, Gold Coast, Sydney, 2
- from Melbourne, Adelaide, Waverley and Perth. The season consists
- of 14 games of regular season played in January and February of
- each year. [SW]
-
- Basketball.
-
- NBL consists of 14 teams (although Hobart Tassie Devils might not
- play in 1994 because of financial problems). Season is usually
- from March/April until September. Each team is only allowed 2
- imports (i.e. non Australian citizens). NBL was created in the
- late 70's and has expanded since then, with several of the
- original teams either leaving or being renamed/relocated. [SW]
-
- Athletics.
-
- Horse Racing.
-
- Is everywhere. Traditionally Australians love to gamble. The
- Melbourne Cup is the biggest race of the year. There is a holiday
- for it in Melbourne. For a few minutes on the Tuesday after the
- first Monday in November the whole country stops to listen
- (supposedly). Work place sweeps proliferate. Phar Lap, which won
- the Melbourne Cup in 1930, is a national hero, and his stuffed
- body may be seen in the Melbourne musuem.
-
- Netball.
-
- There are over 1/2 million registered netball players in
- Australia, so it is by far the most popular women's sport.
-
- Softball.
-
- Is the most popular women's summer sport.
-
- Soccer.
- [contributions? AN]
-
- Other Sports.
-
- Field hockey is very popular for both men and women, and we do
- well in International competition. Many people play squash.
- Other sports played include badminton, volleyball, table tennis,
- yachting, rowing, swimming, cycling... [any more? AN]
-
- 6.6 Travel
-
- These 3 questions were posted at one stage. Here are a summary
- of answers.
-
- 1. How are the conditions of the streets (or roads?) in Australia
- in January? I heard that the roads in the North are often
- overflowed. Is this right?
-
- 2. We want to rent a car (or jeep or motor home) to go through
- Australia. Which kind of car is required or recommended
- (especially for the desert in the center of Australia)?
-
- 3. Maybe we want to fly within Australia. Which airlines are
- recommended and how much are the prizes (examples are enough)?
-
- Answers
-
- (1)
-
- Roads are O.K. around here - but I live in Sydney :- I don't know
- about the roads up north because I have never been there..
-
- I've never heard of roads being overflowed, unless you mean
- flooded (with water). This has happenned over the last couple of
- summers in the northern tropics, but roads are generally only cut
- for a few days. If you want to travel north, it is usually best
- to do that May to November when it is dry and travel south
- September to April. [FS]
-
- The monsoon hits the far north of australia, so the roads may be
- flooded and only usable by boats. however this only is a problem
- north of townsville in queensland and around darwin in the
- northern teritory the rest of the country is in summer HOT and
- dry for the most part but its is much colder in the southern
- parts and you may have some rain down there... IT IS A BIG PLACE
- and spands a large part of the earth!! [FW]
-
- The term 'condition' usually implies whether they are good for
- driving on or not. The term 'streets' usually means the roads in
- the cities. The term 'roads' usually refers to the highways,
- etc. So, to answer your question: they are generally in a good
- condition to drive on (the government has spent a lot of money
- lately fixing up the roads). I'm not sure where you mean exactly
- when you say 'north' since there is a lot to the north half of
- Australia (covering three states and many thousands of
- kilometres). If you mean Queensland (North East) then the roads
- are usually busy with holiday travellers. If you mean Northern
- Territory (North Central of Australia) then the roads are usually
- busy before Christmas (although there are still a number of
- people about on the roads). If you mean in Western Australia
- (North West) then you will find a lot of outback, very few
- people, few roads, and few cars. I think you mean Northern
- Territory ? [IC]
-
- No worries. Stay on the highways and you'll have no problems. It
- often rains a bit, but it is rare these days to have major
- holdups. But don't go off on to unsealed roads. [RC]
-
- (2)
-
- Almost every area in Australia is accessible by any car. That is,
- as long as you stay on the bitch (bitumen) you can go anywhere.
- If you really want to go off the beaten track you will need a
- 4WD, but I've never owned one and I've never felt that I've
- missed anything. If you want a cheap form of accommodation that
- you can take almost anywhere, hire a motor home. If you can
- afford the outlay, and you are staying long enough, the cheapest
- way by far is to buy something civilised and semi reliable, then
- sell it before you go (you could pick up a half decent mid range
- car for A$3-4,000. [FS]
-
- Unless you have driven a four wheel drive (4WD) in sand/mud
- before then stick to a conventional car/motor home they are
- cheaper and you will probably not have enough time to spend
- exploring the rougher areas. If you want to see a sight that is
- only avaliable by 4WD then there is probanbly a tour that will
- get you there and back for less trouble than hireing a 4WD. [FW]
-
- I would recommend a four-wheel drive vehicle for driving around
- through the desert in the centre of Australia. A motor-home will
- probably slow you down and use up a lot more petrol, a jeep will
- probably mean you will get sunburnt very easy. [IC]
-
- A bloody big one mate.! Rent a car, Ford or Holden from a
- reputable company, with air conditioning. Stay in motels and
- hotels. Don't leave the main roads, and even then, carry a 15ltr
- can of water if you go more than 200 km inland from any city on
- the coast. Travel with other vehicles in convoy if you can
- arrange it. Does this sound bad? keep in mind that there are only
- 17 million people in Oz, and most of those live in Melbourne,
- Sydney, Perth, Brisbane and Adelaide, then Darwin. That doesn't
- leave many to spread out over a country that is the size of
- Europe, plus England, plus lower Medetranian etc. Try it on a
- map. It can be many days between passing cars in central
- Australia, and if you are broken down, you MUST stay with your
- vehicle. My advice ? See Australia by bus tour, the only way to
- go unless you are prepared to face the last frontier and all the
- hardships that that entails. And wear a hat. The temperature can
- be 40+ C in the shade. [RC]
-
- (3)
-
- I never fly when going on holidays in Australia. This is because
- everything is so spread out. You fly somewhere then you have to
- hire a car to get out and see something, unless you want to ride
- on a sheep truck (tourist bus). Also when you fly you miss out on
- all the good things in between major centres where the airports
- are built. [FS]
-
- You should arang this as part of your air ticket to australia as
- it will be cheaper than buying the air tickest here. All of the
- australian air lines are very good one of the best safety records
- in the world sometimes the service may not be the best but its a
- lot better than some of the service I have had in other parts of
- the world. Basicly pick out what you want to see ask where it
- is, there may be a number of sites eg desert, we have about 5,
- sandy, stony etc then plan your trip it would take 4 days to
- cross the country east west 3 days to cross north south by fast
- car, with no stops for sight seeing... [FW]
-
- [IC] I presume you are not going to book these flights until you
- get to Australia (so you can ask around and get the best price at
- the time). However, the problem with this may be that many
- airlines will be heavily booked and getting a flight during the
- holiday season in Australia may take some time.
-
- Unfortunately, a local airline company (called Compass) went
- broke for the second time and a lot of really cheap flights
- within Australia have gone. (There are 3 main local airlines now
- - Ansett, Australian Airlines, East-West Airlines and Qantas
- [mainly international flights])
-
- I don't have any actual information handy,so I am guessing here
- and these are my own approximate guesses (Prices in Australian
- Dollars):
-
- * Sydney - Perth. This is a long trip. Probably $700 - $900
- Apparently it is cheaper to fly to New Zealand than to fly to Perth
- from Sydney.
- * Sydney - Darwin Approximately $400
- * Darwin - Perth Approximately $600
- * Flights to Tasmania (or is going by ship better?) If you don't
- think you'll get sea sick, then a ship (from Melbourne) will probably
- end up being cheaper.
-
- I have from a paper some exact figures from Melbourne:- (This is
- Ansett Airlines and the price is for a return ticket).
-
- Melbourne <-> Sydney $179
- Melbourne <-> Adelaide $189
- Melbourne <-> Canberra $199
- Melbourne <-> Brsisbane $289
- Melbourne <-> Perth $419
- Melbourne <-> Cairns $489
-
- Another paper I have quotes this price (it is a 17 day package) :-
- * Darwin <-> Perth (Aeroplane and Bus) 17 days $3973
- [includes hotel accommodation, plane, bus fares and most meals]
-
- Travel in Australia and New Zealand (JO)
-
- This gives some comments on travel in Australia and New Zealand.
- I have some definite biases and will admit them as appropriate.
- Also, I am assuming that the reader has an atlas with maps of
- Australia and New Zealand.
-
- I include New Zealand because anyone making the trip down here
- would be insane to miss it. It is small but has very varied
- scenery and is well worth the time. Flying time from Los Angeles
- to Sydney is about 17 hours. I happen to be tall and wide
- shouldered and find economy class seats very uncomfortable. (I
- have a theory that they were designed by a small, sadistic
- feminist). Consequently, I arrive very tired and jet lagged so I
- allow 3 to 4 days for recovery before doing anything. If you can
- sleep on the plane, you will be better off but don't plan on
- sightseeing the day you arrive. Allow at least one day to rest up
- from the flight.
-
- My biases:
- - I don't like large cities, deserts or rainforests.
- - I do like small cities, mountains, beaches and seacoasts.
- - I think that the US and Canada have some of the most beautiful
- scenery and interesting cities in the world. Australia needs your
- money and I would love to meet you but honesty compels me to say you
- should see the US and Canada first.
-
- New Zealand: Two islands unimaginatively called North and South
- Island. The North Island has some high volcanic mountains, lots
- of rolling pastoral scenery, and an area called Rotorura with
- gysers, hot spings etc. Sort of a minature Yellowstone. It also
- has an area called the Bay of Islands which is supposed to be
- very nice but I've never seen it. I love the South Island. It
- contains Mt Cook and the Southern Alps which are gorgeous. A
- mountain resort called Queenstown is very scenic and pleasant.
- If you like skiing, come in August and ski the Southern Alps.
- There is a coastal area with a town called Te Anu near a place
- called Milford Sound. This is like a Norwegian fjord and very
- well worth visiting. It has a world famous hiking track called
- the Milford Trail with guided expeditions of 3 to 5 days (NZ
- summers only). Finally, the city of Christchurch is very
- attractive - very English with lots of gardens and parks. Time:
- 5 days to a week for one island, 2 weeks for both islands
-
- Australia (working from south to north)
-
- I have never seen Adelaid or Western Australia so make no
- comments. Also note that Australia is large. You will need to
- fly unless you like long train or bus trips. Don't plan on
- intercity driving. The roads are poor and there is nothing like
- the US interstate highway system.
-
- Hobart in Tasmania is a small but very nice city. It has a
- beautiful harbor, steep hills and some very good seafood
- restaurants and a colony of artists and craft workers. (San
- Francisco in minature). It is a popular tourist area for
- Australians but most overseas visitors miss it. Tasmania itself
- is popular with Australians because it is very different from the
- mainland. Cooler and wetter, greener and has more trees and some
- heavily forested low mountains. People from the eastern or
- northwest US would probably not see much point in visiting it.
- If you are from the plains or southwest US than it will be
- different from home.
-
- Melbourne - Sydney and Melbourne have a long standing feud (like
- San Franciso and Los Angeles). Its a nice city if you like
- cities of 3 1/2 million. It does have a beautful art gallery
- with a good collection, some lovely parks, and a number of
- wildlife preserves nearby in the Dandenong mountains. It also
- has a good public transport system of trams (streetcars) which
- are fun to ride. There are a lot of good restaurants and I think
- there is an "Eating Out in Melbourne" guide book which is
- supposed to be reliable. Eating in the major hotels is a recipe
- for bankruptcy. (Just like the US.)
-
- Sydney - Its slightly bigger than Melbourne, suffers from a
- horrible urban sprawl, driving is terrible (no freeways) but
- there is good bus and train service. The harbor and Opera House
- are just as beautiful as you have heard. There are harbor
- ferries which are fun to ride. The ferry service has several
- guided tours of the harbor which are relatively inexpensive and
- worth the time. The Opera House also has guided tours. There is
- an historical area near the harbor called "The Rocks" which is
- fun to wander through. Note that down here anything older than
- 100 years is "historical. My unimaginative but practical
- suggestion is that the best way to see Sydney is to take one of
- the bus tours like Grayline. They all go to the same places .
