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World Youth Day!

July 3rd 2008 00:45
Sydney-siders face 'unreasonable interference' during World Youth Day

Pope Benedict addresses a youth rally crowd


Pope Benedict will arrive in Sydney amid tight security. (Reuters, file photo: Erin Siegal)


Draconian, repugnant and unnecessary. These are just a few of the criticisms of special regulations coming into force for the upcoming Catholic World Youth Day event in Sydney.

Civil libertarians and legal experts say the regulations could see situations such as someone deemed to be wearing an offensive T-shirt being arrested and given a hefty fine.

New South Wales Police say the measures are designed simply to ensure that World Youth Day is a peaceful and happy event.

The event runs from July 15 to July 20, but from today until the end of the month the regulations come into force.

Under the regime SES and Rural Fire Service volunteers will assist police in bag checks at World Youth Day locations.

And anyone deemed to be causing annoyance could be arrested and fined up to $5,500.

New South Wales deputy police commissioner Dave Owens says the regulations do not restrict democratic rights.

"If people wish to lawfully protest, we will facilitate those protests as long as they are law abiding," he said.

"Police officers always maintain a discretion, and I expect them to use that discretion."


There have been suggestions that people could be arrested if they wear a T-shirt that promotes the use of condoms. Mr Owens refused to rule that out.

"There are individual circumstances that will have to be dealt with individually," he said.

'Repugnant'

President of the New South Wales Bar Association Anna Katzmann says she does not understand why the regulations have been brought in.

"They are repugnant for two reasons," she said.

"First of all the Government has by-passed the normal parliamentary scrutiny that would be available if they were introduced by an Act of Parliament," she said.

"Secondly they are an unreasonable interference with people's freedom of speech and movement."

She says there is a chance people could be arrested for trivial offences in the areas that have been declared as special World Youth Day zones.

"These World Youth Day-declared areas are numerous and they encompass places like Sydney University and the Opera House. Places that you and I would travel to regularly, not just churches or church schools," she said.

New South Wales Council of Civil Liberties president Cameron Murphy says he is opposed to the proposed measures.

"A police officer may find someone's T-shirt annoying and on that basis issue them with a fine," he said.

"That sort of thing is likely to escalate any problems that occur rather than prevent them."

The Greens have joined civil libertarians and the Bar Association in calling for the regulations to be cancelled.

Based on an AM report by Barbara Miller.
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NYPD Pizza, Oxford St--Bring it Back!

December 22nd 2007 06:56
NYPD New York Style Pizza & Hotdogs, come back!

Another great hole-in the wall eatery has disappeared, and Sydney is the poorer for it.

NYPD Pizza, which served New York-style pizza by the slice, is gone. Gone the way of The Pop Shop and dozens of other unique businesses that used to make Oxford Street a magnet for all sorts of people, not just gays and clubbers.

Not being a foodie, I don't have the vocabulary to describe what made me regularly break a bus journey or even cross the Harbour just to get one of their monster-size pepperoni slices. The sauce was heavenly. The crust had that perfect balance of chewiness and crispiness. The two sisters who ran the place were friendly and chatty, and always remembered my usual order.

A newer pizza place has opened at NYPD's former location. Unfortunately, it has the featureless look, feel, and taste of a franchise. This is what McDonald's would do to pizza. Bland pies with bases that look pre-formed, displayed in a sterile plastic case. The sauce is tasteless and has a slimy mouthfeel. The allotment of cheese (and toppings) is so skimpy that I left feeling hungry. The slices are served too hot--let it cool or risk a blistered tongue.

At the new place, I didn't try chatting with the clerk, a dreadlocked teenager with dead eyes who burnt the first slice I ordered. She put the slice in the oven, then disappeared into the back of the shop and forgot I was there. Not that much conversation would have been possible over the noise of the offensive rap music that was playing.

To the former owners of NYPD, if you're out there, I'm holding on to my loyalty card in the forlorn hope that you will return.
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Nyaw - pumpkin!

August 19th 2006 02:14

What's orange and green and makes a noise like a dessert?

Thai custard pumpkin!

No, in fact the 'Mer'cans (merkins, tee-hee) weren't the first to combine this particular vegetable with sugar and pass it off as a delicacy. Then again the 'Mer'cans weren't the first to do much at all. Them and the Aussies are the bastard children of far more established empires - and just as my younger sisters have realised, the elder has to die before the younger ever catches up, so there is no cred in sight there.

