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The Sydney Morning Herald from Sydney, New South Wales, Australia • Page 19

Location:
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Issue Date:
Page:
19
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Sydney Morning Herald, Friday, May 1, 1981 Page 19 Leisure AROUND the house and going AWAY ARTS By SALLY MclNERNEY i Activities Suggested viewing ATN 7 al. 7.30i Special Prince Charles Royal Ciiurity Concert. A whole range of Australian tuleut Hill mm out to perform fur the Prince at the Festival Theatre Adelaide and thc evening will be hotted by Harry Crocker. 028 at 9.30i Movie Foolish Year. A film about and for children.

TEN 10 at 10.45: Movie East Of Eden (SS) (PGR) (Rpt). Tlie first of James Dean's big three films, this film firmly cast him as the young num. L. 1 for all willing workers larly to help sort the problems out. The bureau has about 500 organisations on its books.

It is run on volunteer help and subsidised partly by charity and government money. Its headquarters are at I47A King Street, City (opposite the MIX Centre). Inquiries: 231 2803, 233 2991, 233 8527. THE second Randwick Festival (lasting until May 10) begins tomorrow: high spots will be a community fair (Randwick Community Centre, Bundock Street, 9 to 5) and a "You Beaut" bush dance, with roasted jumbucks and music by The Larrikins. At Alison Park; S3 at gate, 8 pm.

Food and drinks on sale from 7. DENSEY Clyne, an enthusiastic authority on small wild suburban creatures, will be guest speaker at the South Turramurra Environment Protection group's meeting on Thursday. She will also show two films starring insects and spiders. Questions can be asked. Visitors are welcome.

At St Philip's Church Hall, Com-enarra Parkway, Turramurra; 8 pm. Inquiries: 449 4526, 449 3746. OPEN Day at Eiyldene, the camellias' home: this weekend, 10.30 to 4 each day. At 17 Mackintosh Street, Gordon; $2, children free. Refreshments Australian Volunteer 'Bureau is an organisation devoted to helping people And volunteer work in almost any Jfield.

People of all ages, with "ot without remarkable skills, can find almost any kind of work here. Arrangements may te brief or long-term, depending on the worker's wishes. The bureau finds unpaid occupations for schoolchildren in the holidays, and for unemployed adolescents, tradespeople, housewives and people who have retired or want some experience in a field where regular job opportunities are scarce. There is no age limit. The bureau needs unskilled workers, clever administrators, cooks, cleaners, child-minders, mechanics, teachers, labourers, tour guides, butchers, bakers, candlestick makers, craft workers, dog walkers, accountants and doctors.

It also needs people to help in sheltered workshops and children's homes, and with disabled people. If you'd like to work in a library, a museum or an art gallery, or even to clean zoo cages, that can probably be arranged too. In one particular program, a volunteer is matched to a child who has behavioural or learning problems, or both. The volunteer goes to the child's school regu Dr Kemp Fowler (University of Sydney). At the Sydney Building Information Centre's auditorium hall, 525 Elizabeth Street, South Sydney.

Thursday, 6.15 pm. Refreshments from 6.15, talk from 6.45, and informal discussion subsequently. Admission free; bookings from Mr Barany, 74 8292. CONCERT for Aboriginal Land Rights: Performers will include Ernie Bridge, country music singer and Aboriginal MP for Kim-berley: and Mike McClellan, Jeannie Lewis, Margaret Road-knight and others. Sydney Town Hall, next Friday at 7.30 pm.

Inquiries: Guy Morrison, 352 5361. also 357 5586. 328 61 18. GRAEME Bell and his All Stars will play for a Roaring 20s jazz party at Balmain Town Hall, Darling Street, Balmain, from 8 until midnight tonight. The admission charge $8 for Sydney Jazz Club members, $10 for visitors includes light refreshments.

BYO. PROGRAM three of the Australian Ballet's 1981 season: Choo San Goh's Variaciones Con- SYDNEY Autumn Antique Arms Fair: A large sale of old, ornamental and bloodcurdling militar-ia, leg-irons, handcuffs, rifles and pistols many of which no longer shoot straight, fortunately. Police Citizens' Min-ogue Crescent, weekend, 9 to 6 each day; $1.50, children free. Inquiries: 827 1645, 451 5578. POLAND'S National Day, celebrated in part by the Polish group Mazury singing and dancing in national costume.