- There is a public zoo (Taronga Park) which can be reached by
- ferry. That is the easy way to see koalas and kangaroos. There
- is also a "Koala Park" that I've never been to. I think its
- included in many of the sight seeing tours. Sydney also has an
- "Eating Out" guide and plenty of good restaurants of all
- nationalities. It lacks chains such as Denny's or Sizzlers but
- the take away snack bar food is fairly good. Not gourmet but
- they won't poison you.
-
- Outside Sydney, the major tourist area is the Blue Mountains.
- They are not high (1500 meters/5000 feet) but are scenic. If you
- like caves, try the Jenolan caves near Katoomba in the Blue
- Mountains. There are coach tours from Sydney to the Blue
- Mountains and the caves. Alternatively, take a train to Katoomba
- (2 hours, $8) and than catch one of the coach tours there. I
- believe the railroad organizes this. You might want to stay one
- or two nights. There are plenty of good motels. I can also
- recommend the train trip to Wollongong as very scenic but then I
- am biased since I live there!
-
- The Whitsunday Islands: Now we jump 1500 km to central
- Queensland. The Whitsunday Islands are a group of small,
- semi-tropical islands at about 20S latitude. You may be able to
- find the largest (Whitsunday Island of course) in an atlas. The
- nearest towns are Bowen and Proserpine. Two islands, Hamilton
- and Hayman, have been developed as international standard resorts
- at international standard prices. A number of other islands have
- "family style" resorts aimed at the ordinary Australian.
- Hamilton Island has an airport. You can fly directly to it and
- take a boat to the other islands. All the other islands have
- check in counters at the Hamilton Island airport.
-
- South Molle was run by Ansett Airlines. Their lease expires in
- June '94 and they are not renewing it. So far, I have not heard
- whether it is closing down or someone else is taking over.
- Radisson Long Island Resort was targetted at the 18 - 35 age
- range. It has just been purchased by another company. The new
- owners say it will cater to all ages. I don't know if they plan
- to redevelop or whatever [JO].
-
- The islands are inside the Great Barrier Reef. All the resorts
- provide high speed catamarran trips to the outer reef (about 2
- hours to get there). There you can snorkle, take glass bottom
- boat trips or take a ride in a "submarine". These don't
- submerge. You sit inside the underwater hull and look out
- through big windows. The Whitsunday Island region is world
- famous for scuba diving and sailing. There are dive boat
- operators for qualified scuba divers. The island resorts also
- have dive courses. Yachts can be rented for bareboat cruising and
- there are tour operators who take people on 5 to 7 day cruises of
- the islands using 45 to 55 foot yachts . You sail in the daytime
- and camp on the beaches with tents, sleeping bags and air
- mattresses at night. The operator provides the camping gear,
- crew and cook. This is a bit of "pot luck" since you will be
- with strangers and the boat might have 6 passangers or 18. The
- cooking is also "pot luck" because the cook will probably be a
- young woman who is touring Austarlia and has signed on for only
- one trip. With luck, she may know how to cook! I did this once
- and liked it. For details, ask your travel agent for brochures
- on the Queensland Islands, Whitsunday Islands or Northern
- Queensland.
-
- Cairns and Cape York: Now jump another 1000 km north. Cairns is
- in the tropics at about 9S latitude and is also inside the Great
- Barrier Reef. It has access to the reef and the rainforest of
- Cape York. When I went there it was small and very lovely.
- There are no beaches in Cairns but some beautiful tropical
- beaches to the north of it and around Port Douglas (an hour drive
- to the north). Since I was there, it has been developed as an
- international tourist resort (mostly for Japanese). I don't know
- what the town is like now but the reef and rain forest are still
- there. Cairns is an international airport with flights to Japan,
- New Zealand and the US. You could go skiing in NZ in August and
- than fly to Cairns for swimming and sunning on the reef.
- Warning: Don't go to Cairns or the Whitsunday Islands between
- December and March. That's the cyclone (hurricane) season.
-
- The Outback: I've never been there and have no interest in it.
- However, if you want desert, kangaroos, or dingoes than Alice
- Springs and Uluru (Ayers Rock) are supposed to be very good.
- There is also a tropical park called Kakadu in the Darwin area.
- Its reported to have lots of crocodiles and birdlife and be very
- interesting if that's your thing. Watch the weather. The rainy
- season is said to be awful - roughly November to March.
-
- *Accomodation at Uluru (Ayers Rock) [GR]
-
- 1) If you are a group 4/5/6 ++ people look at the possiblity of
- renting a mobile home... It is stationary but cost about A$50/day.
- 2) Pioneer Outback Hotel (A$80/night bed/bath)..booked through AAT
- Kings travel agency..very pleased
- 3) Kitchenettes... somewhere in the 60 to 100 dollar range... double
- bed, a/c, share bathroom...best choice at price
- 4) Check with NT beaureau
-
- * Place of interest in Tasmania?
-
- [JL] Things I would look at:
-
- The Gorge in Launceston
- Hellyer Gorge on the West Coast
- Ocean Beach at Strahan
- day walks at Lake St Clair (overnight if you're set up)
- SW rainforest (might be difficult - check out adventure tours out of Hobart)
- scuba diving at Bicheno
- fishing on the East Coast
-
- Tas Redline Coaches, who have some sort of Tassie Pass for out of
- state travellers (008 006 006). However [MP] Just be careful to
- investigate the Red Line Tassie Pass a little more carefully. I
- spent several weeks in Tassie and loved it with one exception:
- actually getting around. The Pass doesn't even go to certain
- parts of the island and when it does it's usually once a day,
- every other day, and things like that. It's possible to rent a
- VW bug for A$25 per day or something which really works well if
- there are two or three of you. Four, five or six might be
- pushing it a little. Simply drawing out your itinerary
- beforehand and then pricing it on individual tickets actually
- competes with the Pass within a few dollars believe it or not!
-
- * Accomodation tips to the low budget motorhome traveller (BB)
-
- 1. Obtain the Automobile club district maps for the area. They
- are the best to navigate by showing all the sights to see and
- have "Rest Areas" marked on them. Now some rest areas can be
- nothing more than a rubbish bin on the side of the road but
- others, particularly in Queensland can have toilets,fresh water
- and even showers. As a traveller you can stay for up to two
- nights at a proper rest area. I know of two places within 20mins
- of the Gold Coast for example.
-
- 2. Obtain information from National Parks, State Conservation
- Areas and State Forests on camping areas. Most are free and those
- that you have to pay at are generally worth it. I regularly stay
- the night in a State Forest near the Sunshine Coast.
-
- 3. Many remote picnic areas, lookouts etc are also good for one
- night even if the sign says "No Camping". Who's going to know if
- it's only one night and you don't make it obvious. Up to 10pm
- your only having a BBQ before returning to the camp aren't you.
- I'm not campin' I'm goin' fishin'!. And of course you got up
- early to have breakfast in the bush.
-
- 4. The first bit of bush you like. Often there are areas of
- unfenced land on the side of the road. Just find a track and
- drive in (careful if raining, don't get bogged). With all bush
- sites I prefer to be as far away from the road as I can. First
- because it's quieter. Second - if they can't see you they can't
- bother you, even if it's some kids wanting to hoon around. I can
- remember one night at Mallacoota this young couple drove right
- passed us into the centre of the clearing (it was dark). She got
- out and urinated on the ground in full view then back into the
- car for some fun. Suddenly they realised that they were not
- alone. Engine on, quick reverse out of their favourite parking
- spot!
-
- I have been touring this way for 24 years without any trouble but
- a lot of adventure. Camping grounds are for when you desperately
- need a shower or to wash the clothes. They invaribly are built
- next to the highway or railway, have noisey people who insist on
- partying all night and wasting the daylight hours sleeping in,
- and aren't anything like being in the bush at dusk or dawn when
- the native animals are active.
-
- 6.7 Health Care
-
- [XXX Anyone want to write a paragraph or 2 describing out health
- care system?]
-
- 6.8 Miscellaneous
-
- * Sydney is spelt with a "y", not Sidney. It was named after
- Baron Sydney of Chislehurst, the Home Secretary at the time when
- the First Fleet arrived. Actually, they named Sydney Cove and
- the city was supposed to be called Albion, but it didn't come out
- that way. [HG]
-
- * Tasmanian Aborigines and Trugannini
-
- The "tradition" view [AD]:
-
- The last hundred survivors of the Tasmanian aborigines were
- rounded up in an operation known as the "black line" about the
- 1850s. They were all moved to a settlement on Flinders Island at
- a place called Wybalenna. They were forced to adopt "christian"
- society clothing/behaviour.. They gradually died out fron the
- european diseases until, when there were only about 30 left they
- were moved to Oyster Cove in southern Tasmania. They gradually
- died out.
-
- The last male survivor was William Lanney. He was murdered
- during a boat trip across a river. He was thrown from the boat
- and his hands cut off as he tried to return to the boat. After
- he was buried grave robbers removed his head to sell to British
- Scientists.
-
- The last female survivor was Trucaninni (or Truganinni) who was
- also known as Lallah Rookh. She died in about 1878. There are
- unconfirmed reports of two elderly ladies living on Kangaroo
- Island (i think) South Australia until about the 1890s.
-
- There are NO full blood aborigines alive today. A fair few
- aborigines live on Cape Barren Island, just south of Flinders
- Island (in Bass strait between Tasmania and Victoria). Racisim
- on the islands is rife IMHO.
-
- White sealers often stole aboriginal women for their sex slaves,
- and half-castes were generally descended from these situations.
- The women were known as " gins" and were roughly treated.
-
- An interesting facet of this story is that in 1984, the Tasmanian
- Museum discovered an Edison Cylindrical Phonograph record in it's
- coffers which had recordings of a half-caste lady (who claimed
- she was full blooded). She was singing traditional aboriginal
- songs. The recording was made in 1902. A very stirring feeling
- listening to this 90 year old recording of a vanished culture and
- it makes me feel very ashamed to be a white Tasmanian.
-
- [XXX Can someone write a paragraph about how there really
- are Tasmanian aboriginals left? AN]
-
- * What is "Mabo"?
-
- The High Court, in the "Mabo" decision, eliminated the previous
- terra nullius principle of land ownership in Australia, and
- stated that there was a Common Law ownership by the indigenous
- people, unless that title had been extinguished by a valid Act of
- the imperial. colonial, state, commonwealth or territorial
- parliamnts. They also said that common law ownership depended on
- a demostrated continuos link between the people and that land.
- [JB]
-
- * Tasmanian Devils and Tasmanian Tigers [KB]
-
- The Tasmanian Devil population is relatively large and is on the
- whole very healthy. There is some problem with a heartworm type
- parasite which has (of course) originated from introduced
- species. The government authority is aware of this and are
- maintaining close watch and quarrantine on infected groups. It
- shouldn't be too great a problem. Tasmanian Devils are a quasi
- animal emblem some suggest ambassador for the state so any threat
- to their survival is taken very seriously.
-
- A bit about the TD, they do hunt, even climb trees, but generally
- prefer to consume carrion aka dead wallabies, livestock, etc.
- The TD species appears to one of the few natives that actually
- have thrived and increased in population with the arrival of
- European man. Especially now we have a brutally efficient means
- of producing carrion aka the motor vehicle which leaves plenty of
- road kill for the devils. We also have the tendency to aggregate
- large numbers of live food such as hens and sheep for the devils
- to maraude occasionally.
-
- Historically the devils used to follow the now extinct Tasmanian
- Tiger. Looked much more like a large dog actually.The TT was a
- notoriously inefficient hunter which just used to lay in wait for
- prey and lunge onto them as they passed, normally only managing
- to wound them and then tracking the animal until it was so weak
- from blood loss etc that it was able to be slaughtered. It is
- suggested that the TT would then feed off its kill until the
- devils arrived on masse and drove it away. Consequently when
- European man arrived with their sheep the TT soon adapted to this
- new abunndant and tractable food source and got a reputation for
- killing livestock. In my opinion the new settlers own dogs were
- much more likey to have killed most of the livestock, they still
- do. As history will show the government of the day reacted to the
- hysteria about the TT and offered a sizeable bounty for each TT
- scalp. The last known TT died in captivity in 1933.
-
- * The Australian Flag
-
- In vexillogical terms, the Australian flag is a defaced blue
- ensign. In the upper hoist (top left corner) is the Union Flag
- (ie the flag of the United Kingdom). On the fly (right) of the
- flag, are 5 white stars, representing the Southern Cross, a
- constellation of stars generally only visible in the southern
- hemisphere. Each of these stars has 7 points except for the
- smallest star which has only five.