And I'm not talking about pumpkin scones, because as long as you close your eyes, there is even less pumpkin influence there than there is banana influence in banana cake. I don't eat banana, including banana flavoured icecream etc, but dangle a piece of banana cake in front of me and I'll sit, shake and ... no actually I probably won't roll over - you'd need the whole cake for that.

Anyway, apart from 'Mer'can pumpkin pie, we don't get pumpkin used so readily outside being steamed or baked - the former being really only acceptable with cheese and bacon. *slather slather*

In the UK, pumpkin is considered pigs' food, and they wouldn't dream of chucking it into the baking pan with a nice leg of Australian lamb. They're quite happy to eat peas and sausages out of a can though... backwards cuisine if ever there was one.

So anyway, in a large Bangkok mall (MBK - the closest thing to a permanent indoor bazaar you will find - you can barter to your little heart's desire) we were pointing and looking puzzled at these strange delicacies, and by the time we'd interpreted what the guy was trying to tell us (it did NOT sound like pumpkin), we had taken up enough of his time for us to be obliged to buy some.

We tried to buy one, but apparently we made his night because we got two.

Greeeeeat we thought - this could be horrendous.

Then we didn't sit far enough away from the stall to screw up our noses in peace.

Never fear, however, because the custard with the cooked pumpkin actually works very well. The stringy, fibrous texture of the pumpkin works quite well and the flesh comes away from the skin easily and satisfyingly - but thank god the Thai use forks instead of chopsticks or we might have been in trouble.

Quite a rich dessert, the mystery Miss E and I give crazy Thai custard pumpkins two thumbs up - put a bit of cinnamon in the mix and I think we have a real winner!
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Snacktime!

May 8th 2006 01:06
Everyone needs a guide to bizarre, quick, raid-your-kitchen, nothing-to eat snacks for munchie crises!

Strange but true, these are the strange concoctions of people in my life for those times when you have nothing but the standard kitchen resources (and sometimes not even that!) and you can’t be bothered to be creative – everyone has a backstop, an insurance policy against the Ethiopian faminesque (which is SO last year).

My personal favourite of the week would have to be:
peanut butter & honey sandwich
... for which I have been persecuted, yes, persecuted in this gods-forsaken country when it's perfectly natural and normal and even considered shamefully conservative in the US! It's not avant-garde people, hell, it's not even the much maligned peanut butter and jelly! (translation for the Aussies: jam)

This is more a brunch / lunch / afternoon tea / dinner-before-running-out-at-night kind of snack. For breakfast I much prefer:

saos with tomato sauce & melted cheese

It's very important you put 4 saos in the centre of a dinner plate when microwaving so you get minimal cheese spillage!

My mother has a couple of odd favourites:
celery & peanut butter (or cream cheese)

... Ah the staple of my childhood.
sweet biscuits & cheese?!?!

apple & cheese?!?!

No, Mum, not EVERYTHING goes with cheese.

My Dad insists on:
peanut butter & tomato sandwich

... but I tried it and it gave me an uncontrollable urge to take the sandwich apart - the combination MAKES everything taste better separately!!

Miss T swears by
bread & tomato sauce - not even a sandwich!

... but she's a freak.

If you've got a hankering for something sweet, find any softish fruit you can, cut up small and raid the pantry!
strawberries & icing sugar - yum!

always keep frozen raspberries handy!


Or the sweet/savoury midpoint:
mashed avocado & mayo


Everyone needs a menu for those dire situations when
a) there's nothing in the house;
b) you don't feel like eating but you're hungry;
c) you're bored and lonely and comfort eating *sniff*.

What do you eat when there's nothing interesting to eat?

A guy approaches the window of the movie theater with a chicken under his arm, and asks for 2 tickets. The girl at the counter wants to know who is going in with him. He replies, "Well, my pet chicken, of course!"

The girl tells him that he CAN'T take a chicken into the theater, so he goes around the corner, stuffs the chicken into his trousers, and returns. He buys his ticket and goes in, happy to have duped The Establishment.

Inside the theater, the chicken starts to get hot and begins to squirm, so the man unzips his fly so the chicken can stick its head out, get some air and watch the movie.

The old lady next to him whispers to her lady friend, "Myrtle, this man over here has just unzipped his pants!"

Myrtle whispers back, "Oh, don't worry about it - you've seen one, you've seen them all."

The old lady replies, "I KNOW......

But this one's eating my POPCORN!...

That's one hungry cock."
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