Wednesday, October 16, 2024

DUTCH BOOK FEST

Australia  will  be  represented at  this   weekend's  Amsterdam  International  Antiquarian  Book  Fair  by  Douglas  Stewart  Fine Books, Melbourne, its focus on early voyages  and  travel,especially in the Far East and includes rare works printed in China, Japan, Goa  and  the Philippines. 

(Books,Amsterdam,Melbourne.)

TAIPAN MAN IN PIT OF DEATH


An unusual item  unearthed  in Townsville was  the above 45 rpm  Capricorn Record  which  featured Ram Chandra , the  Taipan  Man , autographed by  him  in 1979, and  the massive 1974  Australia  Day  flooding  of  Brisbane caused by  Cyclone Wanda .

Born Edward Royce Ramsamy at Lawrence, near Grafton , NSW, in May 1921, he joined  up in the l940s with Nazim Shah  in the  Carnival of Eastern Wonders  on the show circuit, later changing his name to Ram Chandra , specialising in handling and displaying venomous and non venomous snakes in his Pit of Death .

Through his interest in and knowledge gained about deadly Taipans, he helped the Commonwealth Serum Laboratory develop  an antivenene  for the usually fatal Taipan bite . The antivenene  saved the life of Bruce  Stringer , a Cairns schoolboy,  and Chandra was awarded the British Empire Medal  in  the l975 Queen's Birthday Honours.

Chandra was himself bitten by a  taipan . Married in Mackay, Queensland , his family consisted  of  eight children and  three more that were adopted . He died in Mackay on July 1,l998.

On the record , the vocals  are  both  by  Lyall Sutcliffe  backed by  The Wagon Wheels .  Sutcliffe and  his brother  Geoff  were longtime  buskers  who travelled  far and wide. In 2014  they  performed in a western  Queensland tour , aged  78 and 80 respectively , their  musical  minded  parents  living  to  101 and  99 .

In September 2014 , the popular record shop called  Capricorn Records , at Warrnambool, Victoria , run by Michael Fitzgerald , closed after 35 years of trading . 

(Taipan, Chandra ,Cyclone.)

Tuesday, October 15, 2024

SAVE THE PLANET, BIRDS AND BUTTERFLIES.

 Display  in  the  conservatory at Anderson  Botanic  Gardens . Townsville , offering  leaflets and brochures  on how to nourish  wildlife  and  grow  plants  that  butterflies and moths like ,  at  a  time  when  the  monstrous  slaughter  of  men, women and children  continues  in   the  Middle  East  .

A SCURRILOUS MEDIA MATTER

Posted in  Little Darwin , January 21,  2022.

Following  the recent  post sparked by the in memoriam  notice  for   journalist  John  Loizou , who  died  nine years  ago ,  a   January  1980  file  emerged   about  the  managing  editor  of  the   Northern  Territory  News, John Hogan , complaining  about  an  item  in Scurrilous, a column for political  aficionados , in   the   independent   Darwin  Star , of  which  Loizou  was  editor  at  the   time .

 Scurrilous  upset  Hogan  by saying  he  had decided  to set  an  example for  his  staff  back at the  factory (newspaper)  by  dropping out of the  Friday Club, a " select team of   Darwin  businessmen and  upper echelon public servants " who  had  a leisurely lunch on that day  when  two  editions of  the paper-the  daily  and  the  weekender- were  being  produced . 

It went on to say :  Thoughtfully , Mr Hogan  has decided that it is not proper for him to be enjoying  the fleshpots while  his workers  gobble takeaways at  their desks  and  slip out  for a  furtive  shot  of  the  old  kickapoo juice ...if lucky.

Another member of the Friday Club , a top public servant, Martyn Finger, was also reported to be  thinking about  foregoing  the  Friday happy hour . 

With such selfless menScurrilous said  the Territory's  future was assured. 

Hogan, later to become   editor of the Townsville   Bulletin ,  responded by  writing a letter to the  Australian Press Council complaining about the "insulting and  abusive comment "- disguised  as fact , apparently with the express intention  of  ridiculing  him  and  disrupting  personnel relations  at  the  News.  

He believed the author  was  a member of  the  Australian  Journalists' Association  who had  committed a  serious breach of  the  AJA code of ethics.