-
- Directly below the Union Flag is a large 7 pointed white star
- called the Federation Star, representing the federation of the
- colonies of Australia in 1901 to become an independent nation of
- the British Commonwealth. There is one point for each of the six
- states, and one to represent all of Australia's internal and
- external territories.
-
- The length:height ratio of the flag is 2:1.
-
- * History of the Australian Flag
-
- Australia's national flag was chosen from a national flag
- competition held in 1901. Initially started by a Melbourne
- newspaper, the competition was taken up by the new Federal
- Government, and it attracted 32 823 entries. Although not a part
- of the official entry rules, the judges proscribed that the
- design *must* contain the Union Flag. The winning design was in
- fact shared by five people who submitted almost identical
- entries. Australia's first Prime Minister, Edmund Barton,
- announced the winning design in Melbourne on 3 September 1901.
- The design had a mixed reception and caused much controversy at
- the time.
-
- The original design was as described above, except the Federation
- Star contained only 6 points and the Southern Cross was
- represented by stars ranging from 5 to 9 points to indicate their
- relative apparent brightness in the night sky. The design was
- modified to the current design on 22 May 1909, but in fact the
- flag did *not* have official sanction as Australia's national
- flag, and wasn't always flown as such, until the Flags Act of
- 1953 was passed by the Menzies Government.
-
- There is some agitation to change the current design to one that
- does not include the Union Flag in view of Australia's changing
- relationship with Britain.
-
- * National emblem
-
- [BJ] The Australian Coat of Arms shows a kangaroo (left) and an emu
- (right) holding a shield that contains the six state badges (left to
- right on first row: NSW, Vic and Qld, below are SA, WA and Tas).
- Underneath the shield is a spray of Golden Wattle blossoms,
- Australia's floral emblem. Above the shield is the seven pointed
- federation star.
-
- * Why do the stars on the Australian flag have 7 points?
-
- (See 6.8 *The Australian Flag)
-
- * WHY IS AUSTRALIA CALLED AUSTRALIA?
-
- "Terra Australis" was the land of the south. The portuguese
- Fernandez de Quiros, in the serive of Philip III of Spain, named
- it Australia del Espiritu Santo (Southern Land of the Holy Ghost)
- "Australia" was used to flatter the King who was a Prince of the
- Austria Ruling house. [VS]
-
- * What is the source of ".oz" as an internet address representing
- Australia? (is it any different from ".au"; and why do some
- addresses have ".oz.au" both, or is that just harmless
- redundancy?)
-
- [KRE] No, its certainly not the same as AU, nor is it redundant
- in addresses where it appears, its required, and can't be used in
- others.
-
- Long ago when we were first setting up addressing for Aust we
- were always going to use domain addressing - this is way back
- when xxx.arpa was the standard name for US hosts on the arpanet
- (& milnet). That is, the use of domain names wasn't new, but
- there was not yet any organised structure for domain naming (ie:
- the edu, gov, ... and the two letter country names didn't yet
- exist).
-
- We knew we wanted a domain name that represented Australia in
- some way, and things like AU and AUS were suggested, but we also
- knew that our (then) small group fo sites couldn't really ever
- claim to represent all of Australia, and do anything that would
- effectively take over the entire Australian namespace leaving
- nothing for anyone else unless they could fit themselves into our
- naming scheme.
-
- I should also mention that at this time we were already using
- domain names, the domain we used was "SUN" which meant "Sydney
- Unix Network" (and sometimes "Sydney University Network") - the
- Australian net was an outgrowth of a network that started in
- Sydney at Sydney University, and linked UNIX systems. The
- network started before Sun Microsystems was created - still they
- asked us if we could use something other than "SUN" as our name -
- and since our net was no longer just in Sydney, that seemed
- reasonable (though the software used remained called "SUN" then
- SunII and SunIII, until comparatively recently when SunIV was
- renamed MHSnet).
-
- In any case, needing a name, something Australian, but not to
- pretend to represent the whole of Australia, someone (it
- certainly wasn't me, but I don't recall who) suggested "oz".
- That sounds like the "Aus" part of "Australia" or "Aussie" when
- spoken by an Australian (rather than an American, who pronounce
- the thing in some totally wild way), and is fairly commonly used
- by various people to represent things Australian (and has no
- relationship I know of with the wizard), and was adopted.
-
- Eventually, the two letter country naming stuff was invented, and
- AU of course became Australia - the "oz" part, which was always
- just a subset of Australia fitted very neatly as a sub-domain of
- AU, and so that's what was done with it. In time, other
- sub-domains of AU were created, including the edu.au com.au etc
- domains, that serve basically the same community as oz.au does,
- but also telememo.au and otc.au (which match the X.400 naming
- "ADMD=telememo; C=au") that are used by commercial e-mail systems
- in Australia, which has retrospectively justified the decision to
- confine our naming within a subset of the Australian namespace,
- and not even pretend to take over the whole thing.
-
- There's another version of the "creation of oz" story, which
- relates to the very first international e-mail connection that
- the academic community had here, which ran between the University
- of Sydney (home of the Sydney University/Unix Network) and Bell
- Labs. It was implemented using a maildrop on an IBM mainframe at
- the University of Waterloo in Canada, Bell labs would dial there,
- and leave mail for Australia in a file, then the University of
- Sydney would call, using X.25, and pick up the mail in the file,
- and leave another for Bell Labs the next time they called. This
- was set up by Ian Johnstone, initially from UNSW, but then at
- Bell Labs - the theory is that "oz" was the name of the account
- at Waterloo, or one of the file names, or something like that.
- This may indeed be what sparked the suggestion to use "oz" as the
- domain name, I don't know, I certainly don't recall that name
- being in any visible use in that e-mail system though, whatever
- use it had, if there was one, must have been internal I
-
- * What is the village in northern France where the Australian presence
- in WW1 is still celebrated?
-
- In a little town called Viller-Bretonneuve, just outside Amiens,
- there's a memorial to Australian soldiers a couple of kilometres
- outside town, signposted from the main road. There's also a cafe
- on the main road called the Boomerang Cafe, which makes me feel
- it's the right area. :-) [HJ]
-
- I can confirm that Villers-Bretonneux appears to be the town that
- you have in mind. A large Australian contingent was situated in
- or near the town during WW1. There remains a number of overt signs
- of this presence [MS]:
- - some of the streets and shops bear Australian names
- (e.g., Melbourne Street)
- - there is a large Australian War Memorial just outside the town on a
- rise. It contains a lookout and wall with the names of the Australian
- soldiers lost (and, for the most part, never found) in the battles of
- northern France and Flanders. On the wall, it is noted that 11,000
- Australian soldiers died between 1916-1918, so this gives you an
- indication of the size of the wall!
- - At the entrance to Villers-Bretonneux, is situated Adelaide Cemetery
- containing the graves of some of the Australian soldiers.
- - In fact, the region contains a number of Australian and British
- Commonwealth war cemeteries, all of them immaculately kept with cut
- lawns and red roses!
- - Villers-Bretonneux has an Australian "twin town" (Robinvale, Vic.
- if I remember correctly).
- - I spoke with the mayor, who showed me around the local school, which
- was apparently built after WW1 with donations from Australia. The main
- hall is panelled in Australian wood, and has a number of large wood
- carvings of Australian animals. The mayor said he visits Australia
- every year, to maintain the contact between the Villers-Bretonneux and
- Australia.
-
- In the cathedral of nearby Amiens, there is a commemorative plaque
- that states: "...to the memory of The Australian Imperial Force who
- valiantly participated in the victorious defense of Amiens from March
- to August 1918 and gave their lives for the cause of justice, liberty
- and humanity..."
-
- * What visas do Australians need for France? [JB]
-
- Yes, Australians need visas fro France. In 1986 (je croix), it might
- have been 1987, there were some bombings in Lyons, which were
- suspected to have been done by <ethnic-minority> fanatics. In the
- midst of the howls of "what is the government doing about it", the
- French Govt, in a particularly stupid knee-jerk reaction, brought in a
- requirement that visas will be required for all non-EC nationals. (As
- if needing a visa ever stopped a terrorist. And the border checks had
- long since gone.)
-
- This rule is waived in cases where there is a bi-lateral agreement,
- e.g. with New Zealand, and in cases where it was feared to hurt the
- tourist trade, e.g. US. As Australia doesn't play footsies about visas
- for visitiors, we need them to go to France.
-
- French visas are in two flavours:
-
- (a) less than 90 days. These are done over-the-counter here. They cost
- FF200 (about $A54). I had to provide a letter for my 19-yo son stating
- that we were supporting him financially, etc. Otherwise they would
- have wanted bank statement proving he had enough money to live on in
- France.
-
- (b) 90 days - 1 yr. Do get these I needed:
- (i) three interviews at the consulate;
- (ii) FF600 ($A162) per person in cash or bank cheques.
- (iii) the letter of invitation from the French university
- (iv) a letter from Monash saying everything about my status, salary,
- travel grants, insurance, etc.
- (v) tickets or confirmed itinerary
- (vi) a medical certificate, in French, from an approved physician
- (only one in Melbourne!) certifying:
- A) good health
- B) free of TB (X-ray result)
- C) free of syphilis (blood test) [the French bureaucracy hasn't
- discovered AIDS or hepatitis yet.]
- Once I had all these, my application, because it was "pour la
- sabbatique" had to be couriered off to Canberra to be "assessed" by
- the Scientific & Cultural Attache at the French Embassy.
- Well it's all done. Each of the long-term visas set us back about $250
- (such medicals are, rightly, not covered by Medibank.)
- Fortunately the consulate staff were very helpful, polite and
- understanding. The total time was was nearly two months, largely due
- to the queuing delays in waiting for inteviews and medicals.
-
- * What is vegemite? [KP]
-
- Vegemite is a spread, made from a yeast extract. Kraft make it in
- Australia. It looks kinda like black smooth peanut butter, and tastes
- VERY salty.[Glenn]
-
- When I returned to Australia for a visit in 1985 I telephoned the
- folks at Kraft in Pt. Melbourne. Here is the basis of what the man
- told me regarding its manufacture:
-
- First the yeast cells are taken from the breweries. For those of you
- into making home made beer yor know what I mean. For the others, this
- is a very thick tan colored "liquid" smelling like beer but loaded
- with spent and still alive yeast cells. This "liquid" it then treated
- so the yeast cells undergo "cell lysis" which means the cells burst
- open. The liquid is then "washed" (his term) to remove the cell
- walls. The internal contents of the cell are then mixed with salt,
- dried parsley and spices etc.(whatever that is -- I have not been able
- to find etc. in Australia nor NorthAmerica) I guess it is the etc that
- gives Vegemite its characteristic flavor!
-
- Anyways in closing, the man said that it was packaged is small tins (I
- have seen 1 oz. cans of it in Australian Army ration packs) and in
- various containers up to barrel (45 gal?) size.
-
- [DT] Vegemite and Marmite are not the same thing they were
- different product brands. Marmite was actually in production and
- on the shelves well and truly before vegemite ever existed. When
- Vegemite was first released it had a very difficult time - very
- few people bought it. It was apparently taken off the market for
- a short time and given a new (temporary) name after a competition
- was held. The winner came up with the name Parwill. Followed with
- the slogan "If marmite then parwill". Fortunately this also had
- marketing problems. It wasn't really until the "war to end all
- wars" that the renamed vegemite started to sell. It was all the
- shortages of food stuffs and the "scientific" sell using the
- vitamin B argument.
-
- If you really want a good amount of information I suggest that
- you write to:
- Kraft Australia Foods Limited
- Consumer Advisory Service
- Salmon Street
- Port Melbourne Victoria 3207
- AUSTRALIA
-
- * What is the name of the crazy boat race held in Darwin every year?
-
- The Beer Can Regatta
-
- * In which dry river near Alice Springs is there a boat race every year?
-
- The Todd River
-
- * Skin Cancer
-
- [MJ] To provide some (useful) information. The Antarctic ozone hole
- does not in general affect Australia, we are too close to the equator.
- Last summer (?) a small part of the outer edge did pass over Tasmania
- and Victoria but lasted only for a couple of days and did not cause
- particularly high levels of uv radiation at the ground. Australians
- have the highest rates of skin cancer in the world probably due to the
- combination of culture and having summer when the earth is closest to
- the sun. Bring a hat, sunscreen and shirt. Don't "bake" at all, but
- if you insist on being brown, authorities suggest avoiding the
- stongest sunlight between 1100 and 1500 (summer time).
