Friday, 31 August 2001

Kirby ups ante on education, The Australian, 31 August, 2001.

Kirby ups ante on education: [1 Edition]

Stapleton, JohnThe Australian [Canberra, A.C.T] 31 Aug 2001: 5.
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VOCAL High Court judge Michael Kirby has renewed his attack on the federal Government's education policies, saying Australia is abandoning the goal of providing free, secular and compulsory education to all.
Speaking at a ceremony in Sydney to honour one of the founders of Australia's public education system, Justice Kirby said all modernAustralian leaders should take their cue from the values of the founding fathers of Federation, to create a society that was participatory, democratic and egalitarian.

Monday, 13 August 2001

Over the hill at 97, no worries, The Australian, 13 August, 2001.

Over the hill at 97, no worries: [1 Edition]

Stapleton, JohnThe Australian [Canberra, A.C.T] 13 Aug 2001: 5.
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Four Tanzanian athletes led the field: John Msuri, who won in 40min 24sec, followed by Rogat Stephen, Tlehema Benedict and Daniel Sipe.
Once Heartbreak Hill was out of the way, nothing could stop him. Mr [Philip Rabinowitz] pushed the pram of his youngest great grandson, two-month-old Liron, for the final downhill kilometres of the race.

Wednesday, 8 August 2001

700 million ways to take a snapshot, The Australian, 8 August, 2001.

700 million ways to take a snapshot: [1 Edition]

While the 14th census mostly ran smoothly, it did not go off without hitches. On Monday night, the ABS hotline received 13,000 calls from people without a form, 4000 from those unsure of what to do if they were away from home, 2000 with privacy questions and 700 wanting to know if the census was compulsory. The bureau's website had 173,000 hits on Monday.
Twenty members of the 105th signal squadron, based at the Simpson Barracks in Watsonia, Victoria, headed home at 11pm to fill in their forms, a task the ABS said would take about 20 minutes. Captain Lisa Frewster, 30, said she was looking forward to the novelty of her census response joining the time capsule.

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Tuesday, 7 August 2001

Syringe prick forces jumbo to cancel trip, The Australian, 7 August, 2001.

Syringe prick forces jumbo to cancel trip: [2 Edition]

Nicholas Harling, John StapletonThe Australian [Canberra, A.C.T] 07 Aug 2001: 3.
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The pilot informed 300 disgruntled passengers on board United Airlines flight UA816 that he would have to turn back after a woman was pierced by a syringe.
Other passengers protested on learning that the flight could not be diverted to Auckland or Fiji instead of returning to Sydney.
A Sydney airport spokesman confirmed that two hours into the United Airlines flight the captain radioed Sydney that they wished to return due to a medical emergency.

Friday, 3 August 2001

Car strike 'treasoin'to spread, The Australian, 3 August, 2001. Page One.

Car strike `treason' to spread: [1 Edition]

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Strikers at Tristar, the NSW steering components manufacturer that supplies all four Australian car-makers, voted to stay out until at least Monday, causing a chain reaction that the Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries says threatens 50,000 jobs.
Australian Manufacturing Workers Union national secretary Doug Cameron said the battle over Manusafe, an industry trust fund to protect workers' entitlements, was a "fundamental position" for the union.
Assistant secretary Dave Oliver said 600 industrial agreements were due for renegotiation over the next six weeks and the AMWU would be pushing for those employers to sign up to Manusafe.