The Local Paper. Lilydale and Yarra Valley Express Edition. Wed., Feb. 22, 2023

Page 1

■ The Draft Kilsyth Recreation Reserve Master Plan will be open for community feedback next week after Yarra Ranges Shire Council approved its release for community consultation. The draft plan was produced following a community consultation process that included an online survey, direct mailout to nearby residents and in-person engagements that took place at the two main shopping centres in Kilsyth. Walling Ward Councillor, Len Cox, said at this month’s council meeting that the reserve was one of the oldest and most used reserves in the Kilsyth area.

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The Local Paper

100 IDEAS AT GLENBURN

Local News

Vigil at S. Morang

■ A community vigil was at the City of Whittlesea Civic Centre in South Morang last Friday night (Feb. 17) as the impact of the devastating earthquakes in Türkey and Syria continue to be felt.

Council Chair Administrator Lydia Wilson said the vigil was held at 7pm on the Terrace Lawns.

POLLARD WINS M’DINI MASTERS

■ Saturday (Feb. 18) saw the final round of the 2023 Foodworks Murrindindi Masters at Alexandra Golf ClubSome 22 Yea players ventured to the competition with Club President Gary Pollard taking out the Mens Masters title from fellow club mate Tony Rule, and Steve Berry from Alexandra, all on countback. The best three of four rounds was the result format. Other results from the Murrindindi Masters were : Ladies Mini Master, Vicki Clements $250; C-Grade winner: Steve Rumney, $150; NTP’ to Karen Sangster (who narrowly missed getting a hole in one), Vicki Clements and Neil Peterson who each received $100 vouchers. Tony Rule also won a NTP (Golf Hat and Golf Balls). Tony Rule missed out in the Countback for Overall Masters Winner.

Clean Up Australia call

■ Murrindindi Shire Council is assisting regstered Clean Up Australia events on public property by providing free disposal of litter at Resource Recovery Centres.

Registered event coordinators will be conacted prior to the event to discuss disposal requirements.

A limited number of schools and community groups can request help in completing a litter audit.

Murrindindi Council’s Waste Education Oficer will attend the end of the event and provide assistance to complete a litter audit, also talking with participants about how to help avoid this waste in the future.

There are three different eventsfor which people can register. These include:

■ Business Clean Up Day – Tuesda, February 28

■ Clean Up Australia Day - Sunday March 5

■ Schools Clean Up Day - Friday, March 3.

Murrindindi Shire Deputy Mayor, Cr Karine Haslam, said: “Murrindindi Shire is a beautiful place, but we need to work together to maintain its beauty – for our own enjoyment, visitors to our region and future generations.

“So, get your family or friends, your colleagues or your fellow classmates together and register to host a Clean Up event.

“Organising a Clean Up event is easy to do and provides a great opportunity to do something positive for our environment and your local community. You might think cleaning up rubbish at your local park isn’t going to make a difference, but I can assure you that it’s small things like this that make a huge difference,” Cr Haslam said.

■ More than 70 people from Glenburn came together on Saturday, February 11, at the Glenburn Hall to connect with one another, and to talk about Glenburn, and think of ideas and projects that will help make their community even stronger.

Almost 100 ideas were generated during the launch event, which will help shape the Glenburn Community Plan.

“Community Planning is all about putting communities in the driver’s seat to collaborate and plan for the future,” said a Murrindindi Council representative.

“With a little support from Council during a series of upcoming events, Glenburn residents will identify opportunities and priorities for their town to help them develop their own Community Plan.

“There are still opportunities to get involved in the Glenburn Community Planning Program.” Events will be held at the Glenburn Hall:

■ Wednesday, February 22 at 2 pm

■ Wednesday, March 1 at 5pm

■ Wednesda, March 15 at 7pm

A Glenburn Community Planning Dinner will be held, where the community will decide on projects that get included in the Glenburn Community Plan.

“The aftermath of these terrible earthquakes continues to be felt right across our community. In the City of Whittlesea there are more than 3000 people who identify as having Turkish and Syrian background.

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2023 Phone: 5797 2656, 1800 231 311. www.LocalPaper.com.au or www.AdvertiseFree.com.au FREE ‘The Local Paper’ is published by Local Media Pty Ltd Local and Independent. Not associated with any other publication in this area. LARGEST READERSHIP OF ANY LOCAL NEWSPAPER IN MURRINDINDI SHIRE
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The Local Paper

Ash on Wednesday Vale Marjory Long

ABOUT US

Incorporating the traditions of the Evelyn Observer (Est. 1873), Seymour Express (Est. 1872), Yea Advertiser (Est. 1995), Yarra Valley Advertiser (Est. 1995), Whittlesea Advertiser (Est. 1995).

The Local Paper is published weekly online and printed fortnightly and circulates in local editions:

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CONTACT US

Local Briefs

Craigieburn death

■ Homicide detectives continue to investigate the death of a 24-year-old man in Craigieburn last Wednesday (Feb. 15).

Editor: Ash Long

Features Editor: Peter Mac

Columnists: Len Baker, Matt Bissett-Johnson, Rob Foenander, Mike McColl Jones, Peter Kemp, Aaron Rourke, Jim Sherlock, Ted Ryan, Cheryl Threadgold, Julie Houghton, Kevin Trask, Gavin Wood, John O’Keefe

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■ Marjory Long, matriarch of The Local Paper/Melbourne Observer, has died, 10 days short of her 99th birthday.

Mrs Long, mother of Editor Ash Long (and Denise Meikle and Greg Long) was born on February 25, 1925.

She passed away last Wednesday (Feb. 15).

Marjory Norah

Lawrence was raised in Thornbury, daughter of Albert (‘Bert’) and Honora, and sister to Jack, Joy (Wood), Sylvia (McPhee) and Bobby.

She attended Wales St State School, Preston Girls’ High School and Stotts Business College, before starting as a stenographer at Club Motor, the insurance arm of the RACV.

The family ran Lawrence Leathers, a tannery.

The Lawrence were one of the first land holders at Merricks Beach, with several properties taken by family members from the mid1920s. Members of the family still retain holdings there.

At age 19, she volunteered for the Australian Women’s Army Service, serving as a Craftswomen, located at centres including Darley, Seymour and Bandiana.

It was at the Royal Australian Electrical and Mechanical Engineering workshops that she met her husband-to-be, Warrant Officer II James Long.

After their wedding in February 1945, they lived at Albury, Moreland, East Preston and Reservoir.

The family home was a happy one.

Denise attended Wesleigh and Coreen schools, with both sons completing theior secondary education at Ivanhoe Grammar School.

Family was central to Marjory Long, and she was involved and proud with her grandchildren and greatgrandchildren.

After the untimely of Jim Long at age 66 in 1987, Mrs Long lived in locations including Benalla, Grenfell, Camperdown, Ivanhoe, and at the Royal Freemasons Homes for the past 10 years.

In her youth, Marj participated in Brown-

Long Shots

keen interest in the family business, and she known to be bundling newspapers at 4am Sundays, in those early days.

Marjory was a keen reader, and a great conversationalist, noted for her rapid wit. Her past-times including doll collecting and craft.

In their few years of retirement, Marjory and Jim motored around Australia. After his passing, Majory undertook a number of trips to the United Kingdom, Europe and America.

with Ash Long, Editor

Celebrating 54 years in local media

Winner, Best Local Reporting Award Victoria-wide Westpac Award

Direct: 0450 399 932

E: editor@LocalPaper.com.au

Web: www.LocalPaper.com.au

Personal: www.AshLong.com.au

“For the cause that lacks assistance, ‘Gainst the wrongs that need resistance For the future in the distance, And the good that we can do”

ies, Guides and Rangers, and also became a Cub leader.

There wa plenty of sport with tennis and basketball, as well as ice skating and ballroom dancing.

The Merricks Beach connection meant swimming, fishing and friends.

The neighbouring Brooks family had a piano. All the families were involved in bringing the big fishing nets in. She said the haul was plenty of sea-

weed, shells .... and, on the odd occasion, even fish.

In later years, she also owned a weekender at Hastings, in its days as a seaside village.

In the 1960s and 1970s, the Long family began its association with newspapers, first with a weekend distribution business connected with titles such as the Sunday Observer and Nation Review.

Marjory took a

The investigation will examine the complete timeline of the man’s movements that afternoon, including interactions with the public.

It is believed the deceased was assaulted in two separate altercations involving different groups of people, prior to police locating him.

The first altercation is understood to have occurred in Hothlyn Drive about 2.15pm.

The second incident is believed to have occurred on Mitford Crescent around 2.30pm.

While being treated by ambulance crews the man became unresponsive and died.

BBQ at Marysville

■ A barebcue to connect with other community members, and hear updates and learn more about the Marysville Community Plan will be held at 5.30pm on Thursday, March 9, at Burrengeen Park, Marysville.

Participants are asked to bring their own barbecue food, picnic and drinks.

In 2020, the Marysville community voted on priority projects for inclusion in the Marysville Community Plan.

Action Teams were formed to bring eight priority projects to life, and they report what they have achieved.

Priority projects were:

■ Garden beautification in public spaces

■ Decorative lighting in the streets

■ Opening the gym

■ Helping finish Marysville's 'Youth Space' facility

■ Iconic multi-day walk from Melbourne to Marysville

■ RV friendly accreditation

■ Cycling trails for Marysville

■ Improvements to the swimming pool

Residents can learn more about Community Planning by phoning Murrindindi Council on 5772 0333.

At Pheasant Creek

■ Pheasant Creek Blackberry Action Group and the Victorian Blackberry Taskforce are inviting the community to a blackberry control workshop in Kinglake Central on Sunday, March 19.

Theme of the workshop is ‘demonstrating effective blackberry control techniques’ and will feature demonstrations from a variety of groups.

The workshop will run from 10. am – 12 Noon at the corner of Tooheys Rd and Whittlesea-Kinglake Rd, Kinglake Central.

Marjory was a member of the Country Women's Association, joined Probus, participated in Adult Education, was involved with Legacy and the War Widows

In later years, she showed courage and resilience, especially after a bad fall in which she broke both shoulders. She beat a number of health challenges. In recent times, Marjory decided it was time to “go home”.

A funeral service was held at Cordell Chapel, Fawkner, on Monday (Feb. 20), followed by interment at the Fawkner Lawn Cemetery. Arrangements were in the hands of Bethel Funerals.

Marjory Long was a loved and loving mother. and lived a good, honourable and useful life.

To learn more about how to control blackberrie, RSVP by March 12. Contact Chris Cobden on 0413 855 490 or ugln.projects@ugln.net. Catering supplied.

Meeting at M’dindi

■ Murrindindi residents who mioght like to speak to Murrindindi Council about topics that affect them and the communit are invited to an Open Community Meeting.

The event will take place between 5pm7pm on Wednesday, March 29 at Murrindindi-Woodbourne Community Hub, 815 Murrindindi Rd, Murrindindi.

Residents will have five minutes allocated to talk directly with Murrindindi Shire Councillors about issues or ideas. Those residents may be speaking in front of members of the public, as well as Council officers.

Prior registration if not required, and Council representatives will greet participants and and collect details on the evening.

For more information, email governance@murrindindi.vic.gov.au or call the Council on 5772 0333

Heavy alt. route

■ Works on a heavy vehicle alternative route at Mansfield is continuing. Travel through the intersection of Maroondah Hwy and Withers Lane has been upgraded with the construction of a new left-hand turning lane, and the sealing of Withers Lane and Dead Horse Lane through to the Ford Creek bridge is now complete.

Page 10 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, February 22, 2023 www.LocalPaper.com.au
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Phone: 5797 2656, 1800 231 311, 9489 2222, 9439 9927, 0450 399 932 Reg. Office: 30 Glen Gully Rd, Eltham, Vic 3095 (same address for 29 years)
Research, Vic 3095 Web: www.LocalPaper.com.au www.MelbourneObserver.com.au www.LocalMedia.com.au E-Mail: Editor@LocalPaper.com.au Editor@MelbourneObserver.com.au Editor@LocalMedia.com.au Printed under contract by Streamline Press Pty Ltd, 155 Johnston St, Fitzroy, for the publisher, Local Media Pty Ltd. ABN 67 096 680 063, of the registered office, 30 Glen Gully Rd, Eltham, Vic 3095. Responsibility for election and referendum comment is accepted by Ash Long. Copyright © 2023, Local Media Pty Ltd. Cheryl Threadgold, Local Theatre Julie Houghton, The Arts Kevin Trask, Entertainment James Sherlock, Movies Aaron Rourke, Film Mike McColl Jones, Comedy Ted Ryan, Horse Racing Len Baker, Harness Racing Gavin Wood, Stateside Matt Bissett-Johnson, Cartoonist Peter Kemp, Art Rob Foenander, Music
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OUR TEAM
● ● Marjory Long

✔Russell Wealands is preparing a booklet on the 100th anniversary of the Yea Golf Club, which takes place later thus year. He wants to obtain some old photos of the early days with sandscrapes, sheep grazing while players (usually dressed up to play golf) tried their luck with the game, the work done to convert scrapes into greens and any social events, the club rooms etc. “The Club is an important social and sports club - a great place to meet up, exercise the body,” Russ says. Contact him at rwealands@gmail.com

30 beds for mental health

■ The re is now better access to mental health support with a new state-of-the-art acute mental health facility at the Northern Hospital, Epping.

Mental Health Minister Gabrielle Williams this week announced the completion of the new 30-bed facility, one of nine being delivered across the state through the Mental Health Beds Expansion Program.

The new facility features treatment and multi-purpose rooms, staff and family lounge, internal courtyards and enclosed garden areas.

Opening in the coming months, this facility features 240 modules and will provide almost 11,000 days of care to around 650 people each year.

These new facilities provide a safe and welcoming environment for people experiencing acute mental health concerns.

Mini Ads

Special Price: $99 TOTAL for all remaining 2023 issues. Book your ad: 9489 2222.

You can have a black-and-white 40mm h x 62mm w ad in The Local Paper for the remainder of 2023 for a total of $99. Covers Murrindindi, Yarra Ranges, Mitchell, Mansfield, Nillumbik (rural), Whittlesea (rural).

● ● Cameras in Mitchell Shire

✔Waste dumpers n Mitchell Shire are more olikely of getting caught, with the installation of new CCTV cameras in illegal dumping hotspots. Cameras are already in place at various known problem sites throughout the shire. Some are at entrance points to Mitchell. Each year, Mitchell Council typically receives more than 400 reports of illegal dumping and spends more than $180,000 cleaning up and disposing of the dumped material. To report illegally dumped waste please use the Report It tool on the Shire website, phone Council on 5734 6200 or contact the EPA’s 24hour pollution hotline on 1300 372 842 (1300 EPA VIC).

DRUG BUST IN NORTH

■ Gang Crime Squad detectives have charged three men following a year long investigation into drug and firearm trafficking linked to organised crime syndicates.

Warrants were executed at three residential addresses in Lalor, Wollert and Thomastown at 5am on Wednesday, February 8.

A 23-year-old Lalor man was charged with a range of offences, including prohibited person possess firearm, acquire traffickable quantity of firearms, attempt to dispose of traffickable quantity of firearms, dispose category A or B longarm except licenced firearms dealer, possess firearm with no serial number, unlicensed person fail to store firearm in secure manner, eight counts of traffick cocaine, traffick methylamphetamine, drive whilst suspended and commit indictable offence whilst on bail.

He was bailed to appear at Heidelberg Magistrates’ Court on February 15.

A 58-year-old Thomastown man, believed to be a patched member of the Mongols OMCG, was charged with prohibited person possess firearm, handle stolen goods, knowingly deal with proceeds of crime, possess firearm with no serial number, possess imitation firearm, two counts of possess prohibited weapon without exemption and dispose category A or B longarm

Grassroots sports and active recreation clubs and organisations across the Yarra Ranges are being urged to apply for funding to boost their equipment, skills, and administration expertise. Eastern Victoria MLC Harriet Shing announced applications had opened for the State Government’s latest round of the Sporting Club Grants Program. The program provides payments of up to $1000 for new uniforms and equipment, up to $2000 for training coaches, officials, and volunteers and up to $5000 to improve club operational effectiveness.

The City of Whittlesea Commu nity Festival is back this March.

From 11am-5pm on Sunday, March 19, at the Civic Centre precinct in South Morang, there will be live performances, free activities, art installations, live music, market stalls, delicious food, roving performers, cultural activities and much more. This year’s event will also include a free Pet Expo, a Sustainability Lan, and for the first time the Council will be announcing the recipients of the City of Whittlesea Community Awards, live on stage.

except licenced firearms dealer. He was bailed to appear at Heidelberg Magistrates’ Court on July 13.

A previously stolen Harley Davidson motorcycle and two samurai swords were also seized at the Thomastown address.

A 23-year-old Wollert man was charged with two counts each of traffick cocaine, possess cocaine and commit indictable offence whilst on bail.

He was bailed to appear at Heidelberg Magistrates’ Court on March 11.

Police will allege the two 23-year-old men have links to Middle Eastern organised crime.

The investigation remains ongoing.

Crowds aim for Eltham

■■ After an absence of two years the legendary Eltham Jazz Festival is returningfor a free day/night concert in the Eltham Town Centre, on Saturday (Feb. 25).

Organizers of the Festival have engaged a rich selection of artists and band,s hoping to return the Eltham Festival into the top ten jazz festival in the world.

Eltham Festival held this honour several years ago and hopes this prestigious ranking can be regained in 2023-24.

Talented jazz, blues, soul, and funk bands, including The Shuffle Club, Para Para Band, The McNamarr Project, Soul Sacrifice - The Music of Santana, and local students from St Helena Secondary College, will perform at the Festival from 11.30am to 11.30pm.