-
- * November 11th (PB)
-
- First and foremost, it is the anniversary of Armistice Day, the
- end of the War to end all Wars (well,almost). It has also been
- chosen as the date for the formal laying to rest in the
- Australian War Museum in Canberra of the Australian Unknown
- Soldier, an Australian soldier recovered from a graveyard in
- France as a symbol for all Australians of the sacrifice the
- Australian troops made during WW1.
-
- It is also the anniversary of the sacking of the Whitlam
- Government by the G-G, Sir John Kerr in 1975.
-
- And finally, it is the 113th anniversary of the hanging of Edward
- "Ned" Kelly in Melbourne Gaol in 1880.
-
- * [Any more? AN]
-
- 7. Culture
-
- 7.1 Songs
-
- * Waltzing Matilda - the song we had to have. Copyright A.B.
- "Banjo" Paterson (reproduced here w/o permission). (thanks to
- Ross Paterson for correcting the "tt" mispelling :-)
-
- Once a jolly swagman camped by a billabong,
- Under the shade of a coolibah tree,
- And he sang as he watched and waited till his billy boiled,
- "You'll come a-waltzing Matilda with me."
-
- Chorus:
- "Waltzing Matilda, waltzing Matilda,
- You'll come a-waltzing Matilda with me;
- And he sang as he watched and waited till his billy boiled,
- You'll come a-waltzing Matilda with me."
-
- (Substitute third line of verse in each chorus.)
-
- Down came a jumbuck to drink at that billabong,
- Up jumped the swagman and grabbed him with glee;
- And he sang as he shoved that jumbuck in his tuckerbag,
- "You'll come a waltzing Matilda with me."
-
- Up rode the squatter, mounted on his thoroughbred,
- Down came the troopers -- one, two, three;
- "Whose that jolly jumbuck you've got in your tuckerbag?"
- You'll come a waltzing Matilda with me.
-
- Up jumped the swagman and sprang into the billabong,
- "You'll never catch me alive", said he;
- And his ghost may be heard as you pass by that billabong,
- You'll come a waltzing Matilda with me.
-
- There is also a "Queensland version" of the song, generally
- believed to be the Patterson original (or pre-original). It has
- very similar words but has a different metre and is set to a
- waltz tune. The "standard" version of the song was subsequently
- rewritten to fit a march time tune pinched from some other
- source. In a wonderful essay published at the time of the
- referendum which chose AAF as the anthem, some (forgotten by me)
- author made the point that Waltzing Matilda was much more
- appropriate. It tells the story of the swagman, unemployed and
- desperate, driven to petty theft by society's opression. The
- squatter symbolises the priviliged property owners (probably
- multi-national) with the sinister intrusion of the Police to
- support privilege. Finally, the hero dies in an heroic gesture,
- which unfortunately leads only to the pollution of an inland
- waterway. [CM]
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Here is what appears to be the original "Waltzing Matilda", from
- "The Collected verse of A. B. Patterson", first published in
- 1921. It seems to have been published in "Saltbush Bill, J.P."
- (1917), although I have a feeling it may have been presented in
- the Bulletin somewhat earlier. Punctuation as printed in the
- 1982 edition -- don't blame me for the unmatched quotation mark
- in the second verse :-). [IR]
-
- WALTZING MATILDA
- (Carrying a Swag.)
-
- Oh! there once was a swagman camped in a Billabong,
- Under the shade of a Coolabah tree;
- And he sang as he looked at his old billy boiling,
- "Who'll come a-waltzing Matilda with me?"
-
- Who'll come a-waltzing Matilda, my darling,
- Who'll come a-waltzing Matilda with me?
- Waltzing Matilda and leading a water-bag--
- Who'll come a-waltzing Matilda with me?
-
- Down came a jumbuck to drink at the water-hole,
- Up jumped the swagman and grabbed him in glee;
- And he sang as he stowed him away in his tucker-bag,
- You'll come a-waltzing Matilda with me."
-
- Down came the Squatter a-riding his thoroughbred;
- Down came Policemen -- one, two and three.
- "Whose is the jumbuck you've got in the tucker-bag?
- You'll come a-waltzing Matilda with me."
-
- But the swagman, he up and he jumped in the water-hole,
- Drowning himself by the Coolabah tree;
- And his ghost may be heard as it sings in the Billabong
- "Who'll come a-waltzing Matilda with me?"
-
- Both versions are in the Australian Scout Song Book, available by mail
- order from the Sydney Scout Shop price $2.65, phone +61 2 7999640.
-
- --------------------------------------------------------
-
- SWAGMAN: An itinerant labourer, a hobo, a bum. So called because
- his most important possession is his bedroll ("swag"), worn
- behind his head as he walks along.[TM]
-
- An excellent book, probably no longer in print, is "Diary of a
- Welsh swagman" published in Australia some years ago. It is based
- on the journeyings of a Welsh immigrant who was walzing Matilda
- in the late 19th century [AC]
- (Jenkins, Joseph, 1818-1898. Diary of a Welsh swagman, 1869-1894
- / abridged and annotated by William Evans. -- South Melbourne,
- Vic. : Macmillan, 1975.)
-
- WALTZING MATILDA "Waltzing Matilda", "humping a bluey, "carrying
- a swag" are all terms for the same thing, namely tramping about
- looking (or not looking) for itinerant work like shearing. The
- "Matilda" was the swag. [PA]
-
- Matilda=swag=bluey = (american) bedroll (blankets, etc.)
-
- The reason I know of is that one name for a swag was "Matilda" -
- a feminine name for the swagman's sole companion. Walking from
- place to place was called "Taking Matilda for a waltz". [jds]
-
- BILLABONG: A billabong is what the geographers call a "truncated
- meander", i.e. a lake formed by a loop in a river course being
- cut off by the river subsequently cutting a new and shorter path.
- In the US they are called "ox-bow lakes".[JB]
-
- COOLIBAH: Type of eucalypt (gum) tree with hard strong wood, very
- hardy, found in central Australia near inland water courses and
- billabongs.
-
- BILLY: A small tin, generally used to boil water for tea. The
- third- most important possession of a swagman.
-
- JUMBUCK: A (male?) sheep.
-
- TUCKERBAG: A bag for carrying tucker (food). The second-most
- important possession of a swagman.
-
- SQUATTER: Someone who just grabbed land early on, often later
- given title to the land by the government.Basically the landed
- gentry.
-
- TROOPER: A soldier or policeman.
-
- * Short Version
-
- The "verse" below is from a competition to shrink works of OZ
- literature conducted by the Australian (?) newspaper some time
- ago. I found it in some papers I was looking through. I don't
- have the attribution to hand. There was a shrunken "Sydney White
- Pages" too.[CM]
-
- Waltzing Matilda
- ================
- Swaggie dreams of roast lamb dinner
- Passing jumbuck looks a winner
- Bags it, but here come the cops
- Into billabong he flops
- Drowns himself, forgoes hot roast
- Leaves the last waltz to his ghost
- "Sod the law" says our aquarian,
- "Better dead than vegetarian!"
-
- * Advance Australia Fair (National Anthem)
-
- Australians all, let us rejoice,
- For we are young and free,
- We've golden soil and wealth for toil
- Our home is girt by sea;
- Our land abounds in nature's gifts
- Of beauty rich and rare;
- In hist'ry's page, let every stage
- Advance Australia Fair.
- In joyful strains then let us sing
- 'Advance Australia Fair.'
-
- [Original second verse deleted, cos its all about the British :-) AN]
-
- Beneath our radiant Southern Cross
- We'll toil with hearts and hands,
- To make this Commonwealth of ours
- Renowned of all the lands,
- For those who've come across the seas
- We've boundless plains to share,
- With courage let us all combine
- to Advance Australia Fair.
- In joyful strains then let us sing
- 'Advance Australia Fair.'
-
- * A less respectful version [JD]
-
- Advance
-
- Australians never had a choice,
- Had they the eyes to see,
- That any Royal could only spoil
- Republic luxury;
- With leaps and bounds opinion shifts,
- Where most just couldn't care :
- The silent rage, an equal wage,
- And pinch-free underwear;
- We'll raise a glass to anything,
- You poms stay over there.
-
- * Tie me kangaroo down. (Rolf Harris) [TS]
-
- (With wobbleboard background)
- [Spoken] There is an old Australian stockman, lyin, dyin, And he gets
- up onto one knee and he says...
-
- Chorus: Tie me Kangaroo down, Sport
- Tie me Kangaroo down,
- Tie me Kangaroo down, Sport
- Tie me Kangaroo down.
-
- Keep me Cockatoo cool, Curl
- Keep me Cockatoo cool,
- Aw don't go let lettin him actin the fool, Curl
- Just keep me Cockatoo cool.
-
- All together now, Chorus:
-
- Mind me platypus duck, Bill
- Mind me platypus duck
- Aw don't let him go runnin amuck, Bill
- Mind me platypus duck.
-
- All together now, Chorus:
-
- Put me Koala back, Mac
- Put me Koala back.
- He lives somewhere out on the track, Mac
- Just put me Koala back.
-
- All together now, Chorus:
-
- (I include this verse as it was in the original though I find it offensive)
- Let me Abos go loose, Lou
- Let me Abos go loose.
- They are of no further use Lou
- Let me Abos go loose.
-
- All together now, Chorus:
-
- Tan me hide when I'm dead, Fred
- Tan me hide when I'm dead.
- So we tanned his hide when he died, Clyde
- And that's it hangin on the shed.
-
- All together now, Chorus:
-
- 7.2 Recipes and Food
-
- ANZAC biscuits
- 1 cup SR Flour
- " " sugar
- " " oatmeal
- " " coconut
- Put these in bowl & mix.
-
- 4 tblsp butter,
- 2 " boiling H2O
- 1 " golden syrup
- 1 tsp bicarb soda
- Put in saucepan & melt together on stove. Mix with dry ingredients.
- Put in teaspoonfuls onto greased tray. 350F/180C for ~10 min. Enjoy!
-
- Lamingtons
- 4 oz butter 1 tsp. baking powder
- 3/4 cup castor sugar 1/2 tsp. baking soda
- 1 tsp. vanilla pinch salt
- 2 eggs 1/2 cup milk
- 2 cups flour
-
- cream butter & sugar, add vanilla, beat in eggs. Fold in dry
- ingrediants alternately with milk. Spoon into greased and lined
- pan (approx. 8"x11") bake at 350F for 40-45 min. Cool and store
- for a day. Cut into squares, dip in chocolate icing, then roll
- in coconut.
- Chocolate icing: Sift 1 lb. icing sugar and 4 T. cocoa into bowl.
- Add 1 T. melted butter to a cup of warmed milk. Blend to make a
- smooth coating consistency [John Doyle].
-
-
- PAVLOVA
- 4 egg whites
- 1 cup superfine sugar
- 2 teaspoons vinegar
- 1 tablespoon corn starch
- half pint whipped cream
- kiwi fruit or strawberries or passionfruit.
-
- Place egg whites in a clean glass bowl. Beat slowly until frothy,
- then increase the speed and beat until stiff. GRADUALLY add the
- sugar, beating well after each addition. (When all the sugar has
- been added, the mixture should be shiny, very stiff, and should
- stand in peaks.) Gently fold in the vinegar and corn starch with
- a metal spoon.
-
- Line a cookie sheet with brown paper (from a bag) and grease it
- lightly. Pile the meringue mixture on it; it should form a
- cylinder about 8 inches in diameter and 2 inches high. Preheat
- the oven to just under 300 degrees. Bake the pav for between 90
- and 105 minutes. When cooked, leave the oven door ajar and allow
- the pav to cool inside. When cold, peel off the paper and
- transfer to a serving platter. Just before serving, top with the
- whipped cream and fruit. About 8 smallish servings. [Steve
- Wright wright@mcs.anl.gov]
-
- Chocolate Crackles
-
- Here is the recipe as read from the Rice Bubbles packet
- (Apparently it is also on the Copha wrapper):
-
- 4 cups Rice Bubbles (= Rice Crispies)
- 1.5 cups sifted icing sugar
- 1 cup desiccated coconut
- 3 Tbs cocoa (60 ml not 45ml - ie 4 american Tbs)
- 250 gram copha (8 oz)
- 24 patty pans
-
- Mix the first 4 ingredients together. Pour in melted Copha and
- mix. Put into patty pans and chill. Makes 24.