Bankstown City Plaza, tomorrow morning at 10 and II. A LARGE anniversary fete, organised by the Benevolent Society of NSW: Music by the Abbey Jazz Band from 10 to noon, other music later, a karate show, little train rides and games for children, a clown, and stalls selling potted jam and geraniums, tea cosies and tea cakes. In the grounds of the Royal Hospital for women, 188 Oxford Street, Paddington. Tomorrow, 10 to 4. A LIGHT Rail System for Sydney: Lecture and discussion by certantes, set to Argentinian music; poems by Sir John Betjeman (who is one of Britain's best verse-writers, despite being Poet Laureate) translated into music and dance; Ashton's Monotones with Satie's music.

Opera Theatre; premiere on Wednesday, 7.30 pm. Evenings at 7.30 and Saturday matinees at 1.30. No Sunday performances. Until May 26. Bookings: 2 5088.

Concert by the Dutch musician Piet Kee, who will play works by J. S. Bach, Heron, Mendelssohn, Saint-Saens, Alain, Franck and himself. Opera House Concert Hall; Sunday, 3 pm. Tickets $5.50, concessions $3, $2.

Bookings: 2 0588. JAZZ at Abbotsleigh school: The Australian Jazz Sextet (led by the golden saxophonist Errol Buddie, with the guitarist George Golla and the singer Sandie White) and the Harbour City Jazz Band; at the senior school hall, Pacific Highway, Wahroonga. Tomorrow, 7.30 pm; $5, $3 children; supper provided. Bookings: 44 5642, 449 1277, 44 2446, and at the door. JAZZ Action Society Concert: A Tribute to Horace Silver, played by the Keith Stirling Quintet, and A Jazz History, a chronological musical survey gamely presented by The Keys Band.

At the Musicians' Club, 94 Chalmers Street, City (near Central Station). Wednesday, 8 pm $4, at door. ORCHESTRAL Concerts by the Waverley Philharmonic Society: Music by Beethoven, Bruch, Vaughan Williams, Haydn. St Charles Hall, Carrington Road, Waverley, tomorrow at 8 pm.To be repeated at 2 pm on Sunday at Bondi Pavilion Community Centre, Queen Elizabeth Drive, Bondi Beach (for Friends of the Society) and at 8 pm on Tuesday, at St Mark's Church Hall, Gree-noaks Avenue, Darling Point Tickets at door; $2, concessions $1. Inquiries, 387 2410, 349 7043.

By BOB STAINES fishes so well despite the hammering it takes because of professional fishing. He says the constant stirring up caused by the trawling creates a flow of food and thus attracts fish. in comparison, Port Hacking, which is closed to professional fishing, fishes nowhere near as well as the Bay. There are plenty of bream about in the Harbour. Lane Cove, Shark Island, Fort Denison, Neilsen Park, Gladesville, Kirribilli and the red and green channel markers towards the Heads are all producing good fish.

The tremendous seas running outside earlier in the week will really set the Harbour alight and do a lot of good along the rocks when they settle. Fish are inclined to slip into the Harbour to get away from the pounding. Before the big seas, game fishermen after yellowtail baits a' "osa Gully and South Reef found themselves catching silver bream instead. And there were stacks of red bream to 1.5kg on the close-in reefs. In Broken Bay, regulars really got among the snapper at West Reef, Boltons Reef and Reg's Ground, while there were still plenty of big tailer all over the place.

James Dean (bw Denotes programs in black and white. Seven National News at 6.30. ATN CHANNEL 7 7.30: Magazine 7 News. 9.00: Mister Ed (Rpt). 9.25: Fellv The Cat Cartoon.

9.30: Wombat Fun Show. 10.00: Romper Room Juniors. 1 1.00: Eleven AM Topical. 12.00: Movie Cry Havoc (44) (PGR) (Rpt. bw) 2.00: Streets Of San Francisco.

3.00: This Js Your l.il'e. 3.30: Tom And Jerry (Rpt). 4.00: Shirl's Neighbourhood. 4.30: Flipper. 5.00: $50,000 Letterbox Quiz.

