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So Mr Latham thinks he has a problem. If elected Prime Minister this year, he is worried that he will have two houses, one in Sydney and the other in Canberra.
With a predominantly working class Anglo-Celtic population, pre-World War II Ashfield was a green escape from inner-city Sydney. But now Chinese have settled in large numbers, and some blame them for what they see as Ashfield’s disrepair and unwelcoming atmosphere.
Morag Fraser and John Schumann reflect on the crucial role of truth in our society.
Father Frank Brennan discusses the Howard Government's approach to the issue of asylum seeker detention off-shore.
Don Gazzard wonders about the state of Australian real-estate pricing
The IT industry prepares for the next boom
Peter Yule’s Carlton: A History reviewed by Philip Harvey.
Dorothy Horsfield visits the fastest growing Jewish community in Europe
Tony Smith reviews Ian Rankin’s Fleshmarket Close; Garry Disher’s Kittyhawk Down and Alexander McCall Smith’s The Sunday Philosophy Club.
As a public figure, Father John Brosnan was hard to ignore. Throughout his life he worked tirelessly for social justice, providing support for those in prison. Next month, the Brosnan Centre celebrates his life and work.
The largesse in the Budget shouldn’t have proven a surprise, even if conventional wisdom is that budgets following elections are the ones in which governments make tough decisions.
Samuel Pepys’s diaries chronicling London life in the 17th century—now on the internet—remain as fresh and engaging as ever
97-108 out of 109 results.