-
- Damper
-
- The basic recipe for damper is just self rising flour (4 C) and
- milk (2 1/2 C) or water, mixed to a very stiff dough and then
- baked in one of several ways: in a cast iron "dutch oven" buried
- in the ashes of a fire, wrapped around the end of a stick (only a
- small handful or so) and toasted over the fire, or formed into a
- round loaf and baked in a conventional oven. You can spice it up
- by adding a handful of dried fruits, by topping it with some
- mustard and grated cheese or, if you've been bold enough to do it
- on a stick, by filling the hole where the stick was with jam.
- [CP]
-
- Australian Meat Pie [JN]:
- ===================
- Reference: Australian Women's Weekly Home Library: Cooking
- Class Cookbook, p70. (reproduced without permission).
-
- Filling:
- 750 g (1.5 lb) minced steak (N. Americans, use lean ground beef,
- not extra lean -JN)
- 2 beef stock cubes
- salt, pepper
- 1.5 cups water
- pinch nutmeg (generous -JN)
- 2 tablespoons plain flour
- 1/4 cup water, extra
- 1 teaspoon soy sauce
-
- Pie Base:
- 2 cups plain flour
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 2/3 cup water
- 60 g (2 oz) beef dripping
-
- Pie Top:
- 375 g (12 oz) packaged puff pastry
- 1 egg yolk
- 1 teaspoon water
-
- Making the filling:
-
- 1. Place meat into the pan, stir over low heat until meat is
- well browned. Drain off any surplus fat. Add crumbled stock
- cubes, water, salt, pepper and nutmeg, stir until boiling, reduce
- heat, cover, simmer gently for 20 min, remove from heat. Combine
- extra water and flour, stir until flour mixture is smooth. Add
- flour mixture to meat, stir until combined. Return to heat, stir
- until meat boils and thickens. Add soy sauce (to give brown
- colour), stir until combined. Simmer, uncovered, 5 to 10 min;
- remove from heat allow to become cold.
-
- Making the pie base:
-
- 2. Sift flour and salt into basin. Place water and dripping
- into saucepan, stir until dripping melts; remove from heat. Make
- a well in centre of dry ingredients, add liquid, stir until
- combined. (2a. If you're in a hurry, just use premade (bought)
- pastry. It works ok, too. -JN)
-
- 3. Turn out onto lightly floured surface, knead lightly. Roll
- out pastry to line eight greased pie tins. [We use "real"
- aluminium 6 or 8 in pie casings - JN] Cut excess pastry around
- sides of pie plates using a sharp knife. Fill centres with cold
- meat filing.
-
- Pie crust:
-
- 4. Roll out puff pastry on lightly floured surface, cut out
- rounds for top of pies, use a saucer as a guide. Wet edges of
- base pastry, and gently press tops into place, trim around edges
- with a sharp knife. Brush tops with combined egg-yolk and water.
-
- Cooking: Bake in hot oven 5 minutes or until golden brown, reduce
- heat to moderate, cook further 10 min.
-
- Galah [PB]
-
- Having plucked and cleaned galahs, place in a large saucepan of water over
- an open fire. Add two or three large rocks from a creek nearby. Boil for
- two to three days, adding water as required. By this time the rocks should
- have softened, throw away the galahs and eat the rocks.
-
- Galah variations [KP]
-
- Variation 1 (from my landlady the late Mrs. Rose Roots of Punch
- Street, Gundagai, N.S.W., 2722) After the rocks are done, reduce
- heat but continue simmering over low heat for another week. Make
- sure the water level is kept up.
-
- Variation 2 (from my team mates at the Junee RSL Shooting Club,
- Junee, N.S.W.) After the rocks are done, remove and maintain a
- slow boil of the Galahs while a side dish of lava is obtained.
- Serve both immediately, preferably with the lava on top of the
- meat.
-
- Pumpkin Soup [JL]
-
- In a large pot I put cut up pumpkin, 2 chopped up onions, 3
- chopped slices of celery and enough water to cover. Then I
- simmer it until the pumpkin is soft and then I mash it all or
- blend it. You then need to add some curry powder which gives it
- a wonderful flavor. The biggest problem in the US is that most
- of the pumpkins are much more watery than the Queensland blue
- pumpkins in Australia so the soup is not the same. However, this
- year I grew some JackbeLittle pumpkins and they were just fine
- for soup.
-
- [MM] I have found that "Butternut Squash" == "Butternut Pumpkin",
- make a pretty good soup. However they are definitely not the
- same as a Queensland Blue.
-
- Australian/US substitutions
- Oz US
- Copha Hard vegetable shortening (made from
- coconut).
- It's purified coconut oil, sufficiently dehydrated that it
- functions as a quite-edible shortening.[BD]
- Corn Flour Corn starch
- Caster sugar Regular sugar ( actually slightly finer
- than regular US sugar, but not much)
- Golden Syrup Dark Corn Syrup
- (Lyle's Golden Syrup is available in the
- southeastern US at Food Lion [CC])
- Icing sugar Confectioner's sugar
- Rice Bubbles Rice Krispies
-
- Miscellaneous food information
-
- In Australia, margarine in stick form has animal fat. For no animal
- fat, to buy "soft" magarine or butter.
-
- Other recipes to be included if I get them: kangaroo tail stew... [AN]
-
- 7.3 Language
-
- * Prounounciation of Aussie [WE]
-
- Information concerning how/why Australians pronounce Aussie with an
- /z/ and Americans pronounce it with a /s/. A linguistic analysis (I'm
- a linguist) suggests the following:
-
- 1. The Australian pronunciation of Aussie (/z/) is a normal
- phonological feature called "intervocalic voicing of consonants" where
- English speakers make /s/ -> /z/, /k/ -> /g/, /t/ -> /d/ etc. when
- they are between consonants. Some Americans pronounce "significant"
- as signifigant, water as wader and we all say "laser" with a /z/.
-
- 2. The American pronunciation of Aussie (/s/) is an example of
- spelling pronunciation -- which, once again is normal behaviour when
- we don't know the pronunciation of a word. We usually say it the way
- it spells until we find out differently.
-
- 3. So why do Americans insist on saying Aussie with an /s/ even when we
- tell them Aussies say it with a /z/? Once again, that's normal. We all
- have great difficulty saying things in a way that goes against the grain
- -- our grain. I've lived a long time in the U.S., but still can't say
- NEW York with /nu/. I have to say /niu/. Most Americans say greasy (/s/)
- or blouse (/s/) -- all with /s/'s. I think it may go against the grain for
- them to say Aussie with a /z/.
-
- * What is the origin of the word "Pom" or "Pommy"? [BR]
-
- - from daniels@rand.org (Greg Daniels):
- shipping crates labeled "P.O.M.E." (Property of Mother England)
-
- - for deverett@vms.macc.wisc.edu (David W. Everett):
- Prisoner of Mother England (POME)
-
- - from njc@robots.ox.ac.uk (Nick Cerneaz):
- Piss Off Mother England
-
- - from adally@afit.af.mil:
- convict clothing being labelled P O H M for Prisoner Of His Majesty
-
- - from ins559n@aurora.cc.monash.edu.au (Andrew Bulhak):
- Push Off Miserable Englishman
-
- - from ins559n@aurora.cc.monash.edu.au (Andrew Bulhak):
- short for pomegranate, referring to the complexion of recent arrivals
- who have not yet absorbed much of the Australian sun
-
- - from Jacco.Zwetsloot@f550.n635.z3.fidonet.org (Jacco Zwetsloot):
- The general concensus (amongst academics at least) is that `pom'
- came through this train of words and word association: immigrants
- came to be called `jimmygrants' via some sort of rhyming slang.
- `jimmygrants' became `pomegranates' via another sort of rhyming
- slang. This in turn became shortened to `pommy' and `pom'.
- While this may seem like an incredible (in the literal meaning of
- the word) explanation for the origin of `pom', it is verified in
- a number of books. One being "The Australian Language" published
- in 1945.
-
- - from bls@sector7g.Eng.Sun.COM (Brian Scearce):
- My _Dictionary of Historical Slang_ has this to say about it:
-
- pommy, Pommy. A newcomer from Britain, esp. from
- England: Australian: C.20. The OED Sup. records it at
- 1916, but it was current before the Great War. Origin
- obscure; possibly a corruption of TOMMY imported by
- Australian soldiers returning from the Boer War
- (1899-1902). Or perhaps ex. *Pomeranian*, a very
- "superior" sort of dog. It may also have developed
- from JIMMY GRANT thus: Jimmy Grant > immy-granate >
- pomegranate > pommy.
-
- "Jimmy Grant" is, as a previous poster pointed out, rhyming slang for
- "immigrant" (or "emigrant").
-
- * Origin of "Whinge"
-
- [BD] The Macquarie dictionary says "Northern form of OE _hwinsian_ to
- whine", and for whine "OE _hwinan_".
-
- * Origin of "Dunny"
-
- [LC] I was using the toilet the other day and noticed that the
- brandname stamped on the porcelain was "Dunedin". Could this be the
- origin from which the endearing term "dunny" is derived ??
-
- [IR] Unfortunately no. The Macquarie gives: "short for Brit. d.
- dunnakin, dunnaken, from dannaken, from danna (dung) + ken (place)"
-
- * "Show us your map of tazzy"
-
- [PG] Well, being the literary expert that I am . . . 8-) I'll have a
- crack at it. Reference page 182 "A Nice Night's Entertainment" Barry
- Humphries published 1981 by Granada:
-
- "Anyway, there she was starkers! I didn't know where to look. The
- driver seen her norks in the rear-vision mirror and nearly come off
- his dual carriageway. He said, 'Ay, miss, 'ow are you goin' to pay
- me?", at which she *pointed* ... Now, there's a nice crowd in here
- tonight so I'm not going to tell you where she pointed; suffice it to
- say she pointed at the map of Tasmania. Those of you with a
- rudimentary grasp of geography will have a rough idea of what I nearly
- had a rudimentary grasp of - a large triangular land mass deep in the
- southern hemisphere." Quiz question: which BH character said this?
- 8-)
-
- [JMack] I first heard the expression in conjunction with the arrival
- of the show "Hair" in Sydney (this was about 1970). I don't remember
- whether it was a friend, or a review in the paper or a quote from
- RObert Helpman, but the person refering to the costumes on the stage,
- mentioned the maps of tasmania. It's not quite as graphic as Barry
- Humphries use above, but it predates it.
-
- * State-based Nicknames
-
- rom: Nickname:
- NSW Cockroaches,
- Ma-staters,
- Mexicans (by Queenslanders)
- Cornstalks
- Vic Mexicans
- Cabbage-patchers
- SA Crow Eaters
- WA Sand Gropers
- Qld Banana Benders
- Tas Apple Eaters
- NT Top-enders
-
- * Origin of Taswegian [ZS]
-
- Tasway n, {Colloq.} Tasmania [backformation from TASWEGIAN by analogy
- with {Norwegian} adj, from {Norway}
- Taswegian n -> Tasmanian [TAS(MANIAN) + {-wegian} (by analogy with
- {Norwegian, Glaswegian,} etc.)]
-
- * Australasia and Oceania [BJ]
-
- Australiasia=Oz+NZ.
- Oceania=Oz+NZ+Fiji+all those South Pacific Islands...
-
- 7.4 National heroes
-
- [AN: Contributions solicited! Possible candidates: Phar Lap, Ned
- Kelly, Harry (The Breaker) Morant, Private John Simpson & his donkey,
- Edward (Weary) Dunlop, Dawn Fraser, Charles Kingsford-Smith, Kay
- Cottee, Dick Smith, Mary McKillop, Caroline Chisolm, Nellie Melba,
- Joan Sutherland, Rolf Harris, Barry Humphries ... Winged keel??? [RS]]
-
- [JL]
- Ned Kelly's skull and Phar Lap's heart (you beaut)
- Lie enshrined in Canberra's Institute.
- But a truer statement of the statesman's art
- Would be Phar Lap's skull & Mr Kelly's heart.