5.30: I Dream Of Jeannie 6.00: The Aluppet Show Series. 6.30: News And Weather. 7.00: Willesce 'HI Topical. 7.30: Special Prince Charles Royal Charity Concert, Premiere Staged at the Festival Theatre Adelaide and is hosted by Barry Crocker. Artists include Sir Robert Helpman, Julie Anthony and June Bronhill.

9.30: Seven's Rugby Sydney NSW Country. Redfem Oval. ln.Jfl: Nowsnlght An update. 11.30: Movie Time Out For Rhythm (41), (bw), 1.00: Close. ABN CHANNEL 2 8.00: Sesame Street Juniors.

9.30: Play School Juniors. 10.01): Programs For Schools. 1.00: News and Weather, 1.11: Proip-ams For Schools. 3.00: For Children Sesame Street. Flay School.

Gather Your Dreams, Hunter's Gold. The Master of Bal-lantrae. 6.00: Countrywide Rural series. Social, industrial, political matters, with news and interviews. Neil I 'nail.

6.40: lu Your Garden. 6.54: Kaleidoscope Pop music. 7.00: News, Spnrt and Weather. 7.30: The Two Ronnies (PGR). Ronnie Corbett and Ronnie Barker.

8.tfl: Nationwide Topical. 8.40: Sporln-Khl Aston Villa Middlesborough, Swansea Chelsea. 9.40: News Ami Weather. 9.50.: Sportsnight Including trotting from Harold Park (first and second legs. Daily Double), news, features and interviews.

Includinp World Roundup. 11.10: Close. TCN CHANNEL 9 5.10: Shannon's Mob (PGR). 6.00: Cartoons. 6.55: Go Health.

For the children. 7.00: For Young Viewers. 9.00: Here's Humphrey. 10.00: Ed Allen Show. Fitness.

10.30: Another World (PGR). 12.00: Mike Walsh Show Interview. 1.30: Davs Of Our Lives (PGR). MUSIC 10 am. Syneruy Suusoi.

Sunrise: Works IkiscJ on the theme day and night, darkness and light. Included are Sunset from The Grand Canyon Suite. Moonlight Sonata. Midsummer Night's Dream and others. 1.30 pm, 2SI It-IM: A Hundred Years of Dance Music: Nothing like a spot of Hie liiht fantastic after lunch.

Today's program features Music from The Dream Factories the desperately gay music of the late 20's. 2 pm. 2AIK-I Friday Afternoon Concert: A weekly excursion into the familiar and the not-so-familiar. Highligiils today are bv Mozart, Weber. Gershwin, Puccini.

Franck. Schubert and others. 7 pm, 2MBS-FM: Contemporary Editions: One of those rare programs that take up the cause of experimental, avant-garde and "non angry Rough seas driving fish into Harbour ni hi i. it ii BOTANY BAY (LOWER SECTION) Botany MUSIC for little children: In this Bennelong program at the Opera House, the Sydney Youth Orchestra performs within close range of its audience, members of which are encouraged to find out which instrument makes which noise; they will also be allowed to come up close, pat the drums, stroke the violins and look down the tuba. Suitable' for children aged two to five and their escorts.

Recording Hall, Tuesday at II am. Adults $2, children and pensioners $1.50. Inquiries: 2 0588. CHILDREN'S drama workshop, to be held in the first week of the school holidays: mime, characterisation, speech, clowning and general amusement. Elissa Worth's Drama Studio, Gordon.

Bookings: 498 1306. STRATH FIELD Symphony Orchestra will perform Mozart's Concerto for bassoon, as well as music by Tchaikovsky, Wagner, Smetana, Suppe. Strathfield Town Hall, (corner Homebush and Redmyre roads). Tomorrow, 8.15 (wine and cheese from 7.45). Tickets include supper $3.50, concessions $1.50, at door.

Inquiries: 76 7920. GRASS ski-ing: People skilled in this hybrid sport will compete all weekend in the NSW championship titles, with some Canadian rivals gingering up the action. Razorback Ski Ranch, just off the Hume Highway on Razorback Mountain. From about It to 4 each day. BICYCLEMANIA (part of the Randwick Festival): A City to Surf race on wheels instead of feet, -with hundreds of cyclists streaming down Anzac Parade to La Perouse and back.