Attendees can enjoy a variety of cuisines and locally-produced wine, gin and beer. There will also be free kids' activities such as face painting, a jumping castle, and craft activities between 1pm and 5pm on Pryor Street.

The 2023 lineup also includes: The Lachy Doley Group, Pearly Shells Swing Orchestra featuring Julie O'Hara, Spoonful, Rambal, Nat Bartsch Quartet, Shirazz, 32 Bars, Wilson and White, Bluetone Assembly and Nu

● The Syncopators

Funk-O-Matics

The Eltham Jazz, Food and Wine Festival was first held over two decades ago with five roving bands on a street corner.

It is run as a not-for-profit event with funding from the Nillumbik Shire Council, the Eltham Chamber of Commerce and Industry and local businesses.

PAIN RELIEF AND REJUVENATION

Back pain, neck pain, shoulder pain. Leg, knee, ankle and foot conditions. Shoulder, elbow, wrist and hand conditions Headaches including migraines. Cranial conditions including whiplash.

www.LocalPaper.com.au The Local Paper - Wednesday, February 22, 2023 - Page 11 Local News Ticks & Crosses
WENDY LOVELL MLC Member for Northern Victoria 222 Wyndham St, Shepparton Phone: 5821 6668 wendy.lovell@ parliament, vic.gov.au Michael
Springthorpe Blvd, Macleod
111 www.nsthealth.com info@nsthealth.com
Nixon-Livy 100
Phone 0493 571
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● ● Gabrielle Williams, Minister for Mental Health
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www.LocalPaper.com.au The Local Paper - Wednesday, February 22, 2023 - Page 13

https://americasvoice.news/trustless-trustee-weaponization-of-the-doj-by-the-chinese-communist-party/

Trustless Trustee: Weaponization of the DOJ by the Chinese Communist Party

The CCP’s unrestricted warfare infiltration hits home It’s no secret that the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), currently led by General Secretary Xi Jinping, has engaged in unrestricted warfare against the United States for decades in a massive effort to become the world’s sole superpower. Yet little is known by U.S. lawmakers and the public of the CCP’s tactics and the scale of its influence inside its own government institutions.

That war of “malign influence,” infiltration, and lawfare has grown exponentially in scope and threat level—especially over the last few years—making the CCP threat, by many accounts, the biggest existential challenge to America’s national sover- eignty today.

In July of 2020, FBI Director Christopher Wray told Walter Russell Mead, Ravenel B. Curry III

Distinguished Fellow in Strategy and Statesman- ship for the Hudson Institute, “We’ve now reached the point where the FBI is opening a new China- related counterintelligence case about every 10 hours,” and “Over the past decade, we’ve seen economic espionage cases with a link to China increase by approximately 1,300 percent.”1

The US House of Representatives Takes Action

The U.S. legislature must address this serious “lawfare” threat through investigations, legisla- tion and other means at its disposal, and it seems that the process has finally begun in earnest.

The U.S. House of Representatives showed their concerns in a rare bipartisan vote on January 10 to create a new Select Committee on the Strategic Competition Between the United States and the CCP . As reported by The Epoch Times, “A succes- sion of speakers from both parties extolled cre- ation of the new panel, with Rep. Andy Barr (R- Ky.) telling colleagues that ‘this select committee will examine the threats from the Chinese Communist Party with a fine-tooth comb and expose them for the American people and for the whole world to fully understand.’”5

No one understands the plans and no methods of the CCP better than prominent Chinese dissi- dent Mr. Miles Guo

He’s intimately familiar with the CCP because he’s been their primary target. According to The Wall Street Journal, “Some U.S. national security offi- cials view Mr. Guo, who claims to have potentially valuable information on top Chinese officials and business magnates and on North Korea, as a use- ful bargaining chip to use with Beijing.”2

As the highest-profile defector from Communist China, Guo is an invaluable asset of unparalleled strategic importance of U.S. national security. Guo has spent nearly three decades inside the small yet exclusive circle of both past and present deci- sion-makers of the CCP , accumulating personal knowledge of the CCP’s most hidden secrets that are indispensable to our understanding of America’s arch nemesis: the CCP .

And the CCP has been abusing the American judi- cial system to silence Mr. Guo through infiltration, bribery and threats.

All Eyes on the Prey: Modern-Day Bounty Hunters

In 1992, the CCP officially changed its policy and began allowing foreign law firms to establish of- fices and practice law in China. However, unlike in the U.S., China’s communist regime requires that “laws should respect the CCP; the law should be interpreted according to the CCP’s orders, direc- tives, and interests, and the basic requirement for legal service personnel is to uphold the leadership of the party.”1 This would be like one of the U.S. political parties demanding that laws and legal decisions conform to the desires of that party (by some accounts, this is happening in the U.S. with increasing regularity). Furthermore, lawyers are not even allowed to cite their own constitution as a source of law.

Law firms doing business in and on behalf of China are subject directly to the malign influ- ence of the CCP

Law firms doing business in and on behalf of China are subject directly to the “malign influence” of the CCP in a shockingly direct and obvious con- flict against the interests and security of the United States, not to mention the “dissidents, political rivals, dissidents, and critics”1 who have trusted our government’s laws protecting those seeking asylum from hostile foreign governments. The CCP’s weaponization of U.S. legal justice sys- tem to extend its influence in the U.S.—including attempting to extradite Guo back to China using extrajudicial means—“flies in the face of signifi- cant corroborated information supporting [Guo’s] fears and will naturally lead to a lack of confidence in the [judicial] process as well as unwarranted stress to [Guo] and his family, several who have been jailed and tortured by China,” said Aaron Mitchell, an attorney representing Guo. Federal Title 8 U.S. Code § 1158 confers the protec- tion of asylum to “any person who is outside any country of such person’s nationality…who is un- able or unwilling to return to, and is unable or unwilling to avail himself or herself of the protec- tion of, that country because of persecution or a well-founded fear of persecution on account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion.” Once an appli- cation for asylum is filed, the U.S. Government is bound by law to protect the asylum seeker. It appears this legal protection for asylum seekers is being actively violated in Mr. Guo's current Chap- ter 11 Bankruptcy proceedings in the United States Bankruptcy Court in Connecticut (Case No. 22-50073 and 22-05032) by none other than a branch of the Department of Justice itself.

Inserting a Bounty Hunter in the Courthouse: Luc A. Despins

On June 15, 2022, the Bankruptcy Court entered an order directing the United States Trustee’s Office (UST)—a branch of the Department of Jus-

tice—to appoint a Chapter 11 trustee to oversee Mr. Guo’s assets during court proceedings. Attor- ney Joe D. Whitley was vetted and signed a sworn Declaration of Disinterestedness under penalty of perjury, after which UST nominated Mr. Whitley for appointment as Trustee on June 30, 2022.

Paul Hastings, LLC, is a firm with a significant presence in China, which has done significant business representing CCP-controlled state enti- ties

Five days later, in an unprecedented move, UST withdrew the nomination, and recommended Luc A. Despins, a Partner of Paul Hastings, LLC, a firm with a significant presence in China and Hong Kong, which has done significant business repre- senting CCP-controlled state entities.

According to a letter by Mitchell, The U.S. Trustee’s Unusual Action to Withdraw its Appoint- ment of Mr. Whitley was spurious: “On June 30, 2022, just before the 4th of July weekend, the UST in light of its excessive delays in appointing a trustee for this matter, filed a motion for an expe- dited hearing for the Court to approve Mr. Whitley as the trustee. This motion was granted on the same day it was filed with an expedited hearing scheduled on July 5, 2022. Just hours before the expedited hearing was to begin and with no ad- vance notice to the Debtor (and possibly all par- ties), the UST took the unusual action of unilater- ally withdrawing its Notice of Appointment of a trustee and its request for Court approval of the proposed appointment.”

Asked to explain their rationale, the UST re- fused to answer, citing “government privilege.” Mitchell asked for an explanation of “how the U.S. Trustee, in light of the information previously pre- sented by the debtor as well as information avail- able to the U.S. Department of Justice demon- strating that the Debtor is a high-level political target of the authoritarian ruling Chinese Commu- nist Party, believes that the trustee of a firm [Paul Hastings, LLC] with a significant presence in China and Hong Kong and which has done signifi- cant business representing Chinese-controlled state entities, can remain a neutral and disinter- ested party with the ability to avoid undue influ- ence and interference from the Government of China.”

The conflicts of interest in having Luc A. Despins, a partner of Paul Hastings, LLC as trustee are many. Despins has developed business relations with PAG in a $671M bid for Spring REIT. According to sources, entities represented by Paul Hastings include HNA Group, BioNTech SE, Evergrande, Binance and many other companies tied with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).

Not only is the Chinese Communist Party a client of Paul Hastings, they also control the licenses to keep their law offices open in both China and Hong Kong. Effectively, the CCP controls the purse strings to hundreds of millions of dollars for Paul Hastings and Mr. Despins as a partner in Paul Hastings. This allows the CCP to exert tremen- dous influence and pressure on law firms like this to achieve their objectives—as indeed they already have.

The UST has shown that it is incapable of iden- tifying and appointing a disinterested trustee in this case.

The UST, as part of the DOJ, is aware that the DOJ is currently suing casino tycoon Steve Wynn for acting as an unregistered foreign agent of China due to his attempt to have Mr. Guo extradited un- der threat of losing his gambling licenses in Macao.2 At best, assuming it was incompetence rather than malice, the UST has shown that it is incapable of identifying and appointing a disinterested trustee in this case.

The appointment of Despins has obvious conflicts of interest and also reflects the infiltration of the U.S. judiciary system by the CCP using unrestricted warfare tactics. The letter continues, “At the hearing, the Bank- ruptcy Judge pointed out the unusual nature of this action by the UST and questioned the UST legal authority to do so. The UST did not provide a detailed explanation for this rash action at the hearing nor was Mr. Whitley called to explain the conflict to all parties and the Court. The UST sim- ply swept Mr. Whitley away from the Debtor, the parties, and the public.”

Asked to explain their rationale, the UST refused to answer, citing “government privilege.” In the present political climate, and in light of revela- tions such as those brought to light from Elon Musk’s Twitter drops, the American people may not accept such a lack of transparency.

The FBI and the DOJ especially have lost the benefit of the doubt

In August, The Federalist senior editor Chris Bedford explained to Fox News why Americans should be holding the Justice Department and FBI accountable:7 “Right now the plurality of Inde- pendents, according to polling, and the majority of Republicans are saying, ‘Hold on, FBI. The ball's in your court. You show us what you have because right now, we don’t trust you.’"

Former Trump White House acting chief of staff

Mick Mulvaney said on CNN that the FBI and the DOJ have "lost the benefit of the doubt" with Republicans in the U.S. “I think if you’re a conserva- tive Republican who follows politics, the FBI and the DOJ especially have lost the benefit of the doubt. Because of the way they have behaved in the past, the burden is on them to actually show information”8 justifying their actions. According to a 2022 Convention of States-Trafalgar poll,9 when asked for their opinion on the Depart- ment of Justice and the FBI, 46.2% of respondents said they are "too political, corrupt, and not to be trusted." The poll had 68.3% of Republicans and almost half of people reporting no party affiliation saying the DOJ and FBI are "too political, corrupt, and not to be trusted."

The Biggest Kleptocracy Case In DOJ History: CCP Infiltration

Because Guo has worked tirelessly to expose the CCP’s “hunting dogs,” including their “legal beagle” lapdogs, it has become increasingly diffi- cult for these criminals to hide their conflicts of interest and payoffs. This is why Xi’s CCP has engaged middlemen within the U.S. legal system— government officials, law firms, lawyers, journal- ists, lobbyists, and more—who are attempting to extradite Guo back to China; this is also why fam- ily and associates of Guo still in China have been brutally persecuted, arrested and imprisoned. Guo has worked ceaselessly for years to alert the U.S. and the world about CCP's long-planned scheme to undermine the U.S. Guo has worked ceaselessly for years to alert the U.S. and the world about CCP's long-planned scheme to undermine the U.S. as the world's superpower and replace it with CCP's authoritarian regime. As a whistleblower, Guo has perhaps re- ceived more attention from the CCP than from the U.S. government. Court documents reveal that as early as May 2017, high-ranking CCP officials worked constantly with its unregistered agents in an effort to deport Miles out of the U.S. back to China.

In 2017, Guo brought to light the secret plans of the CCP as detailed in two programs: BGY (an acronym for Blue, Gold, and Yellow) and 3F (Fo- ment weakness, Foment chaos and Foment the destruction of America).

Blue represents an array of technology-related tac- tics including hacking, malign social media influ- ence campaigns, media control, spying and sur- veillance. The CCP hackers are sophisticated enough to breach even the highest security data- bases, including those that control U.S. power and other critical infrastructure. These hackers have nearly unlimited black budgets and the organiza- tional flexibility afforded by the CCP’s other opera- tions. They can also access your detailed financial records, personal health data, your daily activity, and location, as well as the potential to develop AI- determined estimates on the individuals’ vulnerabilities to blackmail, corruption, or even simple spearphishing.

The CCP has been harvesting the data of millions of unsuspecting individuals in innocuous-looking mobile apps like TikTok and WeChat and by sell- ing its Trojan-horse-like surveillance camera sys- tems to the world.10 Gold represents money and bribery using direct or indirect financial benefits to influence and control individuals, institutions, and businesses. Sometimes that influence is indirect, as may be the case with the recent revelation that the University of Pennsylvania received a total of $54.6 million from 2014 through June 2019 in donations from China, including $23.1 million in anonymous gifts starting in 2016. “Most of the anonymous do- nations came after the university announced in February 2017 that it would create the Penn Biden Center for Diplomacy and Global Engagement” according to the New York Post. “Joe Biden, whose term as vice president had just ended, was to lead the center and was also named a professor at the university.”3 Multiple former intelligence officials surmise that such schemes carried out by Chinese spies have long played out on U.S. soil and remain ongoing Yellow represents the use of “honey traps” to com-

promise espionage targets. One well-known ex- ample is that of Representative Eric Swalwell, D- Calif., who had a relationship with a woman sus- pected of being a Chinese espionage operative. After federal investigators met with Swalwell in 2015 and gave him a “defense briefing,” he broke off ties with the suspected “honey trap” spy.

“However,” as the New York Post reported “Swalwell wouldn’t be the first or last political figure to be “honey-trapped”—with multiple former intelligence officials surmising that such schemes carried out by Chinese spies have long played out on U.S. soil, and remain ongoing.”

“I can say with a high level of confidence that there are many more of these women out there,” Daniel Hoffman, a retired CIA Senior Clandestine Ser- vices Officer, told Fox News. “China’s MO is to flood the zone.”4

China’s BGY Program is a direct violation of our nation’s sovereign interests and a threat to our national security. Its presence in the American justice system is a stain on the good will America needs to maintain in its relationships within the international community. However, prosecution of those violators caught in the act treats the symp- toms without addressing the cause, ostensibly costing American taxpayers millions of dollars and tying up DOJ agents that could be addressing other threats. Enforcement, as opposed to preven- tion, also does not protect the victims of these crimes.

Addressing the Threat

One of the stipulations negotiated by the U.S House Freedom Caucus before Kevin McCarthy could be voted in as Speaker of the House was “to look into the weaponization of the FBI and other government organizations.” It is incumbent, then that our legislators enact sanctions and/or other responses to confront the weaponization of the U.S legal system and prevent the CCP from hunting and persecuting dissidents like Guo who have come to the U.S. for sanctuary.

As Founder of the New Federal State of China (NFSC), Guo has been providing the U.S. with crucial assistance in its battle against the CCP NFSC’s mission is simple: Taking down the Chi- nese Communist party. As a significant number of NFSC members are American citizens or residents NFSC is concerned with preventing what they or their families have experienced in China from tak- ing place in the United States. The organization is funded by two foundations: the Rule of Law Foun- dation, a 501(c)(3), and The Rule of Law Society, a 501(c)(4). Each of the foundations has its own inde- pendent board of directors and mission statement Miles Guo issued this call to action on GETTR: “If the newly elected Speaker of the House is serious about taking on the CCP with substantive actions he must seize all CCP’s overseas assets, stop the U.S. media, technology companies, Wall Street law firms, etc. from continuing their collusion with the CCP , and have the Congress thoroughly inves- tigate the CCP enablers lurking inside American government agencies especially in judiciary sec- tor.”

Speaker McCarthy, make it so.

Op-ed by Kelly John Walker

#####

Postscript

Evaluating the specific case of the CCP’s persecu- tion of a Chinese resident who has been providing valuable whistle-blowing intel is in the best inter- ests of United State national security. FreedomTalk is taking a deep dive into the case and will be unpacking the details of this attempt by the CCP to extradite a protected dissident back to China by lawfare and force.

1. Hudson Institute: China’s Attempt to Influence U.S. Institutions: A Conversation with FBI Director Christopher Wray. July 7, 2020

2. The Wall Street Journal: China’s Pursuit of Fugitive Businessman Guo Wengui Kicks Off Man- hattan Caper Worthy of Spy Thriller. October 22 2017

• New York Post: $54M in Chinese gifts donated to UPenn, home of Biden Center: April 9, 2022

1. New York Post: China ‘honey trap’ plot could span thousands of operatives: December 11, 2020

2. The Epoch Times. New Select China Committee Approved by House on Bipartisan Vote: January 10, 2023.

3. www.NSFCofficial.com

4. https://www.foxnews.com/media/chris-bedforddoj-lost-american-peoples-trust August 31, 2022

5. https://www.foxnews.com/media/trump-raidmick-mulvaney-tells-cnn-fbi-doj-have-lost-benefitdoubt-with-republicans August 11, 2022

6. https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/poll-fbidoj/2022/08/25/id/1084605/ August 25, 2022

7. https://gnews.org/articles/198009

About Kelly Walker

Kelly John Walker is an American statesman, ac- complished writer, branding professional, and en- trepreneur. He is Founder of FreedomTalk, Host of FreedomTalkTV, and a senior writer for The Epoch Times. Kelly holds a BA in English & Theology and a Master of Science degree on a graduate fel- lowship with the US Department of Defense. He had a distinguished career as a conservation pro- fessional before founding two award-winning ad- vertising agencies.

