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…
Category Archives: Diversions
Earliest memory meme
My Sabu memories in the previous entry lead, almost like The Chaser’s prize segue segments, to the meme Arthur has sent me.
I have to:
- Describe my earliest memory where the memory is clear, and where “clear” means I can depict at least three details.
- Give an estimate of my age at the time.
- Tag five other bloggers with this meme.
Easy, Arthur, as I have the relevant story on a page already, but here it is again.
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If Maths had been like this I may have been interested…
Dear me, there is a nasty left-wing plot brewing in the world of Mathematics of all places, according to Devine pater in today’s Australian.
The square route to hell is paved with good intentions
WATCH out for radical maths, which may be coming to a school near you. Also known as “social justice maths”, it is a teaching theory, gaining momentum in the US, which seeks to use mathematics as a form of instruction in social justice issues.
For example, in studying fractions, a student might be asked to “compare how money spent on military operations could be used to support other important causes (for example, if a bomb costs $10 million and it costs $10,000 to provide health care for an entire family for a year, how many families could get health care for the cost of this bomb?).” Read the rest of this entry »
Friday Australian poem # 14: "The Australaise" by C J Dennis
Expanded since draft posting… And as for the wrong number: oops!
After watching The Sounds of Aus on ABC last night my choice this week was clear.
Hosted by John Clarke, this entertaining story about the way we sound is told through an array of illuminating interviews with linguists, historians, social and political commentators, comedians, actors, and plenty of opinionated people with genuinely hilarious anecdotes. Those featured include Rachel Griffiths, Bruce Beresford, Bert Newton, Max Gillies, Denise Scott, Mary-Anne Fahey, Santo Cilauro, Simon Palomares and Akmal Saleh.
Is our accent really the legendary broad “Strine” of Paul Hogan and Steve Irwin? Why is it so hard for others to do? Are there regional variations? Is it a bastardised version of the Queen’s English? Is it under threat from global forces? And if it is, is it worth saving?
By examining the Australian accent and discovering its story, The Sounds of Aus reveals much about the Australian psyche and our national identity. Indeed, over the last two centuries, many of the conflicts about our identity have been played out through the accent, with our vision of, and our relationship with, the world reflected in the way we speak.
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Melbourne Cup
Did you know there is a Melbourne Cup blog?
I can tell you who won this one:
This year? I reckon The Fuzz — but I wouldn’t bet one it!
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Guilty grin…
Once upon a time this headline would have provoked a smirk: Chinks appearing in Labor’s poll lead.
M would be disgusted…
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