Winners will receive superior new bicycles. The race begins on Sunday, 10.30 am, in Doncaster Avenue, outside Randwick Racecourse, and finishes at the University of NSW. Bream fishermen made a killing at Juno Point where really jumbo-sized fish came on strong. There's more good news upstream at Mangrove Creek, where similar sized fish are being taken. However, blue swimmer crabs have just about had it After the best fishing Easter in many years, those lucky enough to be going on holidays this month can look forward to a lot of fish.

Anybody going to Ballina on the North Coast should take along an extra couple of scalers. In one burst there this week at the Bream Hole, near the Co-op Wall, more than 1 ,000 bream were taken. They simply went berserk and every man and his dog was catching them. Meanwhile at the Australian Angling Titles at Port Lincoln, South Australia, the locals streetcd the other states in the Estuary event. Best of the NSW anglers to do any good were: Tony Forster and Alf Aston, both from the Central Coast.

The main fish caught were whiting up to 700 grams. Bob Staines is editor of Top Spots magaiine. ia Europe feel a momentary loss of place when they see his bearded face looming large oa German televUloa sets. This new album will doubtless take him oa a whistle-stop tour of Europe again, disorienting more Australian tourists. There are some eminently pretty tunes here; and who could question his ability with a lyric when he took such an unpromising subject as Kedron Brook and turned it into a hit (and a tourist spot)? He has written a couple of songs for aa Australian film called She'll Be Sweet which, if memory serves, was oae of the njore spectacular disasters made by the ABC (tarring American actor la their declining years.

The title track is pretty, as Is Reason. A cast of thousands engineered and recorded this album, so there is a bitty feel to it, although the singer manages to emerge as enormously appealing. 2.30: Young And The Restless (PGR). 3.00: General Hospital A drama. 3.30: Search For Tomorrow (PGR).

4.00: The Curiosity Show. 500: Here's Lucy Rpt) 5.30: Family Feud Quiz. 6.00: The Young Doctors. 6.30: News And Weather. 7.00: Sale Of The Century.

7.30: New Faces Variety. 8.30: What'll They Think Of Next Geoff Stone. 9.00: Barnaby Jones Homecoming For A Dead Man (PGR). 10.00: Crlbb Swing, Swing Together (PGR). Alan Dobie.

11.00: Kate Loves A Mystery. 12.00: Moves Thank You All Very Much (69) AO). 2.10: Suddenly Single (71) PGR). 3.40: The Dober- man Gang (73) (PGR). TEN CHANNEL 10 6.30: 7.00: 9.00: 9.05: 9.30: 1O.30: 11.00: 12.00; Cartoons Juniors.

Good Morning Australia. Religious Programs. Fat Cat And Friends. Texas (PGR). Drama.

The Bernard King Show. Good Moming Sydney topical, Maureen Duvajl. Movie The Defiant Ones (58) (AO) (Rpt) lbw)(PCtt). Love American Style ll'GR). That Girl (Rpt).

Matlock (Rpt) (PGR). Action. Simon Tonusend's Wonder World Family show. My Friend Fllcka (Rpt). Superman (Rpt).

Personality Squares. News And Weather. The Restless Years. Special Abba: Words And Music. Features live performances as well as interviews.

Movies Chitty Chittv Bang Bang (68) (Rpt). Children's classic. Dick Van Dyke, Benny Hill. 10.45: East Of Eden (55) (PGR) (Rpt), James Dean stars. Reliiinus.

1.00: Close. 2.00: 2.30: 3.00: 400: 4.30: 5.00: 5.30: 6.00: 7.00: 7.30: 8.00: 12 55: CHANNEL 028 Non-English programs subtitled in English 6.27: News Headlines. With Georee Donikian Ashley. 6.30: A Whole World Of Soccer Presented by David Fordham. 7.30: News Worldwide.

With George Donikian and Diana Ashlev. 8.00: Nonstop Nonsense Comedy. Didi Hallervor-den. (Germany). 8.30: Nick Verlaine A farcial comedy satirising current social norms.

It is about quiet middle-class Nicholas Rimbaud who is. in reality, the famous thief, Nick Verlaine. (France). 9.30: Movie Foolish Year. A film about young people and the problems encountered as they learn about love, Rialda Kadric, Vladi-mcr Petrovic.