About NFSC

The New Federal State of China (NFSC) is a group of freedom-loving individuals united by the com- mon goal of taking down the Chinese Communist Party. Many of its members have experienced or witnessed firsthand the atrocities committed by the Chinese Communist Party. NFCS opposes the Chinese Communist Party on every front—orga- nizing protests, assisting CCP dissidents, and sharing their knowledge of the CCP with the rest of the world. As a staunch adversary of the Chinese Communist Party, supported by The Rule of Law Foundation, NFSC seeks to prevent the destruc- tion of America by communist infiltration and cor- ruption.

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The Third Warfare

In its relentless quest for global hegemony, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) knows no bounds. Arguably the w orld’s most oppressive regime, the CCP has one overarching goal: to promote the interests of the Party, spreading its ideology and control to every corner of the globe. That said, the United S tates and its western allies stand firmly in their way.

The CCP is keenly aware that it is not yet able to destroy the West at a kinetic level of warfare. In a head-to-head confrontation with the U.S. and its allies, China would be outmatched — literally outgunned, militarily. However, there a re devastating ways to wage asymm etrical warfare to undermine and weaken the U.S. while simultaneously bolstering the CCP’s military objectives and capacity to wage war in multiple theaters.

The Three Warfares

T he CCP works from a premise of “ three warfares” (san zhan): public opinion warfare, psychological warfare, and legal warfare. These three interrelated and mutually reinforcing systems can hamstring the strategic and tactical capacities of the U.S. and its allies — even including their military capabilities.

The CCP has learned to use the robust U.S. legal system to weaken America’s standing as the world’s leading superp ower. Tactics collectively known as “ lawfare” exploit both the strengths and weaknesses of American law and litigation to tie up, obstruct, undermine, and divide the U.S. internally and on the global stage.

Lawfare is a major component of fifthgeneration warfare, which uses information and data to exploit and redef ine cognitive biases, manipulate w orldviews, and destroy opponents from within.

“The CCP understood they needed the West to advance, and they are still taking advantage of that,” according to retired U.S. Air Force Brig. Gen. Robert Spalding. “Thus, the only option is for us to completely decouple and prevent our citizens from engaging with China.”

I t is critical that U.S. lawmakers, policymakers, and military leadership u nderstand China’s three warfares strategy and meet their threat headon. A merely defensive posture plays into the CCP’s intent to immobilize U.S. companies, governmental agencies, and military powers through endless litigat ion and the manipulation of public opinion.

Ultimately, lawfare is a means of achievi ng military objectives — while constraining the West’s ability to employ its martial advantages — making it a serious threat to U.S. national security. The first step in defeating these tactics is to, as Sun Tzu wrote, understand the enemy. The second is to use that understanding to formulate offensive and preemptive strategies to beat the CCP at its own game.

Unrestricted Lawfare

It is important to understand that the C CP will hold its opponents to

legal and ethical standards that it has no intention of following itself. Lawfare, wrote Dean Cheng, a former senior research fellow at the Heritage Foundation’s Asian Studies Center, “involves ‘arguing that one’s own side is obeying the law, criticizing the other side for violating the law, and making arguments for one’s own side in cases where there are also violations of the law.’”

“Like the Soviets, the CCP’s dictators are never shy of saying that law is the party’s instrument to destroy enemies,” wrote Bradley A. Thayer and Lianchao Han, and “the Communist Party always remains above the law.”

The ends sought by the CCP justify the means, even if the means include deceit, racism, and human rights abuses. As Cheng wrote, “current PRC behavior suggests that one should not necessarily expect the Chinese to refrain from engaging in activities they condemn in others.”

This approach is essentially “unrestricted lawfare,” the use and abuse of the U.S. legal system by the CCP to weaken America, break the will of the people, and exert its political influence beyond its own borders, weaponizing the American judicial system to persecute Chinese dissidents on American soil and punish whistleblowers.

The CCP has demonstrated before the watching world a willingness to use mass murder to further its agenda, so it comes as no surprise that antisemitism is not off-limits.

Antisemitism as a Weapon: A Current Case Study

Witness the legal persecution of highprofile Chinese dissident, Ho Wan Kwok (“Miles Guo”). This ongoing battle is a cautionary tale in real-time that needs to spark a conversation about whether U.S. law firms should represent the interests of the CCP , knowingly or by default.

In early December 2022, Elliot Dordick — a Jewish-American lawyer — filed an ethics complaint with the attorney grievance committee of New York’s First Judicial Department against Paul Hastings LLP and four of its attorneys,

including two partners. The complaint stems from filings by those Paul Hastings LLP attorneys in an ongoing bankruptcy proceeding (case number 22-50073) in Connecticut involving Miles Guo.

Dordick posted the entirety of his complaint to Twitter, asking, “Why would these Paul Hastings LLP attorneys repeatedly cite a notoriously antisemitic, racist, anti-immigrant website in federal court to attack a Chinese dissident seeking asylum in the U.S. without telling the court of the nature of their source?”

The source in question is The Unz Review, a website founded by Ron Unz, who the ADL said “has denied the Holocaust, endorsed the claim that Jews consume the blood of non-Jews, and has claimed that Jews control the media, hate non-Jews, and worship Satan.”

According to Dordick’s complaint, Chapter 11 Trustee Luc Despins and other Paul Hastings attorneys substantively cited The Unz Review at least five times over several pages to justify their beliefs about Guo’s alleged actions. The Unz Review article cited by Despins and the other Paul Hastings LLP attorneys was written by Pepe Escobar, who the U.S. State Department said is involved in disinformation campaigns by foreign, authoritarian states.

Dordick pointed out that while Despins and the other Paul Hastings LLP attorneys made sure to remind the bankruptcy court of its obligation to view the Department of Justice-appointed bankruptcy trustee’s evidence with deference, they “conveniently” failed to mention noteworthy aspects of the evidence’s source.

On Twitter, Dordick continued, “I’m stunned to see this coming from such a prestigious firm. I took it upon myself to file the ethics complaint attached to these posts immediately upon discovering their actions. This legitimization of such an outrageous source has no place in our courtrooms.”

Infiltrating the DOJ

Guo has said in several videos posted to GETTR that Despins has a close connection to and partnership with the Pacific Alliance Group (PAG) in communist China.

“The appointment,” according to an Aussie Brief News story, “has an obvious conflict of interest and also reflects the infiltration of the U.S. judiciary system using unrestricted warfare tactics. Luc A. Despins is a partner of the law firm Paul Hastings LLP , which has developed business relations with PAG in a $671M bid for Spring REIT … and many other companies tied with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).”

Guo has also “questioned the appointment of Luc A. Despins,” according to the Aussie Brief News, “asking why such appointment will be allowed by the U.S. Department of Justice. He said the appointment is unbelievable and that the CCP can heavily influence the U.S. Department of Justice.”

“The infiltration of the U.S. judiciary system accumulated over the years,” according to the report, “as the CCP’s judicial unrestricted warfare plan intended.”

Dordick requested that the attorney grievance committee office to which he submitted his complaint investigate Paul Hastings LLP , Despins, and other Paul Hastings LLP attorneys for potential ethics violations of rules related to dishonesty, deceit, and misrepresentation, conduct prejudicial to the administration of justice, conduct that adversely reflects on a lawyer’s fitness as a lawyer, and the failure to adequately supervise lawyers at the firm.

“How could Paul Hastings LLP possibly claim it properly oversees its attorneys if they lend credibility to sources of hatred in federal court?” Dordick wrote in a post on GETTR.

Supporters of the New Federal State of China (NFSC), a movement seeking to take down the CCP and liberate the Chinese people, flooded the comments sections of Dordick’s social media posts with messages of support and solidarity with the Jewish community. Comments on his posts indicate NFSC supporters’ strong opposition to any promotion of antisemitic outlets in federal court by anyone, let alone attorneys at influential or respected law firms.

Additionally, several noteworthy figures in the Jewish community, including but not limited to, former U.S. Deputy Special Envoy to Combat Antisemitism Ellie Cohanim, Newsweek Opinion Editor Josh Hammer, and former New York State Representative Dov Hikind shared Dordick’s social media posts.

The struggle between Guo and Paul Hastings LLP is just one battle amid a war for hearts, minds, and, ultimately, global hegemony. The U.S. government would do well to commit significant re sources and scrutiny to ensure this is a war it does not lose.

Townhall Editor’s Note: Communist China is America’s biggest threat. Help us to continue to expose the evil. Join Townhall VIP to support our conservative journalism and use the promo code CHICOM to get 25% off VIP membership.

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MADE IN CHINA 2.0

■ Wang Chong, recognised globally as one of Beijing’s most significant theatre directors and celebrated for his visionary experiments with classic and contemporary plays, returns to Malthouse Theatre from February 28 to March 19 for Made in China 2.0 This follows the sell-out success of Little Emperors presented in Asia TOPA 2017. Chong teams up with director and production designer Emma Valente, dramaturg Mark Pritchard, and co-designer Emma Lockhart Wilson to shine the spotlight on his own experiences as an artist.

Made in China 2.0 is written and performed by Wang Chong, who also co-directed the show with Emma Valente.

In Made in China 2.0, Chong takes audiences on a journey deep inside his personal experiences of creating theatre around the globe, unpacking stereotypes of the global expectations of what China brings to the world. An immersive, funny, one-persontour-de-force, revealing a portrait of family, pop culture, and the role of the artist and provocateur in uncertain times.

Performance Details: February 28March 19. Venue: Malthouse Theatre's Beckett Theatre, Southbank.

MOUSETRAP OPENS IN MELBOURNE

■ The 70th Anniversary Australian production of Agatha Christie’s The Mousetrap has opened at the Comedy Theatre, Melbourne for a limited season.

Directed by Robyn Nevin, with costume design and associate set design by Isabel Hudson, and lighting design by Trudy Dalgleish. The Mousetrap is produced by John Frost for Crossroads Live Australia.

Agatha Christie originally wrote the story as a short radio play entitled Three Blind Mice, which was broadcast in 1947 as a birthday present for Queen Mary.

Christie eventually adapted the work into a short story before again rewriting it for the stage as The Mousetrap.

Christie did not expect the play to run for more than a few months and stipulated that no film of The Mousetrap be made until at least six months after the West End Production closed. 70 years on, a film adaptation looks unlikely at this stage.

Venue: Comedy Theatre, Melbourne

Performance Dates: Now playing for limited season

Prices: From $69 (transaction fees apply)

Bookings: ticketek.com.au or 13 28 49 Groups 8+ call 9299 9873 themousetrap.com.au

Williamstown death

■ Police are investigating the circumstances surrounding a fatal crash which occurred in Williamstown North on Thursday fternoon (Feb. 16).

Officers have been told a car crashed into a parked truck on Kororoit Creek Rd about 1.30pm. The driver of the car died at the scene.

Police have spoken to a number of people at the scene including the driver of the truck and the investigation is ongoing.

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● ● Anna O'Byrne and Alex Rathgeber in The Mousetrap. Photo: Brian Geach - Cheryl Threadgold ● ● Wang Chong returns to Melbourne for Made in China 2.0.

Local Theatre

Shows

■ Lilydale Athenaeum Theatre Company: Family Values (by David Williamson) Until February 25 at the Lilydale Athenaeum Theatre, 39-41 Castella St., Lilydale. Director: Ian Frost. Bookings: www.lilydaleatc.com

■ Williamstown Little Theatre: All My Sons (by Arthur Miller) Until February 24 at 2-4 Albert St., Williamstown. Director: Loretta Bishop. Bookings: www.wlt.or.au

■ Peridot Theatre: Night Must Fall (by Emlyn Williams) Until February 19 ar the Clayton Theatrette, Cooke St., Clayton. Director: Alison Knight. Bookings: www.peridot.com.au

■ The 1812 Theatre: Confusions (by Alan Ayckbourn) (a series of five one-act plays, featuring the same cast) Until March 4 in The Lowe Auditorium, The 1812 Theatre, Rose St., Upper Ferntree Gully. Director: Chris Procter and five other directors. Bookings: https://www.1812theatre.com.au/.../2023-season/confusions/

■ Heidelberg Theatre Company: The Ladykillers (by Graham Linehan) Until March 4 at Heidelberg Theatre, 36 Turnham Ave., Rosanna. Director: Chris McLean. Bookings: 9457 4117 or email boxoffice@htc.org.au.

■ The Revlon Girl (by Neil Anthony Docking) Until March 4 at the Brighton Cultural Centre, Carpenter St., Brighton. Director: Natasha Boyd. Bookings: www.brightontheatre.com.au

■ Mordialloc Theatre Company: The Effect (by Lucy Prebble) Until March 4 at the Shirley Burke Theatre, 64 Parkers Rd., Parkdale. Director: Claire Abagia. Bookings: 9587 5141 or www.mordialloctheatre.com

■ Maffra Dramatic Society: God of Carnage (Yasmine Reza) February 24 – 26 at the Stratford Courthouse, 66 Tyers St., Stratford; March 4 - 6 Newry Hall (Upper Maffra Mechanics Institute). Bookings: maffradramatics.com.au

■ CPAC Musical Theatre: Jersey Boys Musical February 25 – March 11 at the Cardinia Cultural Centre, Pakenham. Director: Lee Geraghty; Choreographers: Ashlee Holdsworth; Nicole Everitt; Musical Director: Kent Ross. Bookings: cpacmusicaltheatre. com

■ Malvern Theatre Company: Ladies’ Day (by Amanda Whittington) Until March 4 at 29 Burke Rd., Malvern. Director: Pip Le Blond. Bookings: www.malverntheatre.com.au

■ The Basin Theatre Group: Two and Two Together (by Derek Benfield) February 23 –March 5 at The Basin Theatre, Doongalla Rd., The Basin. Director: Bob Bramble. Bookings: www.thebasintheatre.org.au

■ Strathmore Theatrical Arts Group (STAG): Fortune’s Fools (by Fredrick Stroppel) February 23 – March 4 at Strathmore Community Theatre, Loeman St., Strathmore. Director: Audrey Farthing. www.stagtheatre.org

■ The Mount Players: The 39 Steps (by John Buchan) (adapted by Patrick Barlow, Nobbie Dimon and Simon Corble) A play for radio adapted and directed by John Rowland. February 24 – March 12 at The Mountview Theatre, 56 Smith St., Macedon. Director: John Rowland. Bookings: www.themount players.com

■ Eltham Little Theatre: A Play in a Day (or Two) February 24 and 25 at the Eltham Performing Arts Centre, 1603 Main Rd., Research. Director: Bella Preston. Bookings: www.elthamlittletheatre.org.au

■ Wonthaggi Theatrical Group: School of Rock the Musical, March 3 – 18 at 7.30pm at the Wonthaggi Union Community Arts Centre, 96 Graham St., Wonthaggi. Bookings: wtg.org.au

■ Gemco Players (A Gemco in the Park Production): Much Ado About Nothing (by William Shakespeare) March 3 at 6.30pm; March 19 at 6.30pm at the Gus Ryberg Amphitheatre, Emerald Lake Park, Emerald Lake Rd., Emerald. Director: Sharon Maine. If weather is unsuitable for outdoor performance, the show will be presented at The Gem, 19 Kilvington Drive, Emerald. Bookings: www.gemcoplayers.org

■ Williamstown Musical Theatre Company: Encore (showcase concert) March 4 at 7.30pm at the Williamstown Town Hall, 104 Ferguson St., Williamstown. Seating at tables. All tickets $40. www.wmtc.org.au

Talk is cheap, gossip is priceless

MYSTERY IN A BLIMP

■ The Shift Theatre presents Mystery in a Blimp from March 23 to April 2 at the Bluestone Church Arts Space, 8A Hyde St, Footscray.

Promotional descriptions of Mystery in a Blimp include: 'A dangerously farcical joyride, comedy as anti-theatre, a murder mystery mashup. a play that self-references to the point of implosion, and 'an absurdist take on play writing and fringe theatre'.

Written by Nathan Curnow, the Melbourne work has references to local theatre culture and the difficulties of staging a new play.

“With a distinct Dadaist bent, identity formation, the creative process and the act of collaboration are explored and exploded – with no safe landing guaranteed.”

The story tells of Hershall waking up on a blimp but nobody knows where they are going or how they even got on board. It’s all the writer’s fault. “He’s 10 pages into it, the drugs have worn off and he doesn’t know how to finish.”

Mystery in a Blimp is directed by Kevin Hopkins with design by Greg Carroll. The cast features Brian Davison, Helen Hopkins, Mia Landgren, Claire Nicholls, Gabriel Partington, Lachlan Watts and Cristina Wells.

Founded in 2009, The Shift Theatre is focused on presenting dynamic works with strong roles for women, both from existing texts and in the development of new works.

The company's aim is 'to provide a stimulating and collaborative platform for directors, actors and a creative team who share our vision for a vibrant ensemble company and stories that capture the heart and the imagination.'

Performance Season: March 23 - April 2

Venue: Bluestone Church Arts Space, 8A Hyde St., Footscray

Bookings: www.trybooking.com/CFJPW

- Cheryl Threadgold

Virginia

■ Edna O’Brien’s play Virginia takes its entire dialogue from Virginia Woolf’s writing, her letters and diaries, and those of her husband Leonard Woolf and her sometime lover Vita Sackville-West.

Essentially a monologue played out in scenes from Virginia Woolf’s (Heather Lythe) life, the dialogue is interspersed with scenes with Leonard ( Mark Opitz) and Vita (Beth Klein)

The loss of her mother and half-sister and her brother's death in the First World War are pitched beside the struggle she faced as a woman for acceptance as an equal intellectual.

