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A land abounding with boundaries
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Vanstone s textbook bias taints defence of minister
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When it comes to climate action, target date is now
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February 14, 2021 12.05am
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The target year for net zero carbon emissions preferred by many nations, including this one, is 30 years away (“Almost alone now: Australia isolated on climate”, February 7). Last century, over a 30-year period, humanity struggled and dealt with two world wars, the Depression and the Spanish influenza. Each nightmare rocking humanity to its foundations. All pale into insignificance should climate change reach a tipping point. Climate scientists exhort that time is of the essence to accelerate our efforts to avoid such an event. 2050 is a target too far.
Whatâs being commemorated can no longer be celebrated
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January 26, 2021 â 12.10am
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Credit:Sydney Morning Herald
When I was a kid, it was standard fare on January 26 for a boatload of men in old-fashioned military uniforms to row a boat ashore at Farm Cove. Theyâd disembark and chase a bunch of Indigenous natives carrying spears. They were all actors re-enacting the landing of the first Europeans. It is my understanding that the last time that this occurred was January 26, 1988. I reckon that if you canât celebrate the events for which the day is named, then itâs time to change the date. -
Self-surgery tale just doesn t cut it
December 30, 2020 9.00pm
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The tale of Leonid Rogozov removing his own appendix (C8) is an urban myth, if Geoffrey Naughton of Newtown is to be believed: As a previous Antarctic expeditioner (Casey 1977), I can attest to the fact that expeditioners do not have to have their appendix removed. I don’t have the scar to prove it.
Cricket tragics would no doubt welcome a distraction from the carnage at the MCG this week and for that, we thank William Williams (C8) and his question on novel scoreboard combinations. That said, about 90 per cent of replies refer to Lillee caught Willey bowled Dilley from the Perth Ashes Test of 1979. Still, some others are pretty great too. Owen Dally of Orange recalls that in 1980s grade cricket Manly-Warringah had two first grade openers named Bush and Tuckerman. They were the best pair by a country mile. The offering from Pat Rodgers of Gladesville is also food-related: In
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