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Sydney and Push
From the 1940s to the 1970s the Sydney Push, an intellectual subculture of authors and activists questioning of authority, including Germaine Greer, was active.
The Sydney Push met in the " back room ", a little above ground floor, at left.
The Sydney Push was a predominantly left-wing intellectual subculture in Sydney from the late 1940s to the early ' 70s.
From 1961 to 1962, poet Les Murray resided in Brian Jenkins's Push household at Glen Street, Milsons Point, which became a mecca for associates visiting Sydney from Melbourne and other cities.
The Push operated in a pub culture and comprised a broad range of manual workers, musicians, lawyers, criminals, journalists and public servants as well as staff and students of Sydney University — predominantly though not exclusively in the Faculty of Arts.
Amongst the key intellectual figures in Push debates were philosophers David J. Ivison, George Molnar, Roelof Smilde, Darcy Waters and Jim Baker, as recorded in Baker's memoir Sydney Libertarians and the Push, published in the libertarian Broadsheet in 1975.
A representative collection of Sydney Libertarian essays was published by L. R. Hiatt in The Sydney Line, printed in 1963 by the Hellenic Herald, whose proprietor Nestor Grivas was a prominent non-academic Push personality and champion of sexual freedom.
The year 1964 saw the gradual demise of the Royal George Hotel as the prime focal venue of the Sydney Push which dispersed its bustling social life to other traditional venues like the Newcastle, Orient and Port Jackson hotels in The Rocks near Circular Quay and the Rose, Crown and Thistle at Paddington, but also to alternative central-city pubs including the United States and Edinburgh Castle.
Push personalities who emigrated to the United Kingdom included Clive James, Paddy McGuinness, Chester ( Phillip Graham ) and Ian Parker ( pictured above ) who returned to Sydney in the late 1970s and was knocked down and killed while drunk, in Dixon Street.
* A. Coombs, " Sydney Push " in A Companion to Philosophy in Australia and New Zealand
id: Sydney Push
Intellectuals such as those of the Sydney Push ( including feminist Germaine Greer, author and broadcaster Clive James and art critic Robert Hughes ) rose out of Sydney during the period, as did influential artists like painter Brett Whitely.
* Sydney Push
She pursued further studies at the University of Sydney in the 1950s, where she fell in with the freewheeling movement known as the Sydney Push.
Bob Ellis wrote in Overland, ‘ What I think absorbs the reader in the deeply revelatory un-memoir Wild Amazement is ... Michael ’ s clear, almost hyper-real remembrance, as if experienced on a guided tour of a radiant, countercultural Disneyland, of a way of life, and a gravely joyous bohemia now gone, of how it was, and what a time it was, it really was, in Sydney in the sixties and seventies, in the Newcastle and the Journos ’ Club and the Push parties and the plans for a literary life .’ And in, Quadrant, Peter Corris wrote, ‘ Anyone interested in how contemporary Australian writing came to be the way it is, with its strengths and follies, its cliques and patrons, and the challenges it faces, will benefit from reading Wilding ’ s sensitive, sometimes bitchy, often funny and always intelligent tracing of his life ’ s trajectory .’ The Italian translation of Wild Amazement appeared in 2009.
He was a regular associate of Sydney Push and media personalities including close friend and biographer Richard Appleton, Joy Anderson, Robert Hughes, Piers Bourke, John Croyston, Mike and Marjorie Hourihan and Brian Jenkins.
Several of these writers had links to the Sydney Push intellectual sub-culture in Sydney from the late 1940s to the early ' 70s ; and to Oz, a satirical magazine originating in Sydney, and later produced in London ( from 1967 to 1973 ).

Sydney and associates
In 1800 Constable began the Farmer's Magazine, and in November 1802 he issued the first number of the Edinburgh Review, under the nominal editorship of Sydney Smith ; Lord Jeffrey, was, however, the guiding spirit of the review, having as his associates Lord Brougham, Sir Walter Scott, Henry Hallam, John Playfair and afterwards Lord Macaulay.
Capital Group is headquartered in Los Angeles, California, and has over 7, 000 associates in 23 office locations around the globe, including offices in London, Geneva, Sydney, Toronto, Tokyo, Hong Kong, Mumbai and Singapore.
Among those killed were John Jenkens, an Australian from Sydney, accused of burglary, who was hanged on June 10, 1851 ; James Stuart, also from Sydney, accused of murder, hanged on July 11, 1851 ; and Samuel Whittaker and Robert McKenzie, associates of Stuart accused of " various heinous crimes ", hanged on August 24, 1851.
Later, Jin was assigned on a secret mission to deliver watches to two of Mr. Paik's associates in Sydney and Los Angeles.
On 19 November 2002, two anglers found the dismembered body of murdered Sydney drug dealer Tony Falconer after he died three days beforehand, after his corpse had been cut up and dumped within the Hastings River by Anthony Perish and his criminal gang associates

Sydney and Ian
Even so he was promoted to vice-captain above several senior players when Ian Johnson and Keith Miller missed the 2nd Test at Sydney through injury and Arthur Morris was made temporary captain.
* Hancock, Ian ( 2002 ), John Gorton: He Did It His Way, Hodder, Sydney, New South Wales ( sympathetic ) ISBN 0-7336-1439-6
After a tip off from Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais, Barker and Corbett opted to move with their families to Sydney, Australia in 1979 for the year in order to exploit a tax loophole and avoid paying the year's income tax.
Ian Thorpe Aquatic Center, Ultimo, Sydney, 2001 – 07
* 2001 – 07: Ian Thorpe Aquatic Centre, ( formerly " Ultimo Aquatic Centre ") Sydney, Australia
Well-known Australian classical performers include: sopranos Dame Joan Sutherland, Dame Joan Hammond, Joan Carden, Yvonne Kenny, Sara Macliver and Emma Matthews ; pianists Roger Woodward, Eileen Joyce, Michael Kieran Harvey, Geoffrey Tozer, Geoffrey Douglas Madge, Leslie Howard and Ian Munro ; guitarists John Williams and Slava Grigoryan ; horn player Barry Tuckwell ; oboist Diana Doherty ; violinists Richard Tognetti and Elizabeth Wallfisch ; cellists John Addison and David Pereira ; organist Christopher Wrench ; orchestras like the Sydney Symphony Orchestra, the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, the Australian Chamber Orchestra and the Australian Brandenburg Orchestra ; and conductors Sir Bernard Heinze, Sir Charles Mackerras, Richard Bonynge, Simone Young and Geoffrey Simon.
May 1985 Ian Tanner ; David Gill ; Sydney
Ian Moir, three-quarter back for South Sydney
Harold was born into a family of three brothers: Ian, Sydney and Harvey ( died in 1997 ).
After three years working on Jørn Utzon shells for the roof of the Sydney Opera House in London, where he is credited with having done the geometry for the problematic design, he moved to Sydney to be assistant engineer to Ian MacKenzie.
The Sydney Morning Herald coverage emphasized that Kevin Rudd was under pressure over " allegations surrounding his past meetings with disgraced former Western Australian premier Brian Burke " ; and that Thomson " had no choice but to resign, especially since Prime Minister John Howard raised the bar a week ago by sacking Ian Campbell for doing nothing more than meeting, in his then-capacity as heritage minister, a delegation which included Burke.
X is an Australian punk rock band, formed in Sydney in 1977 and led by the late Ian Rilen.
: Nephew to Frank ( son of a late unnamed Agretti brother ), who ends up becoming involved with Sydney before being killed by her husband Ian St. James
* Ian Reid, ' The Social Semiotic of Narrative Exchange ,' in Terry Threadgold, E. A. Grosz, G. Kress and M. A. K. Halliday, ed., Semiotics, Ideology, Language, Sydney Studies in Society & Culture, 3, 1986.
The Choirboys are an Australian hard rock band from Sydney formed in 1979 with mainstays Mark Gable on lead vocals and Ian Hulme on bass guitar and were later joined by drummer Paul Wheeler.
* Whiticker, Alan & Collis, Ian ( 2006 ) The History of Rugby League Clubs, New Holland, Sydney
* Heads, Ian and Middleton, David ( 2008 ) A Centenary of Rugby League, MacMillan Sydney
The final contained the four fastest men in the event in history: Ian Thorpe ( Australia, world record holder in the event at the time ), Pieter van den Hoogenband ( Netherlands, aiming to defend his title from Sydney ), Grant Hackett ( Australia, former world record holder in the event ) and Michael Phelps ( USA ).
Led by Sydney Roosters prop Ian Rubin, who was born in Odessa, Ukraine, the Bears were involved in a tight struggle and it was Fijian captain, winger Lote Tuquri, who proved to be the difference between the two sides, with Fiji winning 38-12.
* The drawings of Sydney Goodsir Smith, poet, collected by Ian Begg, edited by Joy Hendry, Edinburgh, Chapman Press, on behalf of The New Auk Society, 1998
It was presented by CBC News anchor Ian Hanomansing from Vancouver, and ABC News presenter Felicity Davey in Sydney.

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