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Twisted Sisterhoods: Mysteries & Thrillers 2021
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Torrington hair salon opens in familiar location
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Updated / Monday, 8 Mar 2021
10:00 I was lost in a wilderness for years with no idea of what female empowerment really looked or felt like. Feminism wasn t for girls like me. To celebrate International Women s Day (Monday, March 8th), Kathy Scott of The Trailbazery writes for Culture about her own journey.
On International Women s Day, I find myself reflecting on the generations of trailblazing women who have paved the way for women like me to have a voice today.
When I think of their commitment and vision I wonder what a world might look like where we no longer need to mark a day in the global calender to promote gender equality.
The man whose idea led to the Australian Institute of Sport
By Tracey Holmes for The Ticket and ABC Sport
Posted
MonMonday 25
updated
MonMonday 25
JanJanuary 2021 at 8:33pm
Andrew Dettre pushed for a national institute of sport to prevent Australia falling behind the rest of the world on the global stage.
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Amongst the celebrations, discussions and debates that are taking place this Australia Day, there will be a certain group marking the 40th anniversary of the Australian Institute of Sport.
But, like the day itself, the Institute has become controversial.
And yet, also like the day itself, it is the history of the place that sits quietly, sometimes not recognised, as the volume of the debate cranks up around it.
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It’s June 1827, and high above the Arctic Circle, British naval officer William Edward Parry and more than 20 men are trudging over the ice from Svalbard to the North Pole. They’re hoping to be the first men to reach 90° North, but it’s not looking good.
No Arctic explorer is more experienced than Parry. He’s already led three voyages to the Arctic and sailed farther through the Northwest Passage than anyone. He’s prepared to face any threat, from extreme cold, to open water, to polar bear attacks.