“The world belongs to men,” she tells us.

The narrative moves between Virginia’s work and her reminiscences of her fellow Bloomsbury group peers, that of her sister Nessa, Clive Bell, Sidney Turner, Lytton Strachey and her husband, Leonard Woolf.

Other modernist writers are mentioned in passing, lunching with W.B. Yeats and “the suave sausage,” Gertrude Stein.

Self-absorbed and introspective, moments of clarity about her work are punctuated with dayto-day activities and sketches of social life.

She addresses the audience directly, stepping in and out of scenes with her characteristic stream-of-consciousness descriptions of her thoughts.

Director Nicholas Opolski’s simple set helps to make the transitions between monologues effective.

Special mention to the choice of costumes that work to tie the narrative to its time.

The audience follows the monologue thread as Virginia shape-shifts between flirtatiousness and an increasing dread that her “crack-brained” illness will prevent her from writing.

What is first and foremost is Virginia’s battle with increasing bouts of depression and her fear of being sent away for “rest cures”.

Lythe brings a brittleness to Virginia that works well.

Both Klein and Opitz are worthy foils, but Lythe’s portrayal of Virginia Woolf anchors the performance.

● Nanna threatens the whole family with her kitchen knife - just one twist on the traditional ‘who done it' in Mystery in a Blimp. (From left) Mia Landgren, Brian Davison, Lachlan Watts, Cristina Wells, Claire Nicholls, Gabriel Partington and Helen Hopkins

Performance Details: Until February 26

Venue: La Mama HQ, 205 Faraday St., Carlton Bookings: www.lamama.com.au

- Review by Kathryn Keeble

Family business

■ The family dynasty of writers continues for Barry Dickins, with his son Louis Dickins now also a successful playwright and film-maker. Louis Dickins attended his father's event at The Channel, Arts Centre Melbourne, where Barry Dickins shared entertaining stories about his life and work as a Melbourne playwright for nearly 50 years, in conversation with Dr Cheryl Threadgold.

The booked out event was well received by the appreciative audience, with a second event likely to be scheduled next year.

A two-part Theatre Heritage Australia oral history interview with Barry Dickins, interviewed by Cheryl Threadgold, can be found on https://theatreheritage.org.au/digital-collection/oral-history-interviews/item/857-barrydickins

Local Theatre Shows

■ Theatrical: Green Day’s American Idiot, March 9 – 26 at Chapel off Chapel, Prahran. Director: Scott Bradley; Musical Director: Tahra Cannon; Choreographer: Grace Collin. Bookings: theatrical.com.au

■ Eltham Little Theatre: Theatre Trivia, March 10 at the Eltham Performing Arts Centre, 1603 Main Rd., Eltham. Director: James Chappel. Bookings: www.elthamlittletheatre. org.au

■ Beaumaris Theatre: Puffs (Two Act edition by Matt Cox) March 10 – 25 at Beaumaris Theatre, 82 Wells Rd., Beaumaris. Directors: Dan Bellis and Kristina Doucouliagos. Bookings: www.beaumaristheatre.com.au

Auditions

■ Peridot Theatre: #BacchaeToo (based on The Bacchae by Euripides) Adapted and directed by Elise D’Amico and Joe Dias. The directors seek a dynamic and diverse cast for this modern adaptation. Initial audition will be a self-tape and must be submitted by Wednesday, February 22. If required, callbacks will be held at Fleigner Hall, 31 Highland Ave., Oakleigh East. Full details: https:// www.peridot.com.au/auditions

■ Strathmore Theatrical Arts Group (STAG): An Inspector Calls, February 26, 27 from 7-10pm at the Strathmore Community Theatre, Loeman St., Strathmore. Director: Roderick Chappel. Further information from the director via http://www.stagtheatre.org/ auditions/

■ PLOS Musical Productions: Strictly Ballroom February 25 – 28, Call-backs March 14. Further details: www.plos.asn.au

■ Avid Theatre and Ardour Productions: The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark (by William Shakespeare) March 14, 7pm –10pm; March 18, 2pm – 5pm at Malvern Community Church Hall, 29 Burke Rd., Malvern East. Director: Nicholas Opolski. Audition enquiries: nopolski@hotmail.com or 0400 507 788.

■ Mordialloc Theatre Company: Summer of the Seventh Doll (by Ray Lawler) March 19 from 2pm and March 21 from 7.30pm at Factory 8/417-419 Warrigal Rd., Cheltenham. Director: Martin Gibbs. Audition enquiries: mandcgibbs@tpg.com.au or call 0411 645 003.

White Season

■ Melbourne independent author Brian Sherlock's newly-released novel, White Season, is an adult comedy-drama set in the Victorian snowfields in fictional Mount Frogmore in the winter of 2019.

The novel's setting has been inspired by the winters Brian has spent as a seasonal worker in Victoria's alpine region. Family relationships and the Deaf are explored, CODA (Child of Deaf Adults) and LGBTQ communities.

White Season tells of two seasonal workers, Toby and EJ, who are on personal journeys to find themselves in the snowfields.

Toby is a first time winter seasonal and a CODA (Child of Deaf Adults) who, on account of outside influences, has developed a fierce resistance to verbal communication and accepting blame for wrongs he hasn’t committed.

Media Flashes

■ Nick Ludlam has started as the International Editor of SBS World News. He was most recently the Foreign Editor for Nine

■ James Preston has started at Fox Sports News as a News Anchor. He is also a Weather Presenter at Sky News Australia.

■ Broede Carmody has stepped into the role of State Political Reporter at The Age.

■ Seven will welcome television presenter Chris Brown to the network in July.

■ Journalist hires at the Herald Sun are Alexandra Middleton, Carly Douglas, Laura Placella, Owen Leonard and Sarah Perillo.

EJ is a far more experienced seasonal and bisexual who is attempting to better himself and his lifestyle – he is the victim of several betrayals and as a result is unwilling to create familial connections with those around him.

Toby and EJ commence the season on bad terms, but soon form a friendship which allows for both to achieve their goals.

The novel is classed as new adult fiction and contains adult language. The targeted audience is 18+.

White Season sells as an ebook or paperback from Amazon, and is freely available from Kindle Unlimited.

Local Paper

Melbourne Observer are published weekly, February-December. You can have a copy emailed to you, free. Sim-

Page 18 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, February 22, 2023 www.LocalPaper.com.au
Confidential Melbourne
● ● Barry Dickins with son, Louis Dickins, at Arts Centre Melbourne. Photo: Malcolm Threadgold
● ● ● Digital editions of
ply
The
and
register at FreePaper.com.au

Bearded Horror and crime

■ Musician Sean Donehue and writer Nick Waxman have created Bearded: a New Queer Aussie Musical to be presented at Frankston Arts Centre's Cube 37 stage from March 13.

Bearded has been in development since 2019 with support from the Australian Music Theatre Festival, the Victorian College of the Arts, Home Grown Theatre Company and supported by Frankston City Council's Artist Project Grant Program.

The show raises the question, 'So what’s it like figuring out you’re queer in 2023?'

For best-friends Bet and Ace, it’s not great. In order to appease the masses, escape the spotlight, and just be seen as “normal” for once, Bet and Ace decide to “date” one another; be each other’s beards.

However, living comfortably in their lie can only last so long. The cracks begin to form as Ace falls for an older boy and Bet learns things about her family that have long been hidden. No matter the lie they live, it would seem the truth will always find a way to reveal itself.

Despite the show’s Queer context, Bearded is ultimately a story about family, given and chosen. This new musical is like reading the diaries of two Aussie queer teenagers; it is intellectual but it sounds and speaks like the youth of today.

Bearded doesn’t deny the fact that queer youth are still subject to blatant queer-phobia and abject hatred, however it also explores distinctly 21st century problems like queer misrepresentation, tokenism, gaslighting and toxic positivity.

Performance Season: March 1 - 3

Venue: Cube 37, Frankston Arts Centre

Tickets: artscentre.frankston.vic.gov.au

Further enquiries: bearded.musical@ gmail.com or 0407 550 391

Puffs

■ Beaumaris Theatre opens its 2023 season with Puffs, or Seven Increasingly Eventful Years at a Certain School of Magic and Magic, from March 10 - 25 at 82 Wells Rd, Beaumaris.

The two-act edition is written by Matt Cox and co-directed by Kristina Doucouliagos and Dan Bellis. Puffs tells of 'a certain boy wizard who for seven years went to a certain Wizard School and conquered evil.'

This, however, is not his story, but is the story of the Puffs who just happened to be there, too. Puffs is promoted as 'A tale for anyone who has never been destined to save the world.'

Puffs is not authorised, sanctioned, licensed or endorsed by J.K.Rowling, Warner Bros. or any person or company associated with the Harry Potter books, films or play.

Performance Details: March 10 - 25

Venue: Beaumaris Theatre, 82 Wells Rd., Beaumaris

Bookings: www.beaumaristheatre. com.au - Cheryl Threadgold

‘TEMPEST’ AT MALVERN

■ The Melbourne Shakespeare Company returns to Central Park, Malvern with their adaptation of The Tempest.

This new musical production is the brainchild of Melbourne director Chelsea Matheson (Telling Tales) with Musical Direction from Benjamin Colley (As You Like It) and Movement Direction from Tref Gare (The King’s Player).

Returning to Central Park, Malvern for the first time since their sell-out season of A Midsummer Night’s Dream, the Melbourne Shakespeare Company is ready to take audiences back to the '80s, imbuing this Shakespeare classic with punk rock.

Whilst audiences know Melbourne Shakespeare Company for their outdoor productions, The Tempest is going to take that concept and turn it up to 11.

With hits like Holding Out for a Hero, It’s Raining Men, and Final Countdown performed live by the cast of actor musicians, a rock concert will accompany the picnic in the park.

Director Chelsea Matheson says: “It’s The Tempest like you’ve never seen it before. As a group of magical outcasts thrive in the sub-cultural landscape and image of 1980's Punk, we take an engaging story of exclusion and rebellion, and set it against the clear and colourful world of commercial 1980s pop culture.”

“As a returning Melbourne Shakespeare Company collaborator, Chelsea also says: ‘Seeing a Melbourne Shakespeare show is the perfect summer activity in the park for the whole family. Melbourne Shakespeare Company truly relishes the art of creating engaging and exciting outdoor Shakespeare

“Audiences can expect not only an entertaining day in Malvern’s beautiful Central Park, but a show that is colourful, bold, hilarious, and filled with familiar music we all know and love.”

The cast of 13 includes Aram Geleris as Prospero, Katherine Pearson as Ariel, Liliana Dalton as Miranda, and Michael Sakinofsky as Caliban.

For Melbourne Shakespeare Company being able to perform in beautiful outdoor locations like Central Park, comes with a responsibility to look after the spaces in which they rehearse and perform.

That’s why they are proud to be industry leaders in sustainable theatre-making, empowering designers to make environmentally conscious choices.

Guests are encouraged to bring a picnic blanket or a foldable chair and to sit back and relax whilst Melbourne Shakespeare rocks their socks off. Protective sun-wear is recommended for matinee performances. Tickets are now available at melbourneshakespeare.com

Much Ado About Nothing

■ Gemco Players present William Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing from March 3 - 19 at the Gus Ryberg Amphitheatre, Emerald Lake Rd, Emerald.

This Gemco in the Park production of one of Shakespeare's most widely performed plays, is directed by Sharon Maine.

The themes of love, mistaken identity, sexual jealousy, honour, betrayal and friendship all play out against the background of the Sicilian countryside.

If the weather makes it impossible for an outdoors performance, the show will be presented at The Gem, 19 Kilvington Drive, Emerald.

Performance Details: March 3, 4, 5, 11, 12, 17,18,19.

Venue: Gus Ryberg Amphitheatre, Emerald Lake Park, Emerald Lake Road, Emerald (alternative indoor vene, The Gem, 19 Kilvington Drive)

Bookings: www.gemcoplayers.org

Nosferatu

■ There is satirical bite in Keziah Warner’s, Nosferatu (pun intended). Invited to invest in a small Tasmanian town by local entrepreneurs, Count Orlok (Jacob Collins-Levy), a venture

tarn.

We are reminded here of Queenstown’s denuded mining landscape. This leaves the local doctor, Kate (Sophie Ross), as the last bastion against rampant capitalism.

The effectiveness of Warner’s script lies in its ability to balance the comic nonsense of a much vaunted myth with the deeper message of individuals giving in to their baser desires for success and wealth.

Director Bridget Baladis keeps the pace moving on an open stage with its chequered parquetry like a mesmeric variegation and a backdrop of doors that suggest the foreboding of other worlds (Romanie Harper).

Paul Jackson’s lighting facilitates the transition between interconnected scenes where the same character can almost appear in two moments simultaneously.

This adds to the momentum of the production. Nosferatu’s shadow, a bloody table and Orlok’s vanishing are well handled staging effects, there also being enough gore to capitalize on the tropes associated with Dracula’s lust for blood.

The double entendre of the lines delivered by Collins-Levy are a comic delight, but each character suggests a different type of loss. Joyce plays a well-meaning but lost individual, Brown, a greedy developer, Ross a doctor facing the loss of her mother and those she is caring for and Siva, a journalist who, against her better judgement, having exposed the fault lines in the original development, still falters.

There is something in this play for everyone; blood, carnivorous plants, environmental degradation, venture capitalism and moral corruption. The integrated theatricality of it all balances the comedy with the gore and has the audience questioning the cause of social disintegration.

Performance Details. Until March 5

Venue: The Merlyn Theatre, Malthouse, Southbank

Bookings: www.malthousetheatre.com.au

- Review by David

Sculptures on move

■ Five significant sculptures from Arts Centre Melbourne’s Public Art Collection are temporarily located at McClelland Sculpture Park and Gallery and Heide Museum of Modern Art during the Melbourne Arts Precinct Transformation.

Sculptures, Rhythms of Life, Family of Man

I, Family of Man II, formerly located around Arts Centre Melbourne’s Theatres building, were installed at McClelland Sculpture Park and Gallery last week.

■ Author Robert Hood has been described as one of the grand masters of Australian horror writing.

In his latest novel, Scavengers, he has married horror and crime, with his main character, Mike Crowe, being a not exactly legal private investigator.

Mike is blackmailed into tracking down a serial killer the media calls The Scavenger, who is notorious for cutting up his victims. At the same time, he finds himself increasingly plagued by visions - and eventually visitations - of a young girl he failed to save from being murdered a decade before.

While Mike Crowe doesn't believe in ghosts, it seems there's one ghost that believes in him.

But can Mike escape the attention of a serial killer long enough to help her, and are these things connected?

These are the questions that Mike must answer in his journey to discover the truth.

Mike must scavenge through the debris of a world going to pieces around him - at first just to survive, then to find answers to questions he'd rather hadn't been asked.

As an author, Hood has long been known for his inventive and creative mind, and in his earlier life spent many years as a journalist.

While studying for his Master of Arts (honours) at university, he analysed the monster imagery in the works of English literary giant William Black.

A career as an English teacher followed, before he eventually left teaching in the 1980s to focus on full time writing.

Hood has published over 120 short works of fiction in Australia and overseas and his work has been included in anthologies and major magazines. His short fiction has spanned a number of genres, including horror, science fiction and crime.

Scavengers is available through www.clandestinepress.net

Lovers’ Vows

■ 24 Carrot Productions presents Lovers' Vows at Mansfield Park from February 2226 at Abbotsford Convent, 1 St Heliers St, Abbotsford, in the Bishop's Parlour space.

The show is an adaptation of Jane Austen’s novel, following Fanny Price, the biracial cousin to the Bertram family who has never quite fitted in with all their privilege.

When the family decide to take advantage of their father's absence to stage their own play, sparks fly and somehow Fanny manages to be in the centre of it all.

There is intrigue, scandal and scheming, but also kindness and love in the face of family pressure and social expectation. The show delves into themes of race, colonialism and discussions on slavery and abuse.

Performance Details: February 22 - 26

The performances on February 22-23 will also be live streamed and available for viewing for up to two weeks following the event for patrons with an online access code.

Venue: Abbotsford Convent, 1 St Heliers St., Abbotsford in the Bishop's Parlour space. Bookings for the in-person or online event: https://www.trybooking.com/events/ landing?eid=1001011&

www.LocalPaper.com.au The Local Paper - Wednesday, February 22, 2023 - Page 19
● ● ● ● ● Katherine Pearson (Ariel) in The Tempest. Photo: Chelsea Neate capitalist, bleeds the town dry. Developers Tom (Keegan Joyce) and Knock (Max Brown) debase themselves to win Orlok’s favour and even the local journalist, Ellen (Shamita Siva), will do anything to achieve a story, despite initially exposing the toxic foundations of the development site with its cobalt blue
What’s OnObservations
Entertainment
- Cheryl Threadgold ● ● Robert Hood ● ● ● ● Bek Schilling (Bet Rawler) and Sean Donehue ( Ace McKinnon) and composer/co-writer in Bearded.

THE REVLON GIRL

Decision To Leave

■ (MA). 138 minutes. Now available on Blu-ray and DVD.

Director Park Chan-wook has built up an impressive career since bursting on to the international scene in 2000 with JSA : Joint Security Area, then subsequently cementing his place as a world-class film-maker with Sympathy For Mr. Vengeance (2002) and especially Oldboy (2003), which should have won the Palme D’Or at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival.

Park’s latest sees him in a refined, even restrained mode, but he continues to lead his characters down dark tunnels from which they may not be able to escape from.

Hae-il perfectly encapsulates Haejun’s growingly illogical behaviour. Decision To Leave is a masterful piece of cinema from a true cinematic master, but unlike Drive My Car and Parasite, the Academy has bizarrely ignored what was easily one of the most celebrated films of last year (it was my favourite for 2022). It is a glaring omission that has left a bad taste in the mouths of movie fans around the world.