(Yugoslavia) 12.00: Close. commercial" music styles. Ignorance, fear, musicial elitism and our reluctance to think as we feel music are challenged by these forms. TALK 12, 2SER-FM: World Red Cross Day: Next Friday is World Red Cross and Red Crescent Day. Refugees are one of the principal concerns of these two bodies and the emphasis of the program is largely on them.

7.30 nm, 2SER-FM: My Two Lives: The autobiography of Brian lint formerly a policeman and now a disabled person. Brain talks about the upheaval in his life brought about by Multiple Sclerosis. 9.03 pm, 2FC: Poetical Imagery: The Mctaphvsicals a program of seventeenth century English poetry read by Ivan Smith to a musical setting by John Sangster. brought into the home, the resident dog may feel threatened, and should be reassured that it is not being replaced by the newcomer. The hierarchy can change as the new dog grows larger or stronger, or if the first dog suffers illness or injury.

If a challenge for leadership is made, frequent growling and con- flirt can result until the position of each dog is mutually accepted. When grooming, follow the priority system and start with the dominant dog. Groom in stages, giving each dog a turn. If you need to spend more time maintaining the coat of one of the dogs, encourage the other with an occasional kind word or pat to acknowledge its presence. If this method is inconvenient or too time-consuming, groom each dog separately, out of sight of the other.

C-SOEOBGES RIWEfl TOWRA et Vrockv rom patches WREN POINT (fgpiff" "tHI v5ji is POINT SYLVANIA POINT.) KueWrffSrffR? 'Waters1 Ar .7 Woolooware Bay If I Top spots on Botany KEY TO MAP: I Bream, jewfish close in or making tide. 2 Crabs. 3 Jewfish 30m mil, bream, whiting. 4 Drift for flathead. 5 Drifl for flalhead in tide.

6. Jewfish and bream. 7 Crabs, bream and trevally during fresh close in. 8 Trevally at high tide. 9 Bream, trevally 70m out from Moylan's Hotel on making tide.

10 Douglass Flats: Flathead, bream, set for crabs. II Fish light for bream from shore. 12 Drifl for flathead, set for crabs. 13 Bream and flathead around leases on falling tide. 14 Jewfish hole about 60m out from leases.

15 Fenced JEWFISH to 20kg have shown up on Wanda Beach with five taken in the past week. The run has surprised regulars although the odd fish is taken there at times. Usually, Garie Beach is considered the prime jewfish beach on the south side of Sydney. The occasional jewfish is also being taken at the Middle Grounds off Port Hacking and the Wreck off Marley. Some jewfish are also in Botany Bay but few anglers are trying for them.

However, what is on in the Bay now are big trevally and tailer in the deep water at the quarantine moorings. Over at Watts Reef near the Reserve at Kurnell, there are some excellent red and black bream at night. However, this spot is hard to fish unless conditions are calm. Bream and just the odd hairtail are over at the Container Wall. Some catches of 40 bream have been taken there at night At present the fish are definitely in the deeper water in the Bay.

Over the years the development-of Port Botany has seen a number of fishing grounds silt up while new spots have been uncovered. Well-known Botany Bay angler, John Bruce, reckons that the Bay speaks to us memorably, directly and distinctively. The third concerto (also for organ, strings and timpani)" of Jean Langlais is actually a more unusual work, with a mysterious rhetorical tone and more effective writing for the solo instrument; but it is Poulenc which will sell this well-produced record of acceptable sound quality. Another ABC disc an outstanding one is a reissue (with a new cover) of the recording of STRAVINSKY'S THE RITE OF SPRING (ABCL 8101) made by Willem van Otterloo in his last days with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra and first released shortly after his untimely death. It is arguably the best recording ever made by and of the SSO.

It would certainly be my choice if I wished to hear or demonstrate the capacities of the orchestra at their height. Kevin's album: a matter of taste Don't favour the underdog The Town Hall monster comes into good hands oyster leases: bream and crabs. 16 Flathead and crabs at high tide. 17 Towra Beach: fish during week. 18 Bream, whiting 220 from Towra Point on falling tide.

