Archive for November, 2007

Friday Australian poem #17: Bruce Dawe, “Homecoming”

Posted in Aussie interest, OzLit, poets and poetry with tags , , on November 30, 2007 by ninglun

Years ago I had a student just beginning Year 12 at a Jewish school north of Sydney; Bruce Dawe’s poetry was our first mission. Over the Christmas holidays (well, that’s what I’d call them ;) ) he went to Queensland, found Bruce Dawe in the phone book and rang him up. “Hey, I have to study your poems!” Result? An invitation to come over for a cup of tea, and some good points to make in class…

An Air Force veteran himself, and veteran too of all manner of jobs, this very down-to-earth Australian poet found his voice and his anger during the Vietnam War. “Homecoming” is just one of many he wrote at that time, but is justly the best known.
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M — another day, another country

Posted in M, travel with tags on November 29, 2007 by ninglun

Now he is off to San Pedro de Atacama - Chile.

He is also very happy about the election outcome.

Australian Adult Literacy and Life Skills Survey 2

Posted in Aussie interest, Education, Jim Belshaw, Observations on November 28, 2007 by ninglun

Jim Belshaw has posted on the Adult Literacy and Life Skills Survey 2006 from the Australian Bureau of Statistics, released just today. I have downloaded the full report, and to be honest have not had time to do more than browse.

Jim’s post does have a good historical introduction.

He then notes:

A second thing stands out when I look at the numbers. Those in the 15 to 19 age cohort had lower levels of literacy than the 20 to 24 year age cohort and by a reasonable margin.

The following graph captures that; I won’t even try to explain the five categories at this stage. The general trend is what Jim is referring to.
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Surry Hills Library threatens restaurant

Posted in Aussie interest, Surry Hills on November 28, 2007 by ninglun

Nothing like a good parochial story.

You see, Sydney City Council is building a swish new community centre to include, among other things, a new Surry Hills Library, at the moment temporarily housed on the Northcott Estate. Next door to the new library site is an Indian restaurant.

crack470.jpg
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An old bloke

Posted in Aussie interest, blogging on November 27, 2007 by ninglun

Lovely story of Election Day in Coffs Harbour NSW from Pip Wilson.

Reckoning: The Economic Consequences of Mr. Bush

Posted in Aussie interest, Current affairs, News and Current Affairs with tags , , on November 26, 2007 by ninglun

Here are some extracts from a  Joseph E. Stiglitz article published in Vanity Fair two days ago.

When we look back someday at the catastrophe that was the Bush administration, we will think of many things: the tragedy of the Iraq war, the shame of Guantánamo and Abu Ghraib, the erosion of civil liberties. The damage done to the American economy does not make front-page headlines every day, but the repercussions will be felt beyond the lifetime of anyone reading this page.

I can hear an irritated counterthrust already. The president has not driven the United States into a recession during his almost seven years in office. Unemployment stands at a respectable 4.6 percent. Well, fine. But the other side of the ledger groans with distress: a tax code that has become hideously biased in favor of the rich; a national debt that will probably have grown 70 percent by the time this president leaves Washington; a swelling cascade of mortgage defaults; a record near-$850 billion trade deficit; oil prices that are higher than they have ever been; and a dollar so weak that for an American to buy a cup of coffee in London or Paris—or even the Yukon—becomes a venture in high finance. Read more »

Serendipity

Posted in Aussie interest, Cultural and other, Films, DVDs, TV, Observations, gay life/issues on November 26, 2007 by ninglun

I thought it delightful that ABC had scheduled (unknowingly of course) Choir Of Hard Knocks Opera House Special for the first day of the Rudd government.

Twelve months ago Jonathon Welch brought together a group of Melbourne’s disadvantaged to form a choir, but had no idea what a sensation the choir would become. Now the 42 members of the Choir of Hard Knocks have been invited to perform in the Opera House concert hall.

Taking such a disparate group on the road is a risky venture, and the stakes are high. It’s a real show of faith in the Choir, and nerve racking for the organisers. It’s a massive logistical operation given the varied emotional and physical needs of the choristers. For most, it will be their first time on a plane or their first trip interstate.
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Sirdan’s Sunday lunch

Posted in Aussie interest, Education, News and Current Affairs, Personal with tags on November 25, 2007 by ninglun

The Empress, E, Sirdan’s neighbour and I had our post-election Sunday lunch today. There was no weeping or gnashing of teeth.

mitchelldonaldson The conversation did get around to a remarkable story that was front page news in Saturday’s Sydney Morning Herald even with that day’s election dominating: Lesson for the school of hard Knox, concerning the young man on the right.