RATING - ****½

Everything Everywhere All At Once

■ Brighton Theatre Company presents The Revlon Girl until March 4 at Brighton Theatre, Cnr Wilson and Carpenter Sts, Brighton.

Written by Neil Anthony Docking and directed by Natasha Boyd, The Revlon Girl is a story of grief, hope, guilt and makeup set in the aftermath of the 1966 Aberfan Welsh Village coal mine disaster.

In this tragic incident 144 people, including 116 children, were killed when a mountain of coal waste crushed homes and a school in the small Welsh town.

While the immediate aftermath was recently portrayed in The Crown Series 3, this play is set eight months after the disaster and depicts four bereaved mothers who meet with a Revlon makeup artist in the local pub one evening to talk, cry and even laugh without feeling guilty - all while navigating how to cope with heart-breaking loss.

Performance Details: Until March 4 Venue: Brighton Theatre, Cnr. Wilson and Carpenter Sts., Brighton Bookings: www.brightontheatre. com.au

Frame

■ Frame: A biennial of workshops, talks and performances will be held at various venues from March 1-31. (Venues are listed below)

The inaugural Frame will host a set of workshops where dance students and independent artists can experience a rich diversity of techniques, styles and approaches, taught by a selection of highly experienced teachers.

Each morning during March, classes at Chunky Move and Lucy Guerin Inc are completely free. In a joint statement, Antony Hamilton (Chunky Move) and Lucy Guerin Inc (LGI) said “We’re delighted to offer these free Morning Classes across March. Whether you’re a regular or a

complete beginner, the program of classes has something for all.”

“(Change from Aotearoa)” is a talanoa/exchange between street dance leaders exploring the currents and tides of dance in Te moana nui a Kiwa and open to all advanced movers over the age of 16 at Dancehouse. At The Substation, “DaS” exists as a form of training for dance artists and musicians to practice live performance together.

“Dancing outside the Frame” presented by Ausdance on Sunday afternoons throughout March will be delivered with choreographic artists Caroline Bowditch, Phillip Adams and David Prakash.

March 10 atThe Substation, 1 Market St Newport: “DaS #7” is facilitated by The Substation resident artists Melanie Lane and Jo Lloyd and soundtracked by a live set from artist and musician Female Wizard.

Imagined as an experience of 'choreography and sound', “DaS” exists as a form of training for dance artists and musicians to practice live performance together. Open and free to all practising dance artists, “DaS” focuses on listening; to sound, to the body, to space and considers this as a frame to transport, transform, share and rupture.

March 18 at the WXYZ Studios ,130 Dryburgh St, North Melbourne: Over a 12-hour cycle notions of sleep/lessness will be explored as a corporeal practice; as sites of unlearning and resistance.

Considering relations between standing and falling, activity and passivity, doing and undoing, “Sleep Activism” declares itself first and foremost a choreographic practice in which our bodies become sites of encounter. This workshop is suitable for artists of any discipline who are interested in collective, durational, emergent, and generative choreographic practices. You don’t need to be a professional dancer to engage in this lab, but need to be open and willing to move.

March 5 - 26 at the Temperance Hall 199 Napier St, South Melbourne: Ausdance VIC partners with three choreographers and dance leaders; Caroline Bowditch, David Prakash, and Phillip Adams to investigate the ability to create, consider, connect, and curate, and collaborate beyond our individual reality through a series of exploratory workshops and an industry-led interactive forum. Held on Sunday afternoons, the sessions are a holistic dive into dance and discussion.

March 1 - 31 at WXYZ Studios,130 Dryburgh St, North Melbourne:Lucy Guerin Inc (LGI) offers a regular program of dance classes at WXYZ Studios in North Melbourne, part of the company’s ongoing commitment to supporting the continued development of Melbourne’s dance artists.

Morning Classes are taught by a selection of highly-experienced teachers, providing a rich diversity of techniques, styles and approaches.To celebrate the inaugural Frame, LGI Morning Classes will be free of charge for the month of March. LGI Morning Classes are recommended for dancers with some training or experience including recent graduates, current students, trained and practicing dancers.

March 20-29 at Dancehouse, 150 Princes St, North Carlton. Presented by Dancehouse, these workshops are suitable for advanced movers over the age of 16. “Vogue Runway and Essence” with Jaycee Iman. Learn the essence of Vogue and strut it down a catwalk. This class includes working on Essence, a term used in ballroom to explain performance quality and movement expression rooted in gender empowerment. “ Waving” with Ooschon. Join waving champion Ooschon for their first Naarm masterclass as they share the fun. For a complete list of workshops and talks please visit www.framebiennial.com.au

Park Hae-il (of The Host fame) stars as Hae-jun, a Busan detective who is known for his meticulous work ethic.

Married to Jung-an (Lee Junghyun), Hae-jun focuses on the job 24/7, and his latest is the death of a prominent immigration officer who fell to his death while mountain climbing.

When the deceased man’s Chinese wife, Seo-Rae (Tang Wei) is interviewed, everyone except Haejun suspects her of murdering her husband, and as the dedicated detective surveils the woman, he begins to have deeper feelings for the person he should just be investigating.

Park and his regular co-writer, Jung Seo-kyoung (Thirst, The Handmaiden), set up a traditional noir plot before fracturing and twisting it into different directions, and it is a joy to see this gifted film-maker carefully guide us through an increasingly bleak journey, but one typically containing moments of dark humour.

Like Park’s previous films, the frame is filled with exquisitely detailed patterns, symbols and colour schemes.

As his 2012 English language debut, Stoker, was a homage to Hitchcock’s Shadow Of A Doubt (1943), Decision To Leave is a loving tribute to Vertigo (1958), and Park confidently combines the love he has for a bone fide classic with the story he wants to tell here.

As usual, Park surrounds himself with a first-rate crew, and everyone, from cinematographer Kim Ji-yong (A Bittersweet Life, The Age Of Shadows), editor Kim Sang-beom (The Man From Nowhere, Inside Men), production designer Ryu Seong-hie (Mother, Assassination) to composer Jo Yeong-wook (The Spy Gone North, The Man Standing Next), are at the top of their game.

The acting is equally fantastic. Wei (Lust, Caution) gives a powerhouse performance, while Park

■ (MA). 140 minutes. Now available on Blu-ray and DVD. Imagine if Charlie Kaufman and Michel Gondry directed Jet Li’s The One, and you’ll be on the way to understanding what kind of journey you will be taking. Michelle Yeoh is terrific as Evelyn Wang, a Chinese-American who runs a laundromat with her husband Waymond (Ke Huy Quan, who most audiences won’t have seen on screen since the mid 80’s, in Indiana Jones And The Temple Of Doom and The Goonies), and has a tempestuous relationship with her daughter Joy (Stephanie Hsu). Her very traditional father, Gong Gong (a superb James Hong), also lives with them. While going through a particularly difficult audit with a tough IRS agent (Jamie Lee Curtis, having a whale of a time), Evelyn is suddenly made aware that the universe she lives in is not the only one, and that hundreds of others exist, each containing an alternate version of herself, and if she is unable to tap into their various skills, she won’t be able to defeat a powerful entity who wants to destroy everything. Directors Dan Kwan and Daniel Scheinert (who helmed the frustrating misfire Swiss Army Man ) have carefully thought through their script, which is meticulously plotted, and the world building is convincing and enthralling. Unfortunately the emotional core doesn’t resonate as much as the film-makers would like, so the epic nature of the story doesn’t fully work, which in turn makes the 140 minute running time feel somewhat unjustified. Due to this, some elements fall into repetition. Production values are strong. While not a total bullseye, this is good fun, where everyone fully commits to the material. A breakout box-office hit last year, and has received a massive eleven nominations at this year’s Academy Awards, this entertaining film will achieve Oscar glory, and personally I really hope Yeoh wins for Best Actress.

RATING - ***½

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● ● The Revlon Girl cast: Casey Bohan (Jean), Jen Bush (Sian), Tanya Wade (Rona), Kaila Michael (Marilyn) and Jessica Symonds (Revlon).
The Local Paper - Wednesday, February 22, 2023 - Page 21 www.LocalPaper.com.au
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The Local Paper - Wednesday, February 22, 2023 - Page 23 www.LocalPaper.com.au
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The Local Paper - Wednesday, February 22, 2023 - Page 25 www.LocalPaper.com.au Melbourne Press Network Alex 0433 205 321 HAMMER EXCAVATIONS • Specialising in Rock & Sleeper Retaining Walls • Tight Access • Site Clean • Demolitions • Bob Cat, Excavation & Tipper Hire • Small & Large Jobs Moondarra Legal Family Law, Conveyancing, Wills Wills and Conveyancing are fixed-priced and family law appointments are first half-hour free. 64 Moondarra Drive, Berwick Phone: 9702 2153 Fax: 8676 1753 julie@moondarralegal.com.au Julie Mouy B.A. LL.B Solicitor ‘Our family is there for your family’ Professional local real estate agents in Sales Auction Leasing Property Management If you are looking for a real estate agent you can trust and rely on contact: Arthur Bourantanis 0423 781 694 arthur@listedsold.com.au
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www.LocalPaper.com.au The Local Paper - Wednesday, February 22, 2023 - Page 35 Metropolitan and Regional Victoria GARNET B GARNET B GARNET B GARNET B GARNET B AILEY 5799 2007 AILEY 5799 2007 AILEY 5799 2007 AILEY 5799 2007 AILEY 5799 2007 ALL HOURS Offering a caring and professional service throughout the Mitchell and surrounding Shires A LOCAL, WHO KNOWS LOCAL NEEDS Prices start from $2500 Prices start from $2500 Prices start from $2500 Prices start from $2500 Prices start from $2500 • Kilmore • Broadford • Wallan • Romsey • Whittlesea • Lancefield • Romsey • Nagambie • Alexandra • Yea & Districts
Page 36 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, February 22, 2023 www.LocalPaper.com.au

■ American actress Mamie Van Doren was born Joan Lucille Olander in South Dakota in 1931.

In 1946 Joan began working as an usher at The Pantages Theatre in Hollywood Film producer Howard Hughes "discovered" the beautiful 18-year-old in a beauty contest.

She was given the screen name of ‘ Mamie Van Doren’. It is said that ‘Mamie’ came from Mamie Eisenhower, the wife of President Eisenhower.

Hughes arranged bit parts for Mamie in RKO Films and this led to a contract with Universal Studios

My first memory of seeing Mamie Van Doren in films was in the 1954 comedy Francis Joins The WACS with Donald O'Connor and Francis the Talking Mule.

Mamie appeared in many films which included - Yankee Pasha, Running Wild, Born Reckless and High School Confidential

The 1950s was the era of the ‘sexy blonde bombshells’ and Marilyn Monroe, Jayne Mansfield and Mamie Van Doren were known as the big three.

In a radio interview Mamie told me that in 1957, when she was appearing at the Riviera Hotel in Las Vegas, Elvis Presley came backstage to ask her for her autograph and then took her on a date to see Louis Prima at the Sahara Hotel

In 1958 Mamie made her most memorable

Whatever Happened To ... Mamie van Doren

film when she co-starred with Clark Gable and Doris Day in Teachers Pet

Mamie had actually known Marilyn Monroe from about the age of 12. They lived very close to each other and Mamie used to watch Marilyn (then Norma Jean) doing modelling work.

The photographers would say "Get that kid out of the picture!"

In later years they shared the same drama coach and became good friends. They met for the last time at the Russian Tea Rooms in New York, two weeks before Marilyn died.

Mamie realised that Marilyn was not well but was shocked to learn of the news of her passing.

In the 1960s Mamie organised her own tour

of Vietnam to entertain the American troops. She became very ill and spent three months in Saigon before returning to the United States

Over the years Mamie appeared in many stage productions including Wildcat, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, Dames at Sea and Chicago

By the 1970s the era of the sex symbols was over, Marilyn and Jane were gone, and things changed for Mamie Van Doren. Mamie was married five times and her last

film appearance was in Slackers in 2003. These days Mamie still makes personal appearances and has her own website.

Kevin Trask

Kevin can be heard on 3AWThe Time Tunnel - Remember WhenSundays at 10.10pm with Philip Brady and Simon Owens. And on 96.5 FM That's Entertainment - Sundays at 12 Noon. www.innerfm.org.au

NEW EXHIBITION AT ART GALLERY OF BALLARAT

Public Palaces: Expanded Textiles & Fibre Practices.

Includes new commissions and recent works by AkiraAkira, Sarah Contos, Lucia Phrmann, Mikala Dwyer, Janet Fieldhouse, Teekah George, PaulKnight, Anne-Marie May, John Nixon, Kate Scardifield, Jacqueline Stojanovic, and Latie West. It is curated by Karen Hall and Catherine Woolley.

The exhibition takes its title from a 1957 essay by celebrated Bauhaus artist Anni Albert who sought to rethink weaving through the lens of architecture, interpreting textiles as fundamentally structural and endlessly mutable.

The exhibition presents works that experiment with materiality. Special f luidity, and process and features p ainting, assemblage, sculpture, video, sound, and installation, It reflects artists’ use of textiles and fibre to chart social and cultural change, respond to historical modes of production and representation and test formal properties through weaving. Embroidery, knitting and sewing.

Exhibition opens March 4 and closes April 30.

Art Gallery of Ballarat

40 Lydiard St, North Ballarat

Develop

■ The works on display have been s elected from the vast talent that emerged from Melbourne’s tertiary institutions in 2022.

For this year’s Develop we see a large range of issues exploring the personal to the universal, including c ultural identity, mental illness, diaspora and love letters to places. Showcasing a variety of styles and techniques, this is a celebration of the next generation of Australian photographers.

Exhibition opens March 4 and closes April 16.

Monash Gallery ofArt

869 Ferntree Gully Rd. Wheelers Hill

At Mildura

Percos – Andrea J. Smith

Andrea J. Smith is a classically trained painter and whose work marries classical still life and portraiture

The Arts

and Sophia Cal presents a performance lecture with K-Pop fans and a dance troupe on March 18 from 3pm. Exhibition opens February 25 and closes on April 1. Hours Wednesday-Saturday 11am6pm. Or by appointment 9380 8888. Project8 Gallery Level 2/ 427 Collins St, Melbourne - Peter Kemp

Pink in Melbourne

■ Three-time Grammy Awardwinning singer, performer, and international pop icon Pink has announces her highly anticipated return to Australia with a massive tour in February, 2024.

with contemporary style and technique.

Having spent more than 25 years overseas, away from her Australian roots, she has exhibited internationally and founded schools both in New York and Rome.

Her latest exhibition Percoso will show around 199 works from her various studios; a journey of perennial musings recorded on Paint.

Andrea is a Mildura expat, who has created an extraordinary, internationally based career, and who we are honoured and privileged to share her artworks, her story and her journey –her Percoso.

Exhibition opens February 24.

Mildura Arts Centre 109 Coreton Rd, Mildura

Experimental

Recreation: Art sport and leisure

Project8 Gallery presents Recreation, an exhibition that explores the human inclination toward play through the experimental realm of art.

Bringing together the work of 11 artists who reflect broadly on leisure activities, this exhibition looks across sporting and artistic histories, themes and forms.

Two performances will also take place during the exhibition. Mark Shorter presents a 30-minute durational performance inside a netted enclosure on March 19 from 6pm,

As part of this tour, Pink will head to Marvel Stadium on Friday, February 23, 2024.

The announcement of Pink’s Summer Carnival tour of Australia coincides with the release of her highly anticipated new album, ‘Trustfall’.

Play On The Plains

■ Organisers have advised that Play on the Plains scheduled to take place in Deniliquin on Saturday, March 11, will not be proceeding.

Play on the Plains is a community run, not-for-profit event which would have had its third iteration in 2023 but due to poor ticket sales it is not viable for the organisation to continue and suffer a financial loss.

Jazz concert

■ Cardinia Shire Council is hosting the Royal Australian Navy Jazz Band – Melbourne Ensemble at Emerald Lake Park for a free concert from 1.30pm-2.30pm on Saturday (Feb. 25).

The band features seven of the Royal Navy's finest jazz musicians, including a rhythm section, trumpet, saxophone, trombone and vocalist.

- Contributed

■ Michelle Pfieffer is a super strong willed lady. She speaks her mind and this time has refused the lead role in the celluloid remake of ‘ Silence of the Lambs’. When questioned on her decision Michelle said ‘I was uncomfortable with such evil in the film’, The remake will still go ahead with a yet to be announced leading lady.

Positive out of pandemic

■ Australia is currently experiencing boom times when it comes to film production in our wide, brown land. Overseas owned production companies have engaged 11,000 locals for on location jobs adding $ 1.47 billion into the Australian economy.

What’s Tom up to?

■ Avid TV viewers have fond memories of Tom Selleck, the actor with the most famous mo in Hollywood. Remember him in various series of the seventies, then he rose to fame in Magnum PI that was a favourite on our screens for eight seasons.Tom even took time to film Quigley Downunder in the Alice. These days the affable Tom lives on a 60-acre ranch outside of California where he grows advocados.

Danger money

■ Former NRL player Beau Ryan hosts The Amazing Race series on Ten Beau has to do all the daredevil stunts prior to the other contestants. He is said to have left a video to his wife and kids just in case one of the stunts proves fatal. For the three months he is away filming Beau was paid $800,000, or $ 61,538 a month .

Kate Ceberano is isolation

■ Kate Ceberano was a Melbourne girl until she got the urge to shift to Sydney to be closer to Sony, her recording company. Kate’s timing meant she faced a couple of weeks in isolation in the Harbour City. Rather than staring at blank walls she wrote two new songs that feature on her latest release. Songs are titled ‘Sweet Inspirations’ and ‘Hold On’.