19 The Patches: sandbar shallow at low tide, breaks with and winds. 20 Bream, trevally and flathead 450m out from The Logs on making tide. 21 Jews nose. 22 Crabs at high tide. 23 Crabs, flathead and bream on making tide.

24 Crabs, prawns, flathead, bream. 25 Crabs, prawns, flalhead, bream. 26 Bream, flathead, whiting drift both tides. (conducted respectively by Leonard Dommett and Patrick Thomas) of ORGAN CONCERTOS BY POULENC AND LANG-LAIS (ABC Records, ABCL 8103). Poulenc's minor concerto for organ, strings and timpani is characteristically diverse in its ideas.

The first few pages of the score take us from Bach in his toccata or fantasia mood to one of Poulenc's favourite and most consistent borrowings, a passage clearly derived from Stravinsky's Symphony of Psalms. Another section of this 53-year-old concerto resembles part of Stravinsky's lyrical Apollo. There are also plenty of moments of typical Poulenc: a scurrying passage, for example, that sounds as if it might have come out of a farcical ballet. Somehow or other, like many other works of this composer, the work as a whole THb LOWER section of Botany Bay to where the bay merges with the Georges River is a prolific fishing ground. I have marked on the map the top spots where I have caught fish the past 20 years.

Fellow fishermen who put me on to some of these are among the very best of the bay's fishermen. These spots are not generally known to the average angler. For instance, The Patches is a top ground, so named because of the patches left in the weeds and shellbeds by a dredge. The Logs is named because of the fallen trees along the Towra shoreline. Both spots are tops for crabs and bream.

The area called Stinkpot has silted up and can only be navigated at high tide. In Weeney Bay the entrance channel is good for big flathead but navigation is limited and most fishing is done by small boats with short shaft engines. At Pelican Points there is a jewfish hole some 60 metres out from the oyster lease notice board. It is best fished on the top to half out tide for bream, school jewfish and flathead. Few anglers realise that one of the top baits in the bay are cockles.

They can be gathered just beneath the sand at the entrance to Stinkpot near the leases from early autumn right through the winter. I have caught some giant bream on this bait at the river entrance up to Pelican Point. The rig is important when fishing fast running water in the way. 1 favour a long trace, say 1.3 to 1.6 metres, to swivel and sinker. A 3 kg line is all you need but make sure you use enough lead to hold bottom when the tide is racing.

By CHRISTINE HOGAN NIGHT RIDER, by Kevin Johnson (Infinity, 37530) DOUBTLESS Kevin Johnson is a hard-working and dedicated musician. That is obvious In the craftsmanship in this new album. But when it comes to matters of taste, the album's cover leaves something to be desired. Like a model in an advertisement for aa airline, Johnson is photographed oa the back cover with the insigaia aid the tail of Lufthansa jet clearly displayed. The man has to have some help with all that travelling, to be sure, bat woald It not have beea possible to do another wayT Still, Kevin Johnson is huge ia Germany, where the little thigh-slippers seem never to tire of hearing Rock and Roll (I Gave Yon toe Best Years of My Life).

Ia fact, tone Australian tourists By ROGER COVELL LISTENERS who are in love with the sound of the Town Hall's resident monster, the gigantic William Hill organ of 1890, will be delighted to find it the centrepiece of one of the new commercially released discs produced for the ABC under its own label. I am not an unqualified admirer of the dragon-like roars and bellows emitted by this fearsome instrument in its unbuttoned moments, but I agree that it is remarkable and am glad that the Australian organ builder Roger Pogson is progessively restoring it to something close to its original condition. That fine organist Michael Dudman ensures that it sounds musical as well as occasionally thunderous in his recording with Sydney Symphony Orchestra By SAM SHEPHERD DOGS are sociable animals and will usually live together amicably in a dominance relationship. When there are two or more dogs in a household, one will assume the dominant role. The established hierarchy of master, dominant dog and underdog is accepted and understood.

Unfortunately, dogs do not understand human reasoning and complexity, and it is sometimes hard Tor the owner not to upset this natural situation by favouring the underdog. When dogs are brought up together, there is usually very little conflict and they become inseparable. If a new dog, or puppy, is 1.

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Pages Available:
2,319,638
Years Available:
1831-2002