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Brisbane, Australia 16 May 1988
On the road again...

by Bob Van Leer

Brisbane, Australia, May 16, 1988:  Betty and I arrived in Brisbane this morning after a trip of about 9000 miles that couldn’t have gone smoother. Every schedule was met, usually with time to spare.

We left Gold Beach at 9 a.m. Saturday, May 14, for a drive to the Medford Airport, stopping at Medford to visit old friends Gerry and Lois Latham there. Vice President George Bush’s plane was at the airport – surrounded by troops. Bush was in Medford for public appearances and a fishing trip on the Rogue with guide Mel Norrick.

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On the road again..." »

Brisbane, Austrailia 17 May 1988
A tour of Expo '88

by Bob Van Leer

(BRISBANE, AUSTRALIA, May 17, 1988)  Today we toured World Expo 88, an internationally sanctioned exposition billed as a $600 million project. The 100 acre site is on the south bank of the Brisbane River across from downtown. More than 50 governments are participating and 25 corporations and the theme of the fair is “Leisure in the Age of Technology”.

Brisbane is Australia’s third largest city with a population of a million people on the shores of Moreton Bay. As were other Australian cities, it was founded by transported English convicts. It was pointed out to us that the American Revolution was responsible for this shipment of convicts to Australia as England shipped them to the U.S. before the revolution.

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A tour of Expo '88" »

Brisbane, Australia 18 May 1988
Korean dances impressive; U.S. pavilion is disappointing

by Bob Van Leer

(BRISBANE, AUSTRALIA, May 18, 1988)  Today we revisited Brisbane’s Expo 88 and the standout of what we have seen of the whole Expo was the dancers at the Korea Pavilion. A dozen dancers did a series of Korean folk dances that was outstanding. The female dancers were as pretty as China dolls and their smiles seem to have been painted on along with their makeup. No change of expression was permitted.

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Korean dances impressive; U.S. pavilion is disappointing" »

Sydney, Australia, 20 May 1988
Austrailian visitors experienec Koala Sanctuary, long train trip

by Bob Van Leer

(SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA, May 20, 1988)     Yesterday we boarded a bus for a final tour around Brisbane before departing for Sydney.  A mandatory tourist stop is the Lone Pine Koala Sanctuary where they have a number of the cuddly small bears for which Australia is famous.  We lined up and had our pictures taken one by one, each holding a koala.  Only one of our party had the misfortune to be holding a koala that was not properly toilet trained.

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Austrailian visitors experienec Koala Sanctuary, long train trip" »

Sydney, Australia 21 May 1988
Sydney Opera House highlights activities

by Bob Van Leer

(SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA, May 21, 1988)    The standout today was attending a performance at the famed Sydney Opera House. The Sydney Philharmonic Choir and the Elizabethan Philharmonic Orchestra performed Dvorak’s Requiem Op. 89.  There were about 160 in the choir and 70 in the orchestra.

      The opera house itself is worth a visit.  It was originally estimated to cost $7 million but 17 years after construction began it was completed in 1973 at a cost of $102 million.  It was paid for by a lottery so the taxpayers didn’t suffer for the construction.  However, the state (New South Wales) government pays 40 percent of the operating cost.

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Sydney Opera House highlights activities" »

Sydney, Australia 22 May 1988
Publishers take boat tour: coast drive

by Bob Van Leer

(SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA, May 22, 1988)    The highlight of today’s activities was a boat trip up the Broken Bay estuary, about 30 kilometers north of Sydney.  Boats haul local passengers and freight up the waters of the Cowan waters and Hawksbury River.  However, most of the passengers on the boat are tourists sightseeing, which somehow seemed familiar.

      Our bus drove us up the coast to the dock on Barranjoey point and we boarded a boat that would seat about 70.  The trip is all in tidewater, and deep water at that, so size and draft of the boat is not a problem.  The boat had restrooms and a bar and one of the crew barbecued pork and beef on the fantail for our lunch, which was served on board.

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Publishers take boat tour: coast drive" »

Canberra, Australia 23 May 1988
Tour of sheep ranch: jouney to Canberra

by Bob Van Leer

(CANBERRA, AUSTRALIA, May 23, 1988)  Our group left Sydney this morning at 7 for a trip to Canberra with a stop at a sheep station. 

      It’s not a long trip, 295 kilometers.  A kilometer is about .6 mile.  Australia has converted from the English system of measurement to metric in this generation and the older people are still having a little difficulty with it.  Temperature in centigrade presented a problem but one of our bus drivers gave us a handy rule of thumb that gets us within a degree or two – double the centigrade reading and add 32.

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Tour of sheep ranch: jouney to Canberra" »

Canberra, Australia, 24 May 1988
Australian government, trade with U.S. are topics

(CANBERRA, AUSTRALIA, May 24, 1988)   Our group started the morning with a tour of the Canberra Times.  The newspaper is in a new plant that includes a large conference room and, after the tour, we heard from two Australian cabinet ministers, the ministers of trade and defense.

      The working relationship between the newspapers and the government is closer than in the United States.  At home we wouldn’t expect to see Frank Carlucci, the U.S. secretary of defense, coming over to the Washington Post office to talk to a group of newspaper people.

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Australian government, trade with U.S. are topics" »

Melbourne, Australia, 26 May 1988
Stay at Australian farm home is trip highlight

by Bob Van Leer

(MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA, May 26, 1988)    Our party arrived in Melbourne this evening.  This is the last stop in our Australian tour, nearly 1000 miles from our starting point at Brisbane.

      Melbourne is the second largest city in Australia with a population of about 3.5 million and is the financial capital of the country.  It is the southernmost mainland Australian city.  South about 200 miles across Bass Strait is the island state of Tasmania, the last land mass north of the Antarctic continent.

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Stay at Australian farm home is trip highlight" »

Melbourne, Australia, 27 May 1988
Zoo Australia offers different mix of animals

by Bob Van Leer

MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA, May 27, 1988)  Several of us this morning visited the Melbourne Zoo, reputed to be one of the world’s oldest.  We were able to see a number of Australian animals I had never seen in the flesh before.

      The odd creature, the platypus, that has a bill like a duck and lays eggs, but the body and fur of a small animal, was on display in a tank of water in a building with the unlikely name of Platypusary.

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Zoo Australia offers different mix of animals" »