-
- * Don Bradman [RS]
-
- Bradman, Sir Donald George (1908- ), cricket world's most famous
- batsman. Born at Cootamundra NSW. Made his first century playing for
- Bowral High School at age 12. His career in the Australian domestic
- competition, the Sheffield Shield, spanned 22 years playing for NSW
- (1927-1934) and South Australia (1935-1949). He made a total of 8926
- runs at an average of 110 at this level of cricket.
-
- Most famous are his Test Match batting exploits against England for
- the prized "Ashes" (the symbol of cricket supremacy between Australia
- and England). So successful was he in the 1929 England tour that by
- the time of the reciprocal 1932/33 English tour, the England captain,
- Douglas Jardine, devised a bowling strategy around limiting Bradman's
- prodigous scoring talents. England's fast bowlers would direct the
- ball at a batsman's rib cage or throat hoping that the ball would be
- parried to one of a number of close-in fieldsmen. The infamous
- "Bodyline" tactic was not only applied to Bradman but also to the less
- able batsmen which raised howls of outrage from the Australian public.
- Bodyline was subsequently outlawed.
-
- Apart from one Test match in the 1932-33 series, Bradman played in
- every Australia-England Test match between 1928 and his retirement at
- the end of the 1948 season. As a test captain from 1936-48, he did not
- lose an Ashes series and the 1948 tour did not result in a single
- defeat. An achievement unequalled by any touring Australian team
- before or since.
-
- He also played Test cricket against the West Indies (1930-31), South
- Africa (1931-32) and India (1947-48). In all, Don Bradman played 52
- Test matches, scored an aggregate 6996 runs at an average of 99.94.
- Where Test Match batting averages of around 50 or 60 earns a player
- the label of a "great", the Don's greatness as a batsman is more than
- just an exxagerated legend.
-
- 7.5 Literature
-
- * To find a book, in or out of print, "International bookfinders",
- Sydney, (02) 909 3000, (02) 953 1240.
-
- 7.5.1 Fiction
-
- (If authors also write poetry, non-fiction, I include that here
- with the fiction entry)
-
- * Thomas Keneally began writing in 1964. Born in northern New South Wales in
- 1935, he now lives in Sydney with his wife and two daughters.
-
- Novels:
- - Schindler's Ark (published in the US as Schindler's List, now a major
- film by Steven Spielberg. Based on the true story of German
- businessman Oscar Schindler who save over 1000 Jews from the Nazi
- extermination camps)
- - A Family Madness
- - Victim of the Aurora
- - The Playmaker (set in first convict settlement)
- - Thomas Keneally Flying Hero Class (interesting Koorie perspective)
- - The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith(*), (made into a film)
- - Confederates(*),
- - Gossip from the Forest(*)
- * shortlisted for the booker prize
-
- Nonfiction: Outback, an account of life in Central Australia
-
- * Patrick White (winner of the 1973 Nobel Prize for literature)
- was born in England in 1912, when his parents were in Europe for
- 2 years; at 6 months he was taken back to Australia where his
- father owned a sheep station. When he was thirteen he was sent to
- school in England, to Cheltenham, 'where, is was understood, the
- climate would be temperate and a colonial acceptable'. Neither
- proved true, and after four rather miserable years there he went
- to King's College, Cambridge, whree he specialised in languages.
- After leaving the university he settled in London, determined to
- become a writer. During the war he was an R.A.F. Intelligence
- Officer in the Middle East and Creece. After the war he returned
- to Australia. [XXX died?] .
-
- Novels: Happy Valley (1939), The Living and the Dead (1941), The
- Aunt's Story (1946), The Tree of Man (1956),Voss (1957), Riders
- in the Chariot (1961), The Solid Mundala (1966), The Vivisector
- (1970), The Eye of the Storm (1973), A Fringe of Leaves (1976),
- The Turyborn Affair (1979),
-
- Collections of short stories: The Burnt Ones (1964), The Cockatoo
- (1974) including several short novels (interesting collection of
- short stories dealing with modern Australian life [MJ])
-
- Autobiography: Flaws in the Glass (1981)
-
- * Tim Winton is the author of several novels, short story
- collections andchildren's books, for which he has received every
- major literary award in Australia, including the Australian/Vogel
- Award and the prestigious Miles Franklin Award. He currently
- lives ont eh Western Australia coast with his wife and children.
-
- Cloudstreet: When two large working-cass families, the Lambs and
- the Pickles, are forced to share a massive house and inevitably
- their lives, their past misfortunes and conflicting personalities
- merge in a breathtaking explosion of joy, tragedy, and the
- occasional miracle. [I loved it! AN]
-
- Other works: An Open Swimmer, Shallows, Scission, That Eye,_ The
- Sky, Minimum of Two, In the Winter Dark, Jesse, Lockie
- Leonard,_Human Torpedo, the Bugalugs Bum Thief.
-
- * Peter Carey grew up in Bacchus Marsh, Victoria, and was
- educated at Geelong Grammar School and Monash University, where
- he read science.
-
- Novels:
- - Bliss (1981) (made into a film, I found the book a bit strange,
- and rather boring - must admit I didn't finish it. AN),
- - Illywhacker(1985) (short-listed for Booker prize)
- - Oscar and Lucinda (1988) (winner of the Booker prize, great, AN).
-
- Short Stories: The Fat Man in History (I enjoyed most of these,
- though they tend to be a little bizarre, AN)
-
- * David Malouf
-
- Fiction: Johnno, An Imaginary Life, Fly Away Peter, Child's Play,
- Harland's Half acre, Antipodes, The Great World (winner of the
- Commonwealth Prize and the Prix Femina Etranger), Remembering
- Babylon.
-
- Autobiography: 12 Edmonstone Street
-
- Poetry: Bicycle and Other Poems, Neighbours in a Thicket, the year of
- the Foxes and Other Poems, First Things Last, Wild Lemons
-
- Libretto: Baa Baa Black Sheep
-
- In _Remembering Babylon_ David Malouf gives us a rich and compelling
- novel, in language of astonishing poise and resonance, about the
- settlin of the continent down under, Australia, and the vicissitudes
- of first contact with the unknown. In the mid-1840s a 13-year-old
- cabin boy, Gemmy Fairley, is cast ashore from a British shipwreck onto
- the Queensland coast, and is taken in by aborigines. Sixteen years
- later, three children from a white settlement come upon this
- apparition: "...."... Possessed of lyrical intensity and always
- respectful of human complexity , Remembering Babylon tells the sotyr
- of Gemmy, and of his relation to the whites. Given shelter by the
- McIvors, the family of the trhee children, he seems at first to have a
- secure role in the settlement, but currents of fear and distrust
- intensify. At once white and flack, a man with a voice but unable to
- speak the language, he confounds all categories that might explain
- him. To everyone he meets .... Gemmy is a force of nature that both
- fascinates and repets. He finds his own whiteness as unsettling in his
- new world as the knowledge he brings with him of the savage, the
- aboriginal. In his most accomplished novel to date,David Malouf has
- written a powerful fiction, informed by a vision of eternal human
- differences. Remembering Babylon is a brilliant mythopoeia of our
- unending encounter with the Other.
-
- * Martin Boyd: _A Difficult Young Man_ (I studied this in High
- School. AN], _Lucinda Brayford_, _The Cardboard Crown_, _Outbreak
- of Love_, _When Blackbirds Sing_, _Day of My Delight_.
-
- * Frank Hardy: _Power without Glory_. Frank Hardy's compelling story
- of corruption and political manipulation created violent
- controversy on its first release and has excited and intrigued
- Australians ever since. Power Without Glory traces the rise of
- the ruthless John west from his impoverished working-class
- beginnings in a Melbourne slum to a position of great wealth and
- political influence. His rising public dominance contrasts with
- the growing emptiness of his personal life, where even family
- turn from him, estranged by his implacable and pitiless pursuit
- of power. A startling expose of bribery, fear and corruption in
- high places, Hardy's tale revealed the sordid world of gambling,
- political intrigue and underworld depravity. Upon the book's
- first publication he was accused of overstepping the fine line
- between fiction and the dpeiction of real Australian people and
- events, and was sued for libel. The sensational legal battle
- which pollowed creatd debate and outrange acress the nation and,
- despite Hardy's acquittal, the questions it raised remain
- unanswered today. [Made into a television series]
-
- * David Williamson Collected Plays Vol 1 (including _The Coming of
- stork_, _Don's Party_ and _The removalists_ [MJ])
-
- * Justin D'Ath, _The Initiate_ (aboriginal protagonist; coming-of-age
- sorta)
-
- * Peter Corris writes light detectives set in and around Sydney
- and there's another (female) author of similar stuff setting them
- all over the place (Murder on the Ballarat Train was one). [MJ -
- XXX]
-
- * Miles Franklin, _My Brilliant Career_. Made into a film by
- Gillian Armstrong, starring Judy David.
-
- * Henry Handel Richardson, _The Getting of Wisdom_: Country
- girl's experiences of going to boarding school late last century.
- Made into a film.
-
- Joan Lindsay, _Picnic at Hanging Rock_. Girls from a boarding
- school in country Victoria, early this century, go on a icnic to
- Hanging Rock on Valentine's day, and 3 of them and a
- schoolmistress disappear. Made into a film by Peter Weir.
-
- Neville Shute: _A Town Like Alice_ (film and also tv mini-series),
- _A Far Country_, _On the Beach_.
-
- * Early colonial life: _The Fatal Shore_, Robert Hughes, Eleanor
- Dark's trilogy _'The Timeless Land_.
-
- 7.5.2 Poetry
-
- * "My Country" by Dorothea McKellar [CP]
-
- The love of field and coppice,
- Of green and shaded lanes,
- Of ordered woods and gardens
- Is running in your veins.
- Strong love of grey-blue distance,
- Brown streams and soft, dim skies-
- I know but cannot share it,
- My love is otherwise.
-
- I love a sunburnt country,
- A land of sweeping plains,
- Of ragged mountain ranges,
- Of droughts and flooding rains.
- I love her far horizons,
- I love her jewel-sea,
- Her beauty and her terror-
- The wide brown land for me!
-
- The stark white ring-barked forests,
- All tragic to the moon,
- The sapphire-misted mountains,
- The hot gold hush of noon,
- Green tangle of the brushes
- Where lithe lianas coil,
- And orchids deck the tree-tops,
- And ferns the warm dark soil.
-
- Core of my heart, my country!
- Her pitiless blue sky,
- When, sick at heart, around us
- We see the cattle die -
- But then the grey clouds gather,
- And we can bless again
- The drumming of an army,
- The steady soaking rain.
-
- Core of my heart, my country!
- Land of the rainbow gold,
- For flood and fire and famine
- She pays us back threefold.
- Over the thirsty paddocks,
- Watch, after many days,
- The filmy veil of greenness
- That thickens as we gaze.
-
- An opal-hearted country,
- A wilful, lavish land -
- All you who have not loved her,
- You will not understand -
- Though earth holds many splendours,
- Wherever I may die,
- I know to what brown country
- My homing thoughts will fly.
-
- * The Man From Snowy River, by A.B. (Banjo) Paterson [CP]
-
- There was movement at the station, for the word had passed around
- that the colt from old Regret had got away,
- And had joined the wild bush horses - he was worth a thousand pound,
- So all the cracks had gathered to the fray.
- All the tried and noted riders from the stations near and far
- Had mustered at the homestead overnight,
- For the bushmen love hard riding where the wild bush horses are,
- And the stock-horse snuffs the battle with delight.
-
- There was Harrison, who made his pile when Pardon won the cup,
- The old man with his hair as white as snow;
- But few could ride beside him when his blood was fairly up -
- He would go wherever horse and man could go.
- And Clancy of the Overflow came down to lend a hand,
- No better horseman ever held the reins;
- For never horse could throw him while the saddle-girths would stand -
- He learnt to ride while droving on the plains.
-
- And one was there, a stripling on a small and weedy beast;
- He was something like a racehorse undersized,
- With a touch of Timor pony - three parts thoroughbred at least -
- And such as are by mountain horsemen prized.
- He was hard and tough and wiry - just the sort that won't say die -
- There was courage in his quick impatient tread;
- And he bore the badge of gameness in his quick and fiery eye,
- And the proud and lofty carriage of his head.
-
- But still so slight and weedy, one would doubt his power to stay,
- And the old man said, "That horse will never do
- For a long and tiring gallop - lad, you'd better stop away,
- These hills are far too rough for such as you."
