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Not So Happy Campers
It's a crude political truism: it's better to be inside the tent pissing out than outside the tent pissing in. At least for those on the inside.
Interview: Pulling the Pin
Victorian union leader Dean Mighell outlines the thinking behind his decision to quit the ALP and join the Greens.
International: At the Crossroads
From Germany, to Britain, to South Africa, Canada and the USA it seems union members are turning on their political partners � and talking about divorce.
Unions: A Case Of Lost Identity
Victorian Trades Hall secretary Leigh Hubbard warns that more unions could leave the ALP if the current policy review hits the wrong note.
History: Rocking the Foundations
There was not just one model of what a political wing of the labour movement should be, Don Rawson writes.
Industrial: Rocky Road
Thirteen hundred Rockhampton workers are putting cars and houses on the line in an effort to beat off bully-boy tactics from Kerry Packer-owned Consolidated Meat Group.
Economics: Cracking a Coldie
As Australian icons fall around him, Neale Towart charts the rise and fall of the Great Aussie Esky.
Poetry: The Right Was Wrong
A glimpse of history shows that waterfront workers deserve the high moral ground.
Satire: Heffernan�s Evidence Conclusive: Proves He's An Idiot
The evidence released by Senator Bill Heffernan to substantiate his allegations against Justice Kirby have proved conclusively that the senator is an idiot.
Review: Upstairs, Downstairs
Robert Altman's latest movie Gosford Park is hard yakka no matter what side of the class system you sit on.
Giant Rat Fights Cole Commission
Dodgy Bosses To Get Life
Unions Back Rugby World Cup
Queue Jumper Abbott In Cash Grab
Refugees Face Bank Imbalance
Guards Act to Plug Leaks
Rabbit Fence Leads Reconciliation to Classroom
Spy Bill Under Fire
Council Takes Up Discrimination Challenge
Power Workers To Decide Own Fate
Thumbs Up for Super Deal
G-G Warned Off State Schools
Fee Pressure Builds on Beattie
Nobel Committee 'Subordinates' Union Rights
Columbians Level Death Charges
Call To Blockade Burmese Junta
Indonesian Threat To Unions
Activist Notebook
The Soapbox
Dealing with Prejudice
Former Liberal senator Chris Puplick did not pull any punches launching a new guide for union reps dealing with discrimination issues. The Locker Room
The Bigger They Are, The Harder They Fall
Phil Doyle tries to get sport off the front pages and back where it belongs ... Postcard
Greetings From Lao
In the first in a new series, Union Aid Abroad's Phillip Hazelton, reports from Lao, where he is establishing a vocational training centre. Cole-Watch
Go West
The Building Industry Royal Commission caravan has rolled into Perth. Week in Review
Top of the Pops
Johnny Howard and his Masters of Deception kept the beat during a week in which secrecy took over from blatant fibbing as the dark art or choice, leaving the national Hit Parade looking something like this �
Letter to Howard #1
Letter to Howard #2
Letter to Howard #3
Jump Before You're Pushed
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News
Rabbit Fence Leads Reconciliation to Classroom
Independent school teachers are using the film 'Rabbit Proof Fence' as a key resource in raising awareness of the Stolen Generation, under a programme promoted by the Independent Education Union.
The film's director Phillip Noyce addressed a group of indigenous and non-indigenous students this week, speaking for more than an hour about the themes and process behind the making of the film.
The students from St Scholasticas College Glebe and St Mary's Cathederal College were among the first to work through the classroom study materials developed by the film's producers.
The discussion traversed a wide range of issues including the choice of dialect for the
characters, the portrayal of the Aboriginal tracker and the belief by the Europeans that they were acting in the girls' best interests.
Noyce revealed that having lived in Hollywood for a decade, he had been unaware of the Stolen Generations debate before making the movie. "I was attracted by the universal nature of the story, but the current debate gives it an extra depth," he says.
NSW/ACT IEU (state) secretary Dick Shearman says his union is taking an active role in raising the issue of reconciliation in the classroom.
"Our members work in schools of all denominations, but there is a consistent commitment to social justice," he says. "The film certainly brings the issue to life for students and has already sparked some stimulating exchanges in the classroom.
Education is one of the keys to reconciliation and our members are working hard to address the mistakes of the past".
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Issue 129 contents
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