Magazine
Michelle refuses lead role with Peter Kemp - John O’Keefe
Magazine
OK. With John O’Keefe ● ● Mamie van Doren
www.LocalPaper.com.au The Local Paper - Wednesday, February 22, 2023 - Page 37
● Michelle Pfeiffer

6.

Across

Crossword No 26 Across Down Down

149. Gallows rope

150. Group of eight

152. Hang loosely

154. Flog

157. Fluid unit

158. Minutest

162. Iran's neighbour

163. Exhausts supply of (4,2)

166. Porridge cereal

167. Pour with rain

169. Slow down!

171. Car pioneer, Karl ...

172. Tobacco user

173. Leers

175. Lever (off)

176. Single

179. Swiss banking centre

180. Come to rest (3,2)

182. Liqueur, ... Maria

183. Towards stern

184. Blackboard stand

186. Negative

189. Harness-racing horse

190. Return (of symptoms)

191. Epic movie-maker, Cecil B De ...

192. Big Apple city (3,4)

196. 60s pop dance (2-2)

197. Dad

198. Heedful

199. Spend extravagantly

201. Not fit for consumption

202. Gloomier

203. Performing

204. Car-top luggage frame (4,4)

205. Worked hard

208. Guidance

210. Up to this time

211. Aquatic bird 212. Pragmatism

213. Vein of ore

215. Vending machine

219. Nimble

221. Small & efficient

223. Striped brown gem (5'1,3)

227. Biology or physics

228. Mummifies (corpse)

230. Donations

231. Scorch

232. Charts (course) (4,3)

233. Villain 234. Arrogant newcomer

238. Power outlet

239. Knit with hooked needle

240. Scratch

243. Eagle nests

246. Ancestry

247. Lease again

250. Naming words

251. Greek philosopher

253. Muddles (up)

256. Frequent visitor

257. Mischievous

258. Character

262. Manufacture

263. Florida's Key ...

266. Is in debt to

268. Citrus fruit

269. Surgical removal

270. Not enclosed (of land)

271. Ruling (monarch)

272. Decimal unit

273. Opinion surveys 274. Corroded, ... away at 275. Slyer 276. Supervised 277. Perseveres 278. Least

1. Manages

2. Annoyed

3. Abstains from food

4. Salt Lake City state

5. Absconded (3,3)

7. Severely

133. Inaccuracy

134. Songs for one

137. Actress, ... Sarandon

138. Scoundrel

141. Heredity units

142. Cosy corners

143. Clean with broom

151. Household jobs

153. Riddle

155. Hot & moist

156. Lower leg joint

159. Revealed (knowledge)

160. Foolishness

161. Inducting, ... in

164. Too soon

165. Open wound

168. Alienate

170. Unfashionable

173. Reverse

174. Giving university talk

177. Soundly constructed (4-5)

178. Worsened (of crisis)

181. Leaves uncared-for

185. Permitting

186. Liked

187. Retailers

188. Football umpire

193. Sun or rain

194. Acorn bearer (3,4)

195. Sing-along entertainment

200. Prayer beads

201. Official emblems

206. ... & lemons

207. Wear best clothes (5,2)

208. Human rights group, ... International

209. Modesty

211. Large pedal

214. Moral

216. Dip in liquid

217. Capers

218. Numerals

220. Conclude

222. Toadstools

224. Great joy

225. Questionable

226. Junior

229. Fully satisfy

232. Liquefy

235. Actress, ... Cruz

236. Straighter

237. Reaction

241. Changing booth

242. Picasso & Monet

244. Library patrons

245. Belongings, personal ...

248. More meagre

249. You

251. Walk with heavy steps

252. Turns away

253. Imitate

254. Father Christmas

255. Praise highly

259. Divine messenger

260. Combine

261. Roman VIII

262. Small tick

264. Unknown writer

265. Swallow noisily

267. Appear

Magazine Magazine www.LocalPaper.com.au Page 38 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, February 22, 2023
Observer Melbourne
Hair-stylist
Lovatts
1.
Straight-line racing car 11. Famous Indian mausoleum (3,5) 15. Nightclub dancer 20. ... kwon do 21. Labyrinths 22. Aegean or Caspian 23. Lahore is there 24. Mad Russian monk 25. NE Scottish seaport 27. Jumbo animal 28. Watering tube 29. Fixed gaze 31. World fair 32. Cruel person 36. Pins & ... 37. Prolong (4,3) 38. Checks (text) for errors 41. Renovate (ship) 44. Metal bar 45. Unfortunately 48. Sneeze noise (1-6) 49. Oddball 52. Rectangular 56. Addressing crowd 57. Anxious (2,4) 58. Perfumed burning stick 61. Goat's wool 62. Economises, ... & saves 63. Fibbing 64. Naomi Campbell is one 65. Imperial ruler 66. Collided with (3,4) 67. Disincentive 71. Absurd comedy 73. Of the ear 75. Windbag 80. Clarify, ... light on 82. Hone 83. Disobey 85. Gauges 86. Befuddles 88. Labourer's tools, pick & ... 90. Welcomes 91. British coin 93. Taking sides 94. Climbing plants 95. Female voices 96. Wither 97. Tingle 99. Mark as correct 100. Holy places 104. Rubbish 105. School maxim 106. Track down 107. Sent via Internet 111. The other way around, vice ... 113. Observe 114. The masses, ... polloi 115. Disorderly 117. Smear 118. Affirmative replies 121. Russian spirit 122. Mustard & ... 125. Canine disease 126. Shaving cut 127. Roman dress 129. Pulpy, soft food 131. Yoga master 132. Apprehension 135. Feng ... 136. Unplaced competitor (4-3) 139. Wild party 140. Representatives 144. Strangely 145. Scandinavian 146. Wall painting 147. Underwriters 148. Glared
conditions
Discharge
wildly
Muscle rupture
Fire-resistant material
Of war
Country dance
Leaked slowly
Aura
Windscreen cleaner
Rocky Mountains state 19. Early guitars 24. Tenant's fee 26. Fish traps 30. Quarrel 33. Document bag, ... case 34. Evoke 35. Cavalryman 38. Triangular-sided building 39. Constantly busy (2,3,2) 40. Learn (4,3) 42. Great ages 43. Charges with crime 46. Furiously 47. Beliefs 49. Properly nourished (4-3) 50. Frostier 51. Stray 53. Bewails 54. More mature 55. Biblical sea 59. Oil paintings 60. Skittles 67. Lowers (oneself) 68. Fishing boat 69. Ex-pupils' get-together 70. Invigorate 72. Residential locations 74. Score after deuce 76. Exposed 77. French N-Test region, ... Atoll 78. Rude 79. Pestered 81. Cargo door 84. Unnerves 87. Strong coffee 89. Nonconformists 91. Primitive 92. Japan's second largest city 98. Recording room 101. Restrict (3,2) 102. Asian cricketing nation 103. Flattened 108. Countless number 109. Saturate (with colour) 110. Turn inside-out 112. Remembered 116. Carpenters 119. Brightening up 120. Proper behaviour 123. Now Zimbabwean 124. Set apart 128. News-sheet 130. Ill-bred 132. Unfulfilled
simple 8. Seedy
9.
10. Talk
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
Magazine Magazine www.LocalPaper.com.au The Local Paper - Wednesday, February 22, 2023 - Page 39 MEGA CROSSWORD No 26 12345 678910 11121314 1516171819 20 21 22 23 24 2526 27 28 2930 31 32333435 36 37 383940 414243 44 454647 48 495051 52535455 56 57 585960 61 62 63 64 65 66 67686970 7172 7374 7576777879 8081 82 8384 85 8687 8889 90 9192 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100101102103 104 105 106 107108109110 111112 113 114 115116 117 118119120 121 122123124 125 126 127128 129130 131 132133134 135 136137138 139 140141142143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150151 152153 154155156 157 158159160161 162 163164165 166 167168 169170 171 172 173174 175 176177178 179 180181 182 183 184185 186187188 189 190 191 192193194195 196 197 198 199200 201 202 203 204 205206207 208209 210 211 212 213214 215216217218 219220 221222 223224225226 227 228229 230 231 232 233 234235236237 238 239 240241242 243244245 246 247248249 250 251252 253254255 256 257 258259260261 262 263264265 266267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 12345678910111213141516171819 202122 2324252627 28293031 323334353637383940 41424344454647 484950515253545556 5758596061 62636465 67686970717273747576777879 8081828384 858687888990 93949596 979899 100101102103104105106107108109110 111112113114115116 117118119120121122123124125 126127128129130131 132133134135136137138139140141142143 146147148149 154155156157158159160161162163164165 166167168169170171 172173174175176177178179 180181182183184185 186187188189190191192193194195 198199200201202 204205206207208209210 211212213214 215216217218219220221222223224225226 228229230231232 233234235236237238 239240241242243244245246 247248249250251252 253254255256257258259260261 262263264265266267 268269270271 272273274 275276277278

Crossroads

Doing Judy proud

■ Standing ovations were the order of the day at the National Theatre production of Judy Australia 1964.

The three shows relived both the music and drama that Judy Garland created all those decades ago. Nina Ferro played Judy and was the perfect choice for this intriguing two-part presentation.

Her powerful voice effortlessly brought to life the timeless classics that were synonymous with the late electrifying entertainer.

Matt Hetherington as the concert promoter Harry M. Miller was outstanding too with an engaging narration and vocal contribution that added to the emotion and excitement of the show.

Along with a seven-piece band masterfully directed by Phillipa Blandford, the show left the audience clearly understanding the story that surrounded this concert tour that made headlines around the world.

Wyreena Music Cafe

■ Liz Frencham and Robbie Melville will perform at the Wyreena Conservatory Café Croydon on Friday (Feb. 24).

Wyreena hosts a live musical event featuring some of Victoria’s most talented artists each month.

Frencham and Melville share a love of jazz, pop and folk.

They instinctively blend their influences into a warm, earthy sound - like red wine on a winter's night, says the media release. For more information, phone 9298 4598.

■ The loft at Chapel off Chapel was a great venue for this premiere production - Coming Out.

This is almost two shows in one, a cabaret/drama, highlighting the reactions of various characters when secret relationships are revealed, offering various points of views.

Whilst an interesting concept, this play written and directed by Scott Taylor (who also played Simon) did not have enough diversity in the drama to warrant a 2½hour running time.

There was a feel of ‘theatre in education’ and I think would do very well in a shorter format as a piece of theatre for an audience unfamiliar or not open to the issues being presented.

This piece also lacked direction and whilst long, the dialogue felt rushed, less sincere than could have been. The plot twists are too obvious. More unspoken communication would have allowed the audience to catch up and find the ‘ahhh’ moments for themselves. Perhaps this will settle as the run continues.

Stephen Loftus was the best of the cast, capturing the emotions of Cole. He belted out some good tunes (written by Robert Taylor) with his singing improving once the show got going. The songs were catchy, yet wordy and fast, sometimes difficult to hear all the lyrics.

I felt privileged to be a part of the audience in this thought provoking commentary, learning some

Crossword Solution No 26

new things, yet would recommend Coming Out more highly after an edit, with a non-cast member directing it with fresh eyes.

Dear Doris

■ I knew where they were headed as I caught up with a huge stream of 50 +s heading towards the Hamer Hall. They were surely going to Dear Doris, the tribute to the great legend of song and film of the 50s and 60s, Doris Day.

A packed Hamer Hall was appreciative of the warm voice of Tamara Kuldin as she introduced us to the long and illustrious list of hit songs and memorable films that the all-American beauty and idol Doris Day thrilled us with.

After a brief introduction to Day’s life, Kuldin drew us in with what is considered almost an anthem to WWII, Sentimental Journey.

In the second half of the hour the audience were delighted to be able to join in singing imprinted phrases such as Que Sera , Sera and Perhaps, perhaps, perhaps.

Melbourne is fortunate that our Arts Program includes Morning Melodies, where for reasonable cost, patrons can sit in the comfortable Hamer Hall and enjoy an hour’s varying styles of music, dance or band.

But it is disappointing that series such as these don’t include a

program, because it would be appropriate to mention here the names of the marvellous eightpiece band that accompanied Kuldin, with the violinist and trumpeter even adding to the vocals.

Kuldin’s vintage bluesy voice carried well in the wide variety of songs. But her projection dropped back a little during some of the easy chat moments, losing momentum.

And I would question the need to have the gorgeous Calamity Jane visual towering over centre stage for most of the hour. A little distracting when gentle changes in lighting over Kuldin could have intensified the sentiment of the moment.

Some in the younger demographic could learn something from attending a few short shows like these where the art of projecting clarity of words and using gentle audience interactions are on proud and successful display.

Morning Melodies are a monthly event at Arts Centre Melbourne. www.artscentre melbourne.com.au

- Review by Maggie Morrison

At Gasworks

■ Deaf ChildrenAustralia will showcase entries of its 2023 national art competition ‘Heroes and Leaders’ at an exhibition at Gasworks Arts Park thisApril and May.

The only one of its kind in Australia, the competition celebrates the art of young deaf and hard of

hearing people from around the country.

The exhibition theme ‘Heroes and Leaders’ explores who the budding artists, aged 8-23, identify as a hero or leader and why. Artworks include visual and digital art across portraits, paintings, photography, digital illustrations and more.

The exhibition will showcase all the competition entries including the finalists and winners selected by a panel of professional deaf artists.

“We’re excited with the calibre of entries in this year’s exhibition from budding young deaf and hard of hearing artists,” says Deaf Children Australia CEO, David Wilson.

“Getting creative is a great outlet for everyone, especially deaf and hard of hearing young people because they often feel isolated and lonely, as they can be the only deaf and hard of hearing person in the family, community, school or work place.

“So, expressing themselves creatively is great for their mental health and wellbeing.”

The exhibition will be at Gasworks Arts Park, 21 Graham St, Albert Park, from Monday, April 3 to Sunday, May 7 (excluding April 7-10), 9:30am to 4pm, and entry is free.

A U A U I S ALLYING CREEPERS SOPRANOS SHRIVEL N E O ITCH S R I S K E T TICK O I E SHRINES WASTE MOTTO TRACE EMAILED E N VERSA E SEE U HOI G ROWDY M V SMUDGE E YESES VODKA CRESS O RABIES I I NICK N TOGA I MUSH E YOGI U R UNEASE O SHUI ALSORAN ORGY D AGENTS N R ODDLY A Q Z U O C D R SWEDE

‘COMING OUT’ AT CHAPEL OFF CHAPEL Page 40 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, February 22, 2023 www.LocalPaper.com.au Magazine Magazine
Mike McColl Jones Top 5 THE TOP 5 NEWS ITEMS TOP 5 NEWS ITEMS THE TOP 5 NEWS ITEMS TOP 5 NEWS ITEMS 5 WE’RE YET TO SEE. WE’RE TO SEE. WE’RE YET TO SEE. WE’RE TO SEE. TO SEE.
5. Joe Biden shoots down Daffy Duck. 4. Matthew Guy seen at Weightwatchers having a meal with some “heavies”.
“Vladimir
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Stateside with Gavin Wood in West Hollywood

PRESENTATION FOR HISTORIC ROUTE 66

■ Hi everyone, remotely from my suite at the Ramada Plaza Hotel and Suites in West Hollywood comes this week’s news.

Days of The Trop

■ Fifty years ago, The Tropicana in West Hollywood was home to the stars and also the junction of the famous Route 66, which served as America’s east-west artery towards California

This site is now the Ramada West Hollywood, built in the 80s. It remains home to the stars and has become a famous Aussie watering hole.

The old Tropicana is where Jim Morrison of The Doors lived and where Janis Joplin partied, where the Beach Boys, The Byrds, Led Zeppelin, Guns N’ Roses and Eddie Cochran, to mention a few, would hang out.

The Trop, as it was affectionately known, was the place to hang out in LA when you made it in the recording capital of the world.

The Ramada Plaza Hotel on Santa Monica Blvd, recently held a special event marking the further western placement of a historic Route 66 sign.

The Ramada Plaza is located at the western end of the historic and romanticised Route 66 which began in Chicago and travelled through the midwest ending at the Pacific Ocean.

Established in 1962, Route 66 signified the first all-weather highway that linked Chicago to Los Angeles, making the route popular for motorists who drove west to pursue better lives, symbolizsing unprecedented freedom and mobility for citizens who owned cars. The road was the first transition from dirt road to superhighway and linked “small town” USA to major metropolitan cities.

Beware Smoothies

■ It’s very likely that you are getting more calories and sugar when you drink a smoothie than when eating whole fruits or vegetables, said Sarah B. Krieger, a registered and licensed dietitian nutritionist who spoke for theAcademy of Nutrition and Dietetics, a professional trade group.

Smoothies enjoy a “health halo” that can be misleading, “but the bottom line is quantity, and people are often consuming a 20- or 24-fluid-ounce smoothie. That’s a lot.”

Even if you’re making your smoothie at home, using only fruits and vegetables with no other added ingredients, you can drink it in just a few minutes, compared with the 15 or 20 minutes it would take to eat the same fruits or vegetables whole, Ms Krieger said.

And if you’re drinking smoothies frequently, you may be consuming a lot more fruit than you would otherwise. The fibre in whole fruit “acts as a net” to slow down the process by which the body turns sugar from food into blood sugar, Ms Krieger said, and though the smoothie still contains fibre, it has been pulverised during the blending process.

As a result, you’re likely to feel hungrier again sooner after drinking the smoothie than you would have had you eaten the same fruits and vegetables whole.

And if you aren’t preparing your own smoothies, buyer beware. Commercially prepared and store-bought smoothies often contain added sugar, honey or other sweeteners, protein powder that’s often sweetened, or milk, yogurt, nut butters and other ingredients that make them more filling and more palatable but also add calories.