- So he waited, sad and wistful - only Clancy stood his friend -
- "I think we ought to let him come," he said;
- "I warrant he'll be with us when he's wanted at the end,
- For both his horse and he are mountain bred.
-
- "He hails from Snowy River, up by Kosciusko's side,
- Where the hills are twice as steep and twice as rough;
- Where a horse's hooves strike firelight from the flintstones every stride,
- The man that holds his own is good enough.
- And the Snowy river riders on the mountains make their home,
- Where the river runs those giant hills between;
- I have seen full many horsemen since I first commenced to roam,
- But nowhere yet such horsemen have I seen."
-
- So he went: they found the horses by the big mimosa clump,
- they raced away towards the mountain's brow,
- And the old man gave his orders, "Boys, go at them from the jump,
- No use to try for fancy riding now.
- And, Clancy, you must wheel them, try and wheel them to the right.
- Ride boldly lad, and never fear the spills,
- For never yet was rider that could keep the mob in sight,
- If once they gain the shelter of those hills."
-
- So Clancy rode to wheel them - he was racing on the wing
- Where the best and boldest riders take their place,
- And he raced his stock-horse past them and he made the ranges ring
- With the stockwhip, as he met them face to face.
- Then they halted for a moment, while he swung the dreaded lash,
- But they saw their well-loved mountain full in view,
- And they charged beneath the stockwhip with a sharp and sudden dash,
- And off into the mountain scrub they flew.
-
- Then fast the horsemen followed, where the gorges deep and black,
- Resounded to the thunder of their tread,
- And the stockwhips woke the echoes, and they fiercely answered back
- From cliffs and crags that beetled overhead.
- And upward, ever upward, the wild horses held their way,
- Where mountain ash and kurrajong grew wide;
- And the old man muttered fiercely, "We may bid the mob good day,
- NO man can hold them down the other side."
-
- When they reached the mountain's summit, even Clancy took a pull -
- It well might make the boldest hold their breath;
- The wild hop scrub grew thickly, and the hidden ground was full
- Of wombat holes, and any slip was death.
- But the man from Snowy River let the pony have his head,
- And he swung his stockwhip round and gave a cheer,
- And he raced him down the mountain like a torrent down its bed,
- While the others stood and watched in very fear.
-
- He sent the flint-stones flying, but the pony kept his feet,
- He cleared the fallen timber in his stride,
- And the man from Snowy River never shifted in his seat seat -
- It was grand to see that mountain horseman ride.
- Through the stringybarks and saplings, on the rough and broken ground,
- Down the hillside at a racing pace he went;
- And he never drew the bridle till he landed safe and sound
- At the bottom of that terrible descent.
-
- He was right among the horses as they climbed the farther hill,
- And the watchers on the mountain, standing mute,
- Saw him ply the stockwhip fiercely; he was right among them still,
- As he raced across the clearing in pursuit.
- Then they lost him for a moment, where two mountain gullies met
- In the ranges - but a final glimpse reveals
- On a dim and distant hillside the wild horses racing yet,
- With the man from Snowy River at their heels.
-
- And he ran them single-handed till their sides were white with foam;
- He followed like a bloodhound on their track,
- Till they halted, cowed and beaten; then he turned their heads for home,
- And alone and unassisted brought them back.
- But his hardy mountain pony he could scarcely raise a trot,
- He was blood from hip to shoulder from the spur;
- But his pluck was still undaunted, and his courage fiery hot,
- For never yet was mountain horse a cur.
-
- And down by Kosciusko, where the pine-clad ridges raise
- Their torn and rugged battlements on high,
- Where the air is clear as crystal, and the white stars fairly blaze
- At midnight in the cold and frosty sky,
- And where around the Overflow the reed-beds sweep and sway
- To the breezes, and the rolling plains are wide,
- The Man from Snowy River is a household word today,
- And the stockmen tell the story of his ride.
-
- - A.B. "Banjo" Paterson
-
- 7.5.3 Children's Literature
-
- [This section is very incomplete cos I don't have any of my
- kid's books here in the US with me. Contributions welcome! AN]
-
- The Billabong series, by Mary Grant Bruce. Set on a station
- called Billabong late last century, story of brother and sister
- Jim and Norah, and Jim's friend Wally. Treatment of aboriginals
- rather paternal and rascist these days, but I really enjoyed
- these yarns as a kid. Also by Mary Grant Bruce, _Possum_. [AN]
-
- Ivan Southall, Colin Thiele
-
- _The Magic Pudding_, and especially _Snugglepot and Cuddlepie_
- (May Gibbs).[MJ]
-
- 7.5.4 Non-Fiction
-
- * Bruce Chatwin, _Songlines_: 'The Songlines emerge as invisible
- pathways connecting up all over Australia: ancient tracks made of
- songs which tell of the creation of the lang. The Aboriginals'
- religious duty is ritually to travel the land, singing the
- Ancestors' songs: singing the world into being afresh. _The
- Songlines_ is one mans impoassioned song' Sunday Telegraph.
- [Highly recommended. AN]
-
- * _My Place_, by Sally Morgan. Modern Australian women writing about
- life as an aboriginal woman. Sally Morgan has also written an award
- winning play, and painted some canvases that imo are the best in the
- WA Gallery (which is quite well stocked). [RH]
-
- * Two books about early colonial women:
- (1) _The Women of Botany Bay: A Re Australian Society_, by Portia
- Robin pp. $16.95 paper.
- (2) _Life Lines: Australian Women's Lives 1788 to 1840_, edited
- by Patricia Clark and Dale Spender. Sydney, NSW: Allen and Unwin,
- 1992, 249 pp. @22.95 paper (US distribution: Paul & Co., PO Box
- 442, Concord, MA 01742).
-
- * I recommend Paul Kelly's _The end of certainty_ for a
- chronicling of the relationship between economic and social
- policies in the Liberal Party. It seems to Kelly that Howard was
- the one to try and introduce social conservatism into the Libs to
- match the economic shift. Hewson, it appears, is so narrowly
- focused on the economy (laser-like anyone?) that this is now
- irrelevant. [PR]
-
- Jack Davis, _A Boy's Life_. An entertaining account of growing up
- (Koorie)
-
- Diane Bell, _Daughters of the Dreaming_. Feminist Aboriginal
- anthropology.
-
- Jill Conway, _The Road from Coorain_. Autobiography. In the
- tradition of My Brilliant Career - a woman's exquisityly
- clear-sighted memoir of growing up Australian. Jill Conway is a
- noted historian, specialising in the experience of women in
- American and was the first woman president of Smith College (a
- women's college in the USA).
-
- *Hugh Lunn, _Over the top with Jim_ (and the sequels) -- popular
- autobiographies dealing with growing up in the '50s.
-
- * Alan Marshall, _I can jump Puddles_ (Story of writer Alan
- Marshall's childhood, after he was crippled at a young age by
- polio. A classic. He wrote several other autobiographical works,
- and a number of them, including "I can ..." were made into a TV
- series by the ABC)
-
- * Albert Facey, _A Fortunate Life_. This is the extraordinary
- life of an ordinary man. It is the sotry of Albert Facey, who
- lived iwth simple onesty, compassioin and courage. A parentless
- boy who started work at eight on the rough West Australian
- frontier, he struggled as an itinerant rural worker, survived the
- gore of Gallipoli, the loss of his farm in the Depression, the
- death of his son in WWII and that of h is beloved wife after
- sixty devoted years - yet felt that his life was fortunate.
- Facey's life story, published when he was eighty-seven, has
- inspired many as a play , a television series and an
- award-winning book that has sold over 1/2 a million copies.
- [Moving and unforgettable.AN]
-
- * Stan Arneil. _One Man's War_. The diary of a young Australian
- army sergeant, Stan Arneil, kep as a prisoner of war duing WWII.
- It covers the entrie period of imprisonment from the fall of
- Singapore in 1941 through the infamous Burma railway camps, his
- return to Changi and his repatriation to Australia in October
- 1945. Winner of the 1981 International Pen Award for Non-fiction.
- After the war Stan Arneil was active in welfare and church work.
- In the 190s he established the credit union movement and he has
- been awarded the Order of Australia for his efforts in that
- field.
-
- * Susan Mitchell. (1) _Tall Poppies_. Nine Australian women talk
- about women and succes in Australia today. _The Matriarchs_.
- Twelve Australian women, from their sixties to their nineties,
- talk about their lives, and about being alives today.
-
- * John Pilger, _A Secret Country_. John Pilger was born and
- educated in Sydney, Australia. He has been a war correspondent,
- film-maker and playwright. Based in London, he has written from
- many countries and has twice won British journalism's highest
- award, that of Journalist of the Year, for his work in Vietnam
- and Cambodia. Among a number of other awards, he has been
- International Reporter of the Year, and winer of the United
- Nations Association Media Peace Prize. John Pilger writes about
- his homeland with life-long affction and a possionately critical
- eye. In A Secret Country he pays tribute to a littel known
- Australia and tells a story of high political drama.
-
- -"Tenaciously researched, fiercely argued, both unsparing and
- patriotic, A Secret Country presents a harsh narrative of class,
- race and power; of the oppression and resistance, the betrayal
- and amnesia, that lie behind the sunny illusions of the
- Australian self-image" Robert Hughes.
- -"A moving account of the abuse of human rights in Australia'
- Graham Greene
- - "This is a patriotic book in the best sense, written in the
- belief that Australia deserves not old bromides and stereotypes,
- but the respect of critical appraisal. With _The Fatal Shore_ by
- Robert Hughes, it is an essential text for anyone wishing to
- understand the real Australia obscured by the advertising
- industry's image of a nation of 'white Anglo-Saxon Crocodile
- Dundees with the wit of the cast of _Neighbours_'. It is also a
- necessary book for those of us who believe in the redeeming power
- of truth. Daily Telegraph, London.
- -"He reveals a hidden Australia at once more ugly and more heroic
- than the offical history... Combining investigative journalism
- with whimsical anecdote, it's a powerful critique of Australian
- society and a bloody good read." Australian Tribune.
-
- * Paul Kelly, _The Hawke Ascendancy_ is the story of how the Labor
- Party returned to power in 1983 after its crusing defeat in1975.
- It is the inside story fo three men- Bob Hawke, Malcolm Frase and
- Bill Hayden - and thier unique power struggle. The account covers
- the full eight years which began with Fraser's 1975 supremacy and
- closed iwth Hawke's 1983 triumph and first year of office.
-
- * I recommend Paul Kelly's _The end of certainty_ for a
- chronicling of the relationship between economic and social
- policies in the Liberal Party. It seems to Kelly that Howard was
- the one to try and introduce social conservatism into the Libs to
- match the economic shift. Hewson, it appears, is so narrowly
- focused on the economy (laser-like anyone?) that this is now
- irrelevant. [PR]
-
- 7.6 Films
-
- From the Sunday "New York Times", Jan 2nd 1994 [AT]:
-
- "Perhaps the closest parallel to the vitality of Ireland's movie
- industry today is the Australian experience of the late 1970s. In
- a period of just a few years, the Australians gave the world
- "Gallipoli," "Breaker Morant," "My Brilliant Career," "Picnic at
- Hanging Rock" and "The Change of Jimmie Blacksmith." Critics
- slavered over the output of directors like Peter Weir, Bruce
- Beresford, Fred Scepisi & Gillian Armstrong. "'Crocodile'
- Dundee," the ultimage in outback machismo, established box-office
- recoreds in both Australia and the United States, wehre it was
- the 2nd-highest-grossing movie of 1986.
-
- The success of these filsm change the image of the country that
- produced them. Suddenly, Australians loomed large as a force in
- the movie world.
- ...
-
- ...Soon after they made their mark, nearly all the best-known
- Australian directors scampered off to Hollywood. The mighty
- Australian film industry faltered -- partly because of recession
- & unemployment but also because its proficient pool of talent
- opted for the bigger budgets and wider distribution offered by
- the students."
-
- [Entries mostly taken from a Maltin's 1991 TV Movies and Video Guide.
- I'll fill in more each month. Also I don't have much on more recent
- releases. Contributions welcome. AN]
-
- ACTION/ADVENTURE
- Escape 2000
- Fortress
- Forty Thousand Horsemen
- The Lighthorsemen
- Mad Dog Morgan
-
- Mad Max (1979) Dir. George Miller. Mel Gibson. In the desolate
- near future, the police have their hands full keeping roads safe
- from suicidally daring drivers and roving gangs. Top cop Gibson
- tires and quits, but when his wife and child are murdered by
- vicious cyclists, he embarks on high-speed revenge. Weird
- atmosphere and characters combine with amazing stunt work in this
- remarkable action film.