The matters  , he  submitted, were  serious enough to warrant  Press Council adjudication. It was  pointed out  to  Hogan  the  Press Council  only dealt with  complaints  against  a  newspaper, not  the  author . 

Loizou was sent a copy of Hogan's  letter... this resulted in  Scurrilous  taking   another  bite  out  of  the   Friday  Club  and  the  NT  News .

It said Scurrilous was busily building a  fallout shelter , convinced there  will be no  peace  in  our  time due  to  Hogan's  response, his letter of complaint run in full .Then it  commented  that  it was amazing  that Mr Hogan  did not know how the  Press Council works. 

Scurrilous could be wrong , it continued ." Is  Mr  Hogan still attending the Friday Club?" Adding more spice to  the luncheon , Scurrilous  said it was    inclined  to write to  the Press  Council  drawing  attention  to "the moral decadence" displayed  at  the  NT  News.

The News , it added,  had been accused of  running sexist advertisements  and not so very long ago , the  newspaper  had  used  bits of  fishing line to lift  the skirt  of a  young  girl  so  that  her  knickers  could  be  photographed. 

Perhaps it was  more a case   for the Festival of Light than  the toothless  Press Council ? It  ended : Ho hum. 

BLOWN IN THE WIND

Parts of North Queensland are being showered with Kapok seeds blown about   by  the wind . The  tiny seeds , attached to fine  fibres, are dispersed  far and wide  when the  pods open.  They  are  very evident  on  Magnetic Island  and  in  and   around  Townsville .

Vallis.

FROLICKING FISH

 

Vallis.

Monday, October 14, 2024

VETERAN REPORTER PUSHED BOUNDARIES

 Sydney Morning Herald  article , April 12 , 2013.

Memorial services and public tributes in Darwin, Hanoi and Dili marked the death of journalist John Loizou, who had a 54-year career in radio, newspapers and online publishing, ranging across northern Australia and Southeast Asia.

Loizou was buried in Darwin with a traditional Aboriginal smoking ceremony, while Vietnamese colleagues in Hanoi stopped work in his memory and East Timor's Fretilin Party paid  tribute.

Loizou would have appreciated the diverse acknowledgments; his life's work was shaped around the notion that Australia's Top End was an integral part of Southeast Asia.

During parliamentary debate on a condolence motion, both sides of Territory politics described Loizou's reporting as balanced and fair. Yet he called himself a Marxist and, while never joining a political party, was prepared to cross the line separating journalism from social activism.

 John Brendan Loizou was born in Melbourne on June 20, 1942, to a Greek Cypriot immigrant, Vasilios Loizou and his Tasmanian-born wife, Gladys (nee Jackson). John's education never went beyond Dandenong Technical School but at 17 he was promising enough to win a prized ABC cadetship.

The ABC sent him to Darwin, where he met Olive Kennedy, a member of the stolen generation, and they married in 1964.

Loizou became a respected member of Olive's extended Walpiri family around Phillip Creek. In an ABC radio documentary long after Olive's death, Loizou recorded the Phillip Creek children's experiences of family fragmentation under government policies of assimilation. 

After a stint back in Melbourne at The Age, Loizou returned to Darwin to work at the Northern Territory News under its crusading editor Jim Bowditch, who championed such unpopular causes as Aboriginal land rights and opposition to the Vietnam War.

(Later , In  Darwin , John  teamed up  with  Christina  Pas , who ran   the popular Restaurant Cri ,  about which it was hoped she would  pen  a book, was  a  keen photographer , wrote  an  essay  on  Xavier  Herbert , author of  award  winning novels  Capricornia  and  Poor Fellow My Country . A  dynamic  couple, they  produced newspapers , including the Southeast Asian Times , which Cri  continued online  after  John's death.) 

Loizou's sympathetic coverage of  Aboriginal actions such as the occupation of Quail Island, which stopped RAAF practice-bombing of an area containing sacred sites, and the Larrakia people's successful claim to land at Kulaluk in suburban Darwin was crucial in the battle for public opinion, according to anthropologist  Bill Day, an adviser to the Larrakia claim.

UPCOMING : Rerun of  Loizou's Scurrilous  clash  with  an  editor . 

(Reporter,Loizou , Asia.)