Problem with fat

■ Fifteen years ago, there was a lot of talk about the obesity epidemic. In 2008, Michelle Obama started a government program called “Let’s Move!” that sought to reduce childhood obesity.

You might remember the First Lady teaming up with everyone from Beyoncé to Big Bird to promote exercise and better eating habits.

Unfortunately, the program was largely a failure. And the obesity statistics continued to rise. 74 per cent of Americans today are either obese or overweight.

And yet, we’re no longer talking about it.

The national conversation around health and weight has turned away from things like good nutrition, weight loss and the importance of physical fitness, and instead adopted phrases like “fat acceptance” and “healthy at any size.”

In some circles, there’s even blanket denial that there is anything unhealthy at all about being obese.

Out and About

Where are my kids?

■ Actress Megan Fox is clapping back at a social media user after being asked about her kids’ whereabouts. The Jennifer’s Body actress, 36, shared a series of sultry selfies on Instagram, where she poses in a fuzzy burgundy hat, a black corset bodysuit and black pants.

“Pick me energy [heart and 1/4 moon emojis],” she captioned the photo carousel, garnering tons of comments on her look from fans.

Fox however replied to one user who commented on the photo, “where your kids at?” “Wait, wait, wait, I have kids?!?” she sarcastically wrote in response.

“Oh my god I knew I forgot something!!” “Quick, someone call the valet at the Beverly Hills hotel. That’s the last place I remember seeing them,” she added. “Maybe someone turned them into lost and found.”

World goes completely mad

■ Now Disney is ditching its “fairy godmothers.” Its theme parks will now use the more gender-neutral title “apprentices” for cast members working at its dress-up salons.

You have got to love the World Health Organisation. New WHO guidance says that “Sex is not limited to male or female.” It says that it was going “beyond” the use of binary terms to “recognise gender and sexual diversity.”

Oberlin College was assessed $36M in defamation damages to a family-run bakery in Oberlin, Ohio, over false racism claims. The college has now been assessed $4M in interest fees for refusing to pay the money it owes.

The Michigan Attorney General says “drag queens make everything better” and suggests a “drag queen for every school.” Now, I am the last person to suggest that drag queen shows are not fun. But for schools?

NPR is being mocked for a tweet warning that the tampon shortage is a problem for “people who menstruate.” Gee, I wonder who those people are.

Gavin Wood

Education fails

■ National test scores released recently show the largest math declines ever recorded for fourth and eighth grade students across the country, while reading levels dropped to the lowest level since 1992. The results are from the National Assessment of Educational Progress, known as the “nation’s report card,” which tests hundreds of fourth and eighth graders and was administered for the first time since 2019. The results are considered the first nationally represented study of the coronavirus pandemic’s impact on learning. The findings show math scores for eighth graders fell in nearly every state, with the average math score dropping eight points since 2019, from 282 to 274, out of a possible 500. The average math score for fourth graders fell by five points. In reading, both grades’ averages fell three points. Researchers say a 10-point decline or gain is equivalent to about a year of learning.

Come and visit us

■ If you are considering coming over to California for a holiday, then I have got a special deal for you.

We would love to see you at the Ramada Plaza Hotel and Suites, 8585 Santa Monica Boulevard, West Hollywood

I have secured a terrific hyoliday deal for readers of the Melbourne Observer and The Local Paper. Please mention ‘Melbourne Observer’ when you book to receive the ‘Special Rate of the Day’ for your advance bookings.

Please contact: Jennifer at info@ramadaweho.com Happy

The Air Force Academy is promoting a Fellowship Program for “gender minorities.” “Cis gender” men need not apply. (Does that mean you and me?) Eligible applicants must be cisgender women, transgender women, non-binary, agender, bigender, two-spirit, demi gender, genderfluid and gender queer. Why can cis gender women join but not cis gender men?

Another one from the Air Force Academy. The Academy’s diversity training tells cadets to use words that “include all genders,” dropping of course “mom and dad.”

They advise cadets to use “person-cantered” and genderneutral terms. Consider “parent or care-giver” rather than mom and dad. You can’t say that you are “colour-blind” or that you “don’t see colour.” You must be colour conscious. Not sure how “person-cantered” fits in here.

The Navy has been advised to rename the USS Chancellorsville to avoid ties to the Confederacy. We all know that this is a guided-missile cruiser that was named after General Robert E. Lee’s most famous military victory during the Civil War. Why has it taken so long?

Rushdie loses sight

■ Salman Rushdie lost sight in one eye and the use of one hand after he was brutally stabbed in the neck during a literary event in upstate New York two months ago, his agent said.

The 75-year-old author, whose novel The Satanic Verses has prompted calls for his death, was stabbed in the neck and torso as he walked on stage to deliver a speech at the Chautauqua Institution on August 12.

His agent Andrew Wylie gave an update on his condition in an interview with the Spanish newspaper, El País . “[His wounds] were profound, but he’s [also] lost the sight of one eye,” said Wylie.

“He had three serious wounds in his neck. One hand is incapacitated because the nerves in his arm were cut. And he has about 15 more wounds in his chest and torso. So, it was a brutal attack.”

MARKETING
The Local Paper - Wednesday, Februar y 22, 2023 - Page 45 Magazine Magazine www.gavinwood.us
FEATURE
From my Suite at the Ramada Plaza Complex on Santa Monica Blvd
Holidays, Gavin Wood
● ● ● ● ● Pictured at the historic Route 66 sign at the Ramada Plaza Hotel and Suites at 8585 Santa Monica Boulevard, West Hollywood is Ramada Managing Director Alan Johnson with Countdown Motion Pictures founder Gavin Wood.

■ The classy Sydney two-year-old, Barber, looks the one to beat in next Saturday’s Blue Diamond Stakes classic to be run at Sandown.

He made it three on end, with a gutsy win after the downhill start over 1100 metres, showing he will have no worries with the additional 100 metres of the final.

His rider Jamie Kah was full of praise for the son of Exceed and Excel, well named, being out of the smart mare Trim

She said he handled the track well and there’s room for a lot of improvement seeing he hasn’t had a race start since he won back in November last year.

One that has been heavily supported is the, Ciaron Maher and David Eustace trained filly, Steel City, and has moved into second spot in the market for the big one.

You have to go on her run in the Widden Stakes at Rosehill where she was narrowly beaten by another possible star on the horizon, Learning to Fly, who made it two from two, with an outstanding win last start.

The Peter and Paul Snowden team have the smart King’s Gambit hopefully going around despite being scratched from the Coolmore Pierro Plate at Randwick.

A late report said that they may run him in the Silver Slipper and give the Blue Diamond a miss.

SYDNEY COLT HOT FOR BLUE DIAMOND Ted Ryan

His progeny always attract those looking for speedsters. One sire that is taking all before him is the New Zealand entire, Dundeel, who has a big team of 27 entries to go under the hammer. They always attract a good price and he has 16 fillies and 11 colts, to be knocked down.

The former Blue Diamond Stakes winner, Extreme Choice, has only two entries from the sales, which is disappointing, as I feel that his progeny will race well.

He has two fillies, one out of the American mare, Leamington, and Steady Hand. The next sire represented, I Am Invincible, could top the sales as his brood are winning races all over Australia in major events. He has top of 10 youngsters representing him, five fillies and five colts. They are expected to bring a top dollar.

One of the younger entires, Microphone, formerly trained, by James Cummings, has only three nominations, two fillies and a colt, which should attract a good dollar, if you are looking for speed..

ing at 10am, Lots 271 through to 540. On the final day, March 7, from 10am, it is lots from 541 through until 615 inclusive.

Young Victorian entire, All Too Hard, has nine colts and two fillies representing him, and are sure to sell well.

One of the big chances in the Diamond was Learning to Fly, who had won in brilliant style at her first two starts, but will now go for a spell.

The filly, in the care of Annabel Neesham, is one of the best fillies going around, especially after her outstanding win in the Inglis Millennium over 1100 metres.

The Western Australian galloper, Brave Halo, ran a good fourth behind Barber, after failing to get a run in the latter stages, in the Prelude.

His connections were deciding whether to pay the late entry fee of $55,000 to run in the classic.

Overall, I like the Sydneysider, Barber, who looked good at his first crack at Sandown.

His rider, Jamie Kah, was a big rap for him, and said after his victory, he was never going to get beaten.

The Ciaron Maher-David Eustace filly, Steel City, has been heavily backed, but is yet to crack it for a win, although has run some good places.

Of the others, I like the Gai WaterhouseAdrian Mott trained The Instructor who won well on the first day of the preludes at Sandown.

Inglis big sale

■ Racing folk are gearing up for the popular Inglis Yearling Sales to be held from Sunday March 5 through until March 7 inclusive, at their sales complex at Oaklands, near the Tullamarine Airport.

As mentioned in a previous column, many a top galloper has gone under the hammer at their yearling sales in the past.

These include the best sprinter in the world, Nature Strip, Masked Crusader, Santa Ana Lane, Gytrash, Ollie Kirk, Hey Doc and Bella Nipotina.

The cream of Australia’s best sires are represented.

Commencing on Sunday March 5, at 10am, Lots 1 to 270, will go under the hammer.

On Monday, March 6, once again commenc-

Another leading sire, who is producing speed machines is Brazen Beau, who will be led by 10 fillies and eight colts, which are sure to attract serious bidding.

The English stallion, Camelot, sire of the good galloper, Russian Camelot, has three fillies and three colts to be sold.

A former Golden Slipper and Sires winner, Capitalist, has nine colts and five nice fillies to be sold, which could bring some good dollars.

A prolific sire of speedsters, Deep Field, is sure to attract buyers with his team of seven colts and six fillies.

Here is one I really like: Russian Revolution, who is breeding good young winners at present. Russian Revolution has nine colts and five nice fillies, ready to be sold.

A former winner of the Cox Plate, Shamus Award, from Rosemount Stud, under Anthony Mithen, has 12 fillies and 14 colts, ready to be knocked down. His progeny racing at the moment are winning races all over Australia.

The ever reliable, and possibly Australia’s leading stallion, Snitzel, has only six fillies and one colt to go under the hammer.

Former Cox Plate winner and placed in the 2010 Melbourne Cup, So You Think, has a top of 28 entries, which include, 15 colts and 13 fillies. So You Think stock, have generally been good sellers at previous auctions.

Then you also top flight stallions represented: Starspangledbanner, Street Boss, The Autumn Sun, Written Tycoon Toronado, Yes Yes, and Zoustar.

Sport
Barber winning at Sandown. Racing Photos.
● ● ● ● Vee Cee winning at Flemington. Racing Photos. Looking for a Professional to run the show? Ted Ryan Phone 9876 1652 Mobile: 0412 682 927 E-Mail: tedryan@australiaonline.net.au ★ Compere/Host ★ Auctioneer ★ Promotions ★ A-Grade Journalist ★ Voice-Over Commercials ★ Race CallerAll Sports, Race Nights ★ TV, Radio, Press ★ Respected Member of the Media ted.ryan@optusnet.com.au
Page 46 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, February 22, 2023 www.LocalPaper.com.au

SMALLISH SEVEN-CARD EVENT AT WARRAGUL

■ A smallish seven event card at Warragul opened the week on Monday February 13 and Maude trainer John Kendall snared a double during the afternoon with A Rocknroll DanceHelen Wheels filly Sherocks Sherolls taking the 1790 metre Downtowner 3Y0 Maiden Pace and 4Y0 Art Major-Miss Mach Kana gelding Ooga Chaka the HockingStuart Pace over the same trip, both horses driven by Maryborough youngster Luke Dunne.

Sherocks Sherolls bred and raced by Mark Lawrence led virtually throughout to score by 1.9 metres over Johnthebullshark which trailed using the sprint lane, with Bulletproof Kid (three pegs – outside the winner from the bell) third a head away. The mile rate 1-59.

■ Kendall would certainly have been ‘hooked on a feeling’ after Ooga Chaka raced by his company Kenlach Standardbreds greeted the judge.

Going forward from gate three only to be trapped outside polemarker Lorimer Lady, Ooga Chaka gained cover when Damysus was sent forward from the tail to race in the open. Easing three wide in the last lap, Ooga Chaka sustained the run to defy all challengers in defeating Fightnfury along the sprint lane off the back of the leader Lorimer Lady by 1.2 metres returning a mile rate of 1-57.7. Shallow Beach which trailed the winner home from three back was third a head away.

■ Coimadai trainer Steven Zammit combined with Anthony Butt aboard 4Y0 Stunin CullenLittlemishollywood mare Strapping Red to easily land the Liberty Maiden Pace over 1790 metres, leading all of the way from the pole to score by 5.1 metres from Stanton Break which trailed moving to the outside on turning, with Daisy Starzzz third 6.4 metres away after following the pair. The mile rate 2-00.8.

■ Melton trainer/driver Ken Tippet’s 5Y0 Rock N Roll Heaven-Universal Alice mare Kia Ora Beauty was a huge victor of the 2210 metre Total Span Pace.

Beginning swiftly to lead from gate three, Kia Ora Beauty left her rivals standing on the final bend to register a 16.3 metre margin in advance of Illawong Danny from the tail returning a mile rate of 2-01.2.

Deft Touch after moving to race uncovered with two laps to travel was third 1.5 metres back.

Thrilling finish

■ The fast class race at Mildura on Tuesday –the Zilzie Wines Pace over 2190 metres resulted in a thrilling finish with equal favourite Dancing Finn dead-heating with Dennis as called by broadcaster Luke Humphreys.

Dancing Finn a 5Y0 A Rocknroll Dance-Anna

Finn mare trained at Globe Derby Park in Adelaide by Lance Holberton was going for four straight Mildura victories and did exactly that to share the major prize.

Driven by Ellen Tormey, Dancing Finn starting from gate two on the second line settled with most of the field ahead of her as polemarker and equal favourite Foolish Pleasure (James Herbertson) led from the pole copping pressure from Regal Scribe a stablemate of Dancing Finn whereas Dennis trained by Aaron Coad and driven by Wayne Hill pushed through from inside the second line to trail the leader.

Going forward three wide on the back of Major Mal in the last lap which quickly dropped off, Dancing Finn made the final bend three wide with three in line on turning after Dennis had angled through a narrow opening to join the leader.

In a three horse titanic battle all the way up the running, the judge was unable to separate Dancing Finn and Dennis, with Foolish Pleasure 1.2 metres away third. The mile rate 157.9.

■ Red Cliffs trainer Kate Attard’s 9Y0 For A Reason-Czarina Katerina gelding Stormont Star was a tough victor of the McDonalds Pace over 1790 metres.

Driven by Jordan Leedham who has been a regular at most Mildura meetings, Stormont Star (gate two on the second line) was set alight from five back with a lap and a half to travel to join the pacemaker Loseashoe (gate three).

In an impressive staying performance, Stormont Star raced clear in the straight to reg-

Harness Racing

Beauty ($4.60) the victor. Trained by Anton Golino at Cardigan and driven a treat by Ryan Duffy, Hopeful Beauty after beginning safely from gate five slotted on the back of Sleepee ($3.30) which flew away to lead easily leaving Ready Jet ($1.70) from gate six parked outside the pair.

With reinsman Josh Duggan aboard Sleepee not allowing the favourite to cross, the race was to develop into a tactical affair. Joining Sleepee on the home turn, Im Ready Jet couldn’t get past in the straight with Hopeful Beauty using the sprint lane to blouse Sleepee by 1.3 metres and Im Ready Jet a head away third after locking wheels momentarily with Sleepee resulting in Nathan Jack lodging a protest against the runner up which was subsequently dismissed.

len-baker@ bigpond.com

with Len Baker

ister a 5 metre margin over Loseashoe in a rate of 1-57.6. Heavily supported favourite Arockatthepark was a disappointing third 2.4 metres away after trailing the leader and easing three wide on turning.

■ Local Nichols Point trainer Ian Campbell was successful with 8Y0 Artesian-Goodtime Evie gelding Another Sparky who is relishing the Mildura sunshine.

Driven by Alex Ashwood for Heathcote owner Terry French, Another Sparky registered his 14th victory in 144 outings by leading all of the way from the pole in defeating Montana Pride (gate two) which trailed by 3.9 metres in a rate of 2-01.7. Only In Rome (gate five) was third 1.6 metres away after racing uncovered.

Charlton, Shepp.

■ Wednesday was double day with Charlton racing in the afternoon and Shepparton at night in extremely warm conditions.

Carlsruhe part-owner/trainer/driver Jack Sullivan loves the trotters and 5Y0 Majestic SonSullanders Pride gelding Sonnyboy led throughout from gate five to land the Ace Radio Trotters Mobile over 2100 metres at Charlton. Bowling along at his leisure, Sonnyboy never looked like stopping, scoring from Maori Muscle (three pegs) and Ivar (one/one) which dropped to trail the winner into the straight.

The margins 3.8 by 6.1 metres in a mile rate of 2-0.8. It was Sonnyboy’s first success since December 2021 at the same track,

■ Five year old Bettors Delight-The Presidentslady mare Royal Cadence trained on the track by Greg Norman who is shortly to shift to Avenel, also led throughout in the 1609 metre Bubbles In The Bush March 19 Pace.

With Kerryn Manning in the sulky, Royal Cadence was always in control and greeted the judge 7.3 metres in advance of Straight Up (four pegs) which eased wide approaching the home turn. Mynameisruby which trailed the winner was third a half head away. The mile rate 200.9.

■ At Shepparton the second heats of the Lyn McPherson Memorial Breed For Speed Trotting Series (1690 metres) were held, the first being the Bronze with Ardmona trainer Donna Castles snaring the quinella with 6Y0 Bacardi Lindy-Tender Annie mare Lindy Grace defeating Dances in a mile rate of 2-00.5.

Going forward from gate five with Mark Lee in the sulky, Lindy Grace led throughout to register a 4.7 metre victory over Dances (Doc Wilson) which trailed. NSW visitor Sally Em was third off a mid-field passage 2.2 metres back.