-
- Mad Max 2 (The Road Warrior) (1981) Sequel finds Max, now a
- loner, reluctantly helping tiny oil-producing community defend
- itself against band of depraved crazies thirsty for precious
- fuel. Far less original script-wise, but trend-setting visual
- design and some of the most unbelievable car stunts ever filmed
- make this equal to, if not better than the original.
-
- Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome (1985) Tina Turner. Mad Max comes upon
- Turner's cutthroat city of Bartertown, survives a
- battle-to-the-death in the Roman-style Thunderdome, and is exiled
- to the desert where he is rescued by a tribe of wild children.
- Lots of stunts and action, and even some philosophical moments,
- but lacks kinetic energy.
-
- The Man From Snowy River (1982) Dir George Miller. Kirk Douglas,
- Tom Burlinson, Sigrid Thornton, Lorraine Bayley. Grand,
- old-fashioned Western-style saga, based on epic poem, about
- strong-willed young man who goes to work for an empire-building
- cattleman, and falls in love with his daughter. Kokey,
- simplistic, but great fun, with eye-filling scenery of the Snowy
- Mountains and incredible action scenes with some wild horse.
- Thompson cameo role as Clancy of the Overflow.
-
- The Odd Angry Shot
- The Quest
- Razorback
- Return to Snowy River, Part II
-
- Walk Into Hell
-
- We of the Never Never (1983) Angela Punch McGregor. True story
- based on the memoirs of the first white woman to travel into
- Australian inland wilderness (known as the Never Never). Visually
- stunning.
-
- COMEDY
-
- Bliss (1985) High-powered businessman has a major heart attack,
- sees himself dying, the revives - which changes his entire
- outlook on life. After a dynamic opening this stylized satire
- slows to a snail's pace and loses its thrust. Australian Academy
- award winner and internation film festival favourite.
-
- The Cars That Ate Paris (1974) Peter Weir. The poor people of
- Paris (Paris, Australia) keep the economy going
- by inducing traffic accidents and selling the spare parts/scrap metal.
- Iffy black comedy has its moments. (in US released as The Cars
- That East People?)
-
- "Crocodile" Dundee (1986) Paul Hogan. Amiable, laid-back comedy
- (that became an enormous world-wide hit) about an adventurer who
- shows a pretty American reporter around the bush country, then
- accompanies her to the equally strange terrain of New York City.
- Irresistibly simple and old-fashioned, with a sweetness that's
- rare in modern comedies. [Unfortunately this is all most
- Americans know about Australia. AN]
-
- "Crocodile" Dundee II (1988) Sequel, not too bad.
-
- Don's Party (1976) Bruce Beresford. Powerful black comedy about
- the interaction - sexual and otherwise - about a group of young
- suburbanites who get together to watch election returns. Stunning
- direction, superb performances by all; biting script by David
- Williamson, from his play.
-
- Flirting: director John Duigan
-
- Malcolm (1986) Charming, disarmingly off-beat comedy about a
- slow-witted young man with a genious for mechanical devices and
- his unusual entry into a life of crime. Australian film institute
- winner for best Picture.
-
- Norman Loves Rose (1982) Ok comedy of teenager Owen who becomes
- enamoured with sister-in-law Kane. She becomes pregnant and who
- is the father?
-
- Rikky and Pete (1988) Pete is a misfit with a penchant for
- gimmicky inventions, Rikki is his sister who is still trying to
- find herself; together they flee to a remote mining town where
- their lives take some unexpected turns. Followup to Malcolm by
- the same director and writer, hasn't the same sweetness or
- consistency but it's admirably quirky.
-
- Strictly Ballroom
- Scott Hastings (Paul Mercurio), one of Australia's best ballroom
- dancers, is on-target for a number of championships until he starts to
- dance from the heart, abandoning the Dance Federation's rigid steps in
- favor of his own moves. His partner Liz (Gia Carides) leaves him and
- Scott is forced to take up with an amateur. Fran (Tara Morice) matches
- Scott's zest for life, but one question hangs over them as they teach
- each other about life, love, and dancing: can they win by rejecting
- tradition?
-
- Touch and Go (1980)
-
- Young Einstein (1988) Nutty comedy based on the premise that
- Einstein not only developed the theory of relativity, but
- invented rock 'n roll. The silliness continues from there... but
- any movie that contains 'cat pies' can't be all bad.
-
- The Year my Voice Broke:director John Duigan
-
- DRAMA
-
- Breaker Morant
- Burke and Wills
- Cactus
- Caddie
- Careful, He Might Hear You
- Chain Reaction
- A Cry in the Dark: The Azeria Chamberlain story, with Meryl Streep as
- Lindy Chamberlain
- Dawn
- The Devil's Playground
- The Fringe Dwellers
- The Getting of Wisdom
- Ground Zero
- Heatwave
- High Tide
- Kangaroo
- The Killing of Angel Street
- Kitty and the Bagman
- Last Days at Chez Nous
- The Last Wave
- Lonely Hearts
- Man of Flowers
- The Mango Tree
- Miracle Down Under
- My Brilliant Career
- My First Wife
- Newsfront
- Now and Forever
-
- -On the Beach. Based on a Neville Shute novel, set in Melbourne, the
- last place on earth just about that people are still alive after
- a neuclear war, waiting for the sickness to reach them.
-
- Picnic at Hanging Rock
- Proof: Blind man takes photographs as proof that he was there.
- Puberty Blues
- Rebel (1986)
- Shame (1988)
- Squizzy Taylor
- Storm Boy
- Summer City
- Tim
- A Town Like Alice
- Traveling North
- Warm Nights on a Slow-Moving Train
- Weekend of Shadows
- Who Killed Baby Azaria
- The Wild Duck
- Winter of Our Dreams
-
- MUSICAL
- Dogs in Space
- Starstruck
-
- MYSTERY/THRILLER
- Dead Calm
- Patrick
-
- 8. Contributors
-
- The following people (listed in no particular order) have made
- substantial contributions to this FAQ. If you have any
- corrections, suggestions, additions, subtractions, etc., please
- mail them to Ann Nicholson, aen@cs.brown.edu.
-
- NOTE: Unfortunately, I cannot post articles on behalf of others,
- arrange aus.* feeds, look for lost relatives, etc. I only have
- time to deal with email that is related to this FAQ.
-
- Chris Penington (cjp8b@Virginia.EDU)
- Hugh Garsden (hughg@ee.su.OZ.AU)
- Rex Mammel (rexm@csn.org)
- Brian Ross (brian@coombs.anu.edu.au)
- Luke Brennan (BRENNAN@COCO.CCHS.SU.OZ.AU)
- Rhys Weatherley (rhys@cs.uq.oz.au)
- George Michaelson (G.Michaelson@cc.uq.oz.au)
- Phil Watson (Phil.Watson@newcastle.ac.uk)
- Fred C. Wyse (02h@oasys.dt.navy.mil)
- Jim Breen (jwb@capek.rdt.monash.edu.au)
- Tim Littlejohn (little@ere.umontreal.ca)
- Bruce Cockburn (bcockburn@acorn.co.uk)
- Thomas Marvan (tmarvan@sdcc3.ucsd.edu)
- Ruth Isabella McKai (mckay@leland.Stanford.EDU)
- Thomas Cohen (thos@suite.sw.oz.au)
- Ronald J. Bartle (snuffy@zelator.in-berlin.de)
- Richard Helm (helm@watson.ibm.com)
- Ross Alford (zlraa@marlin.jcu.edu.au)
- Carol Denehy (ccd@ccadfa.cc.adfa.oz.au)
- Bob Marks (bobm@agsm.unsw.oz.au)
- king@qut.edu.au
- Chris Maltby (chris@suite.sw.oz.au)
- Dave Horsfall (dave@eram.esi.com.au)
- Stephen Wales (stephenw@mincom.oz.au)
- Shannon McNeil (mcneil@angis.su.OZ.AU)
- John Nash (jnash@ccs.carleton.ca)
- Ian Doust (iand@hydra.maths.unsw.edu.au)
- Ross Paterson (rap@doc.ic.ac.uk)
- Nick (nfoskett@mv.us.adobe.com)
- Melissa Rogerson (rogerson@bkfug.kfunigraz.ac.at)
- David Everett (deverett@vms.macc.wisc.edu)
- Ming (mkoh@hp-vcd.vcd.hp.com)
- Charles Creegan (ccreegan@uncecs.edu)
- Duncan Farrow (d.farrow@uea.ac.uk)
- John Lamp (jw_lamp@postoffice.utas.edu.au)
- LS
- Vincensius Sugito (sugito@tartarus.uwa.edu.au)
- Barth Richards (barth@cbnewsd.cb.att.com)
- Franz C. Schlosser (fcs@leo.DIALix.oz.au)
- Frank Warner(fwarner@swifty.dap.CSIRO.AU)
- Ian Couroulis (i899435@greybox.ucnv.edu.au)
- Robert Chalmers (earth@nanguo.xanadu.dialix.oz.au)
- Brendan Jones (brendan@mpce.mq.edu.au)
- Robert Elz (kre@munnari.OZ.AU)
- Corran Webster (cwebster@math.ucla.edu)
- jondarr@macadam.mpce.mq.edu.au
- Ivan Reid (ivan@cvax.psi.ch)
- Kim Badcock (Kim.Badcock@ml.csiro.au)
- Tony Sprent (sprent@sol.surv.utas.edu.au)
- John Newman (J.Newman@icarus.curtin.edu.au)
- James Harland (jah@cs.mu.OZ.AU)
- Leanne Archer (Leanne Archer)
- William Eggington (William_Eggington@byu.edu.23.0@byu.edu)
- Andrea Janelle Dickens (ajd2k@Virginia.EDU)
- Greg Vernon (vernon@bcstec.ca.boeing.com)
- Andrew Davie (s1331501@giaec.cc.monash.edu.au)
- P Atcliffe (p_atclif@pat.uwe.ac.uk)
- Chris Maltby (chris@softway.sw.oz.au)
- Tony Mason (tmason@tuart.awadi)
- Rob Geraghty (robg@citr.uq.oz.au)
- Andrew Clarke (ajc@libserver.canberra.edu.au)
- John Oliver <j.oliver@uow.edu.au>
- Lawrence Cavedon (cavedon@cogsci.edinburth.ac.uk)
- Ian Couroulis <ian@ironbark.ucnv.edu.au>
- Peter Butler (peter_butler.its_2_po@ms-gw.uow.edu.au)
- Mark L. Sawley (sawley@dme.epfl.ch)
- Helen Johnston
- Gopal Rajan (grajan@worldbank.org)
- Ken Pisichko (pisichko@uwpg02.uwinnipeg.ca)
- Michael Johnson (mick@mullara.met.unimelb.EDU.AU)
- Justin Sullivan (justin@sydney.dialix.oz.au)
- Chris Beiting (beiting@vax.ox.ac.uk)
- Ron Seto (rons@zubrette.mpce.mq.edu.au)
- Samir KASME (samir.kasme@alcatel.ch)
- Tom Northey (tom@opal.com.au)
- Ian Staples (ianst@qdpii.ind.dpi.qld.gov.au)
- Mark the Magnetic (mpiton@chem.queensu.ca)
- Bob Dick (bd@psych.psy.uq.oz.au)
- Phil Ganderton (gandini@unm.edu)
- Joe Mack (mack@fcs260c.ncifcrf.gov)
- James Mullen (jmullens@cssc-melb.tansu.com.au)
- Josef Widjaja (jwidjaja@laurel.ocs.mq.edu.au)
- Richard Hickling (kinlen@ox.ac.uk)
- Peter Rayner (pjr@splash.Princeton.EDU)
- raphael@mama.research.canon.oz.au
- Zev Sero (zev@asis.unimelb.edu.au)
- Bob Backway (b.backway@trl.oz.au)
- Dean Tregenza (dean.tregenza@audit.csiro.au)
- Jaqui Lynch (lynch@delphi.bc.edu)
- Mark Morwood (morwood@wal.hp.com)
- Bob Dick (bd@psych.psy.uq.oz.au)
- Tony van Rosmalen (crisar@rulcvx.LeidenUniv.nl)
-