IT TAKES a lot of guts at the best of times to stand in front of 1350 fellow students, 150 teachers and 600 parents in the school assembly hall and tell it as it is.

But when it involves accusing some of your year 12 classmates of being cheats, and fingering influential parents for bullying the school authorities into giving prestigious positions to undeserving sons, the effect can be nothing short of sensational.

Especially when the school is the well-respected North Shore institution Knox Grammar, which counts among its alumni the veteran broadcaster John Laws, Macquarie Bank chairman David Clarke, former editor of the satirical Oz magazine Richard Neville, Hugh Jackman and ethicist Simon Longstaff. Read more »

Did something happen last night?

Posted in blogging, my sites on November 25, 2007 by ninglun

10.08 pm: John Howard concedes defeat

Posted in Events with tags on November 24, 2007 by ninglun

Mardi Gras Night 1996 - 24 November 2007

10.50

A very good farewell speech by John Howard, I have to say, and he virtually conceded the loss of his own seat.

8.30pm: ABC computer delivers government to Kevin Rudd

Posted in Aussie interest, Current affairs, Events, Kevin Rudd, News and Current Affairs, Politics on November 24, 2007 by ninglun

830pm.jpg

Mind you, it still ain’t over.

Polling Day in Surry Hills

Posted in Aussie interest, Current affairs, Events, Indigenous Australians, Jim Belshaw, M, News and Current Affairs, Personal, Politics, Reconciliation, Surry Hills, my sites, travel with tags , on November 24, 2007 by ninglun

Just past 8am and the polling booths will have just opened for today’s election. There will be no surprises in Surry Hills where Labor is 100% sure to win. But nation-wide? There were those at last night’s meeting still saying “landslide to Labor” but it does seem it will be a very close thing.

I have to say I thought Noel Pearson’s dummy spit yesterday was impolitic. He could have saved that for after the election. I really wonder too whether he bothered to look beyond the campaigning hype (on both sides) at actual ALP policy on Reconciliation and Indigenous Affairs, particularly Constitutional Recognition Of Indigenous Australians. All he has done is tarnish his own reputation for a degree of balance and originality — for which I have up to now tended to respect him — and made life difficult for himself if Labor gets elected.

Here in Surry Hills it is a grey morning and the sound of crows fills the air. Is this ominous? If so, for whom? I go coaching in Chinatown shortly and will vote either on the way there or on the way home, depending on the crowds. Meanwhile I note, if this relates to anything, the relative readership figures for the past 21 hours on my blogs here at WP:
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Pre-election: Politics in the Pub at Surry Hills

Posted in Aussie interest, Current affairs, Events, Personal, Politics, Surry Hills on November 23, 2007 by ninglun

So I went down to The Gaelic Club this evening for Politics in the Pub; Sirdan was meant to come too but he must have been working. I do get to see him Sunday so I guess I’ll find out what happened.

I had a bit of a connection with this event, as these entries explain. Some nice things were said about my story in the introductory talk, and then we heard from the ABC’s Mark Willacy. He is an interesting speaker. We also heard from Noah Bassil, Deputy Director, Middle East Centre, Macquarie University. There have been some interesting talks at Politics in the Pub over the years as you will see if you visit that link; a few of them have transcriptions. You may see tonight’s talks on UHF 31 Thursday 2.30 pm and Sunday 10.30 pm.

The audience was primarily left, of a generation, most of them, that makes me feel almost young. There were some good questions, especially one from a woman who knows Iraq well, and its history.

It was good to meet Mark Willacy in person at last, as distinct from by phone; also met Peter Cave [YouTube link], the ABC’s foreign affairs editor.

What “Old Teachers Never Die” needs…

Posted in Education, my sites on November 23, 2007 by ninglun

…is a bit of ranting. So I have obliged, though it is a rant I deeply believe in. See The literacy we need but many don’t want… That “many” includes just about everyone on Howard’s side of politics and some on Rudd’s, but if you really want an education revolution that might deliver a healthy democracy, this is the way you have to go.

How’s that for assertiveness.

But it is based on very careful research, reading, and experience.

Friday Australian poem #16: Banjo Paterson "Fur and Feathers"

Posted in Aussie interest, Diversions, OzLit, poets and poetry with tags , , on November 23, 2007 by ninglun

Having been serious on this blog — even deep and meaningful — in a few posts this week I offer this in a spirit of fun, and can almost guarantee you won’t have read it before! I found it in the whitewolf collection, and if you click the author name below you can see what he says about A B Paterson, one of the two best-known 1890s bush balladeers — though both of them lasted into the 20th century, Paterson rather longer than Henry Lawson…

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