■ Heat two - the Silver saw Muckleford trainer Chris Angove’s 4Y0 Andover Hall-Shez Almighty mare Ebonys Avenger bring up two wins in succession, leading throughout from gate three with Ryan Duffy in the sulky.

Coasting along at her leisure, Ebonys Avenger had plenty in reserve at the finish to record a 9.8 metre margin over Violetta Gift (gate two) which trailed, with polemarker Abbie using the sprint lane from three pegs for third a half neck away. The mile rate 1-58.

■ Three quality mares (Sleepee, Hopeful Beauty and Im Ready Jet) looked head and shoulders above their rivals in Heat three – the Gold and that’s how it turned out, but not the way that punters anticipated with the third elect Hopeful

Sulky Snippets Sulky Snippets

This Week

■ Wednesday – Mildura, Thursday –Melton/Echuca, Friday – Ballarat, Saturday – Melton, Sunday – Horsham (Cup), Monday – Maryborough, Tuesday – Kilmore.

In quarters of 28.9, 30.5, 28.2 and 28 after a lead time of 5.3 seconds, Hopeful Beauty a 6Y0 French bred daughter of Brilliantissime and Beauty Life returned a scintillating mile rate of 1-55.2 which was a new track record.

Day racing

■ Day racing at Hamilton was Thursday’s venue with a compact eight event card. Long time industry participant Russell Maisner was in the winners stall as owner/driver of 4Y0 Art Major-Aleppo Heiress gelding Anotherbigman which led throughout from outside the front line to land the Finchetts Plumbing Pace over 2160 metres.

Trained by the Stewart/Tonkin combination, Anotherbigman notched up his 4th success in 26 outings, scoring by 1.8 metres from Senna Storm (one/two) and Reason To Be (one/one) who was 1.6 metres away third. The mile rate 1-57.7. Russell has now driven 8 winners from 113 drives.

■ Portland trainer Emily Hinch combined with Kerryn Manning aboard 8Y0 Shadow Play-Roman Abbey mare Abbey Fields to snare the 1660 metre Become A Club Member Now Pace, leading all of the way from the pole to account for Surfsup Tigerpie along the sprint lane after trailing by a half neck Luv Me Or Hate Me (one/ one) was third 8 metres back in a mile rate of 157.8.

■ Mattie Craven’s 5Y0 Mach Three-Shes A Cool Lady gelding Hes A Cool Mac chalked up his seventh victory in 39 outings by leading virtually throughout in the Matthews Petroleum Pace over 2160 metres with Dunnstown’s Declan Murphy in the sulky.

Showing sparkling speed from gate five to cross hot favourite Eyethink (gate two) and lead on the first turn, Hes A Cool Mach never looked like being caught, but after kicking clear on turn

Ballarat fast-class

■ The fast class race at Ballarat on Friday –the www.ballarattrottingclub.com.au Pace over 2200 metres was a terrific race going the way of Melton part-owner/trainer Charlie Mizzi’s most consistent 6Y0 Tintin In America-Willow Rosenberg gelding Wotdidusaaay who by winning registered his 14th victory when making his 90th race appearance.

Driven by Jackie Barker, Wotdiduousaaay starting outside the front line enjoyed a cosy trip three back in the moving line as roughie Small Town first up since December led from gate five.

Not rushed three wide in the final circuit, Wotdidusaaay dashed to the front on turning, holding off a defiant Captain Pins (four wide home turn) after following the winner home. Hot favourite Imperials Reason was held up in the straight on the back of the weakening leader until too late and flashed to the wire late for third. The margins 2.4 metres by a neck in a mile rate of 1-57.4.

■ Shelbourne trainer Kate Hargreaves combined with Shannon O’Sullivan to land the Interpath Pace over 1710 metres with Wipe The Canvas, a 5Y0 daughter of Art Major and Wenona Maggie, leading all the way from gate two to account for Jasperine (three pegs) which gained an inside run in the straight by 1.7 metres, with Island Caesar (three wide home turn) from mid-field third a head away. The mile rate 2-00.9.

ing, just held on by a head from Jilliby Ripper (three pegs) which flashed late in a mile rate of 1-56.1.

Eyethink given every opportunity after coming away from the markers in the straight was third 2.4 metres away. The mile rate 1-56.1.

Entertainment Extra 30TH ALBUM FOR CEBERANO

■ Australian music royalty Kate Ceberano will celebrate her illustrious 40-year career with the release of her 30th album, My Life is A Symphony, and a national concert tour that debuts with recording partner, the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, at Hamer Hall this May.

Kate will perform with the Adelaide Symphony Orchestra at Adelaide Cabaret Festival on the Festival Theatre stage in June, with further national dates to be announced.

Singer, songwriter, performer, artist, icon, legend of Australian rock, pop, soul and jazz, Kate Ceberano has enjoyed one of the most enduring and inspirational careers in Australian music.

My Life Is A Symphony is a celebration of Kates’s songwriting from across her 40-year recording career. The MSO and Kate will take audiences through her incredible catalogue from pop anthems Brave and Pash to the iconic songs she has interpreted along the way I Don’t Know How to Love Him, Some Day I’ll Fly Away and more.

“Recording the album with the MSO was a musical joy – the full backing of a symphony orchestra elevates some of my favorite songs to new heights,” said Kate. “I am thrilled to release the album and embark on a national tour

to perform the music live for fans across the country with Australia’s great symphony orchestras.”

The album will be released on May 12, two weeks before the concert with the MSO a t Hamer Hall. It can be pre-ordered through ABC Music and with MSO concert tickets now on sale at mso.com.au

Kate Ceberano burst on the music scene as a teenage sensation in 1983 fronting seminal band I’m Talking , becoming a superstar of the ‘Countdown’ era.

Since then, she has effortlessly moved across genres as a soulful tour-de-force, racking up 11 platinum albums, 10 Top 10 singles and countless awards and accolades.

The most prolific Australian female artist of the era, Kate has forged an unassailable distinction through more than 8000 live performances spanning every concert, theatre and festival stage in the country and beyond.

My Life Is A Symphony is an album and tour that brings Kate Ceberano back to her essence as a musical force and an electrifying live performer. Witness the voice of a generation as she celebrates four decades of music at Hamer Hall with the MSO - Prue

Sport
www.LocalPaper.com.au The Local Paper - Wednesday, Februar y 22, 2023 - Page 47

Fight to change the name of Yea

■ In an era where country town reports in daily newspapers appeared alphabetically, Yea often missed out being in print if the paragraphs about other towns were too lengthy.

In the 1910s, Major Frederick George Purcell, Editor of the Yea newspaper, campaigned to change the town name.

The original name for the district had been Muddy Creek.

A letter writer to The Argus in November, 1894, explained:

“Sir,-In The Argus of today you give the origin of the name ‘Muddy Creek’ to the Yea River

“Parhaps you will kindly accept a little information on the subject from an old subscriber.

“ Hovell in his journey from Sydney to Port Phillip came to a creek at a point where crossing appeared impossible.

“It was not wide but running strong and deep, with steep banks on both sides. He rode down to its junction with the Goulburn, say, three miles

“He rode upwards for some miles still the same steep banks and soft mud at the bottom.

“The only place he could see a little gravel was where the present bridge is at Yea

“He cut down the banks at each side, crossed and named the creek ‘the Muddy ’, because of its mud.

“The gold discoveries in the neighbourhood are of a comparatively recent date.”

A letter writer to the Yea newspaper in 1912, calling themselves ‘Yeaite of the Sixties’said:

“I was pleased to see in last issue of the Chironicle, one at least coming forward in defence of the old time name of our township.

“1 am surprised at Major Purcell being not aware of our township's historical significance, more especilly as it was named after a brave and distinguished soldier.

“The major's ohjection to the name because of its position on alphabetical list making it as he says, more dillicult to get local news into the metropolitan papers, is it to use a

Colonial phrase "too thin''. I happen to know a little about the treatment of country correspondents by the Metropolitan P'ess, and if the matter is good enougth, the aiphabeti cal position doesn't count.

Lacey Walter Giles, a Colonel, born in Park Row. Bristol, on 20th May 1808. was the eldest son of Sir William Walter Ye a, second baronet of Pyrland, near Tasuton, Somerset, who married on 24trh June 1805, Anne Hecksteller (d. 1861), youngest dlaughter of Colonel David Michel of Dublish House, Dorset.

“The family of Yea held land in the thirteenth century under the Abbots of Buckfast, Devonshire

“David Yea, High Sheriff of Somerset in 1720, married a daughter of of Harrow.

“His grandson William was made a Baronet in 1759.

Lacy Yea was educated at Eton. Lord Malmsbury mentions a desperate fight he had with a big boy of 16, which he won -”by sheer pluck" when he was only 13

“In 1854 he went in command of toTurkey and the Crimea. A man of an onward, firey, violent nature, he was so rough an enforcer of discipline that he had n ever been much liked in peace time by those whohad to obey him.

“He never missed a turn d of duty in the trenches except for a short time, when his medical attendant had to use every effort to induce him to go on board

“His body was brought on next day and it was buried on the 20th.

Lord Raglan, in his despatch of the 19th said Colonel Yea was not only distinguished for his gallantry, but had exercised control of the Royal Fusiliers in such a manner as to win the affection of the soldiers under his orders, and to secure to them every comfort and accommotiation which his persooal exertions could secure for thtem.

“When Muddy Creek was changed to a Yea River some 35 years ago it was not done in an off hand manner, but bya properly constituted Government Board which sat and took evidence, so that the Major need not think that the Yea Progress Association has only to pass a resolution for Yea to be perfectly wiped

out, as it was intended to be by the proposed Trawool scheme.”

Another letter writer, going by the name of ‘Nay’, submitted:

“Having followed the subject pretty closely since it was first mooted at the Progress Association meeting, and having read most of the arguments put forward as the reason why the name of the township should not be changed, I confess that I have not been impressed.

“We have been made acquainted with the reasons why the name of a celebrated soldier should be perpetuated.

“That is right enough even tbough he was one of the Bulldog breed that made old England’s fame.

“That does not describe our township. To think that one of the prettiest townships in the State should be named like a Quaker's affirmation.

“Besides we have the River Yea to perpetuate the memory; indeed it lends itself fairly well to rythm

“By gentle Yea's meandering streams, In musing mood I often rove.

“That does not go badly, but the name applied to a township - and such a pretty township - seems out of place.

“Give it a nice sounding name,

some thing that will give the place a quality, indicate its situation, or its products.

“I am aware that this is not always done, still it need not prevent it being done now.

“:The reasons already advanced for the change seems to me to be very strong, and to the point.”

Major Purcell did not have much to say in favour of the man after whom the town was named.

“I say that Col. Yea never did anything that entitled him to be immortalised.

“ True nobility is derived from virtue, not from birth, and I will take a paragraph or two from his biography as published and I think the average reader will agree with me that Colonel Yea was not a noble character, and therefore has no particular claim to be immortalised:

"This was largely due to Yea's personal exertions; his dark eyes yielded fire, and all the while from his deep chisselled merciless lips pealed the thunder of imprecation and command. He showed no mercy and cursed his men freely, while they were sacrificing their lives. Is there anything ennobling or elevating in such conduct. Sounds more like a tyrant than a noble character.”

Change names of Councillors not the town: reader

■ Sir-Having read a great deal in your paper of late re the changing the name of "Yea" I beg space to make a few suggestions. Since the name of Peter Snodgrass has been brought into the piece I might mention that when he first landed in Yea there was a large lagoon between the Post Office and the Bowling Green stretching from near the town pump in a circular fashion over to the side of Mr Buckland's shop.

On this a same lagoon were to be seen a few Blacks (Natives) paddling in canoes. 'What a lovely town it would be if that lake were still there and lighted up with the long expected Electric Light.

Well I am not going to suggest that the town be called after the first arrival, as we have a street called after him. This was practically his route through the spot where Yea now stands. Nor yet do I intend to suggest King Billy or Samba after any of the original blacks that paddled on this lake in the very early days although F. G. P. seems to admire some of the black's names, when naming some of the beauties around Yea

There are also some nice names and picturesque spots in this direction such as Kerrisdale, Strath Creek, Flowerdale, Glenfern and Break o' day

But alas whatever the Progress Association thinks, the Council evidently thinks the King Parrot Road should keep its name and "place" independent of all these nice surrounding names

But what I do intend to suggest is that you first change the names of some of the Councillors. I will not suggest which ones but there are some we must keep if we are to get Electric Light.

Well we must keep Cr Quinlan as it does not seem honourable to me to put him off. The Bible says honor thy Mother and Father etc and it is now he is the Father of the Council ... Keep a Drysdale because he is 'bonnie'.

- “Native’, Kerrisdale

P age 48 - The Local Paper - Wednesday, February 22, 2023 www.LocalPaper.com.au Local History
● ● Major Frederick George Purcell ● ● ● ● Lacy Walter Giles Yea, after whom the district is named
● ● Yea Post Office. 1869.

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P ackaged liquor licence application

W e Premium Co

Greensborough Pty Ltd applied to the Victorian Commission for Gambling and Liquor Regulation on [date] for the grant of a packaged iquor licence at Shop 1 21C, 25 Main St, Greensborough VIC 3088.

Any person may object to the grant of this application on the grounds that:

• it would detract from, or b e detrimental to, the amenity of the area in which the premises are situated, and/or • it would be conducive to or encourage the misuse or abuse of alcohol.

An objection must state the reasons for the objection.

All objections are treated as public documents.

Objections must be made n writing to:

Victorian Commission for Gambling and Liquor Reguation

GPO Box 1988

Melbourne VIC 3001

Objections must be made no later than 30 days after the date of this notice.

Notice is given to Sotirios

R isvanis (AKA Sam

Risvanis) that the Victorian Magistrates’ Court has fixed a date for hearing an application concerning the property situated at 208 B roadway, Reservoir, Victoria on 1 March 2023 at 10.00 am. For further details contact: G&M Lawyers on (03) 9945 7999 or gandm@gandmlawyers. com.au, or the Victorian Magistrates. Court.

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BEDROOM SUITE. Near new. QS Bed, large dressing table, bedside tables. Toorak. 0412 728 133. F-I

ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICA. Complete full set with 24 volumnes of 1965 edition. Maroon ‘leatherette’ covers. Original wooden shelving unit. GC. $50. Ashburton. 9885 2203.F-I

FLOOR MATS. Honda Accord. Euro luxury MY12 Genuine, front and rear. Genuine cargo mat/boot liner. Colour: Grey/black. EC. $85 ONO. Gladstone Park. 0402 282 477. F-I

KITCHEN ‘Cupboards and drawers in various sizes in American oak timber. $300 ONO. East Iavnhoe. 00418 322 569.

LOUNGE SUITE. ‘Fler’

Modular 6 Seater L-shaped Corner Unit with Fluro Light Sand Colour, would suit large room or Man Cave. EC. $200. Endeavour Hills. 0468 954 177.

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OVEN. Fisher and Paykel, double doors, approx. 6 years old with new element and all shelving. $300 ONO. East Ivanhoe. 0418 322 569.

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RECLINER CHAIR Princess, on wheels, with full tilt, pressure care, manual and pump. Hardly ever used. EC. Cranbourne. 0452 442 561.

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ROCKING CHAIR. Antique. American style, adult size, spring based, casters, carved timber frame, EC. Upholstery in need of replacing. GC. $100. Croydon. 0408 332 181.

WATER TRANSFER

PUMP. Yardworks. 1100W model. YW1100TP integrated trolley. 4600 litres per hour. EC. $65 ONO. Gladstone Park. 0402 282 477.F-I

WHITE METAL BATH. Removed from a bathroom reno. Original from 1960s. No leaks or damage. surplus to needs, use for an animal water trough, lily pond, raised garden bed or could put back into a house. Pick-up in Watsonia. GC. $50 ONO. 0408 704 995.F-I

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TANDEM TRAILER. 10’ x 5’, all steel construction, lights, brakes all in good working order. Made by Forest Hill Trailers. GC. $2000. Croydon. 9726 8513.F-I

VEGEPOD. Medium size. 2 covers. Base has been assembled (never used). One opened box which contains the cover/poles and joiners and a new unopened cover and all accessories/instructions. New cond. $250 ONO. Seymour. 0438 228 617.

‘BE MY VALENTINE’ MOLLY ROSE MARKET. From moreish chocolate to groovy candles, Molly Rose at 279 Wellington St, Collingwood, will be filled with sparkling jewellery and beautiful smells by local makers and creators. Sunday, February 12. 12 Noon5pm. Free entry

CHOIR - YARRA GOSPEL COMMUNITY CHOIR. Starts on Thurs., Feb. 9. Weekly. 7.15pm. Join us singing in harmony in a friendly inclusive group. First night free. no auditions. Sheet music, wine and cheese supper provided. $12.50 per week. At St John’s Anglican Church, 552 Burke Rd, Camberwell. 0421 277 862. www.yarragospel.org F-I

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MOONEE PONDS BAPTIST CHURCH , 4 5 Eglinton St, 5.30pm Mondays, supports those from Moonee Valley in a tough place. All welcome for a free hot meal from 5.30pm on Mondays. If you have food handling, listening or cleaning skills, then contact us to help out. 0466 075 820. UFN

MORNINGTON Dutch Australian Seniors Club. Meets weekly in Tyabb Community Hall, Frankston-Flinders Rd, Tyabb on Mondays, 10am2pm. Morning coffee, games of Klkaverjas and Rummicub. New members welcome. Nel, 0414 997 161. Paula, 5779 8291. UFN

SOCIAL BALLROOM DANCING. Lessons and practice, 7.30pm -10pm Wed. Scots Church Hall, Yea. $5. Dance: 1st Saturday of month. 7.30pm11pm. 0490 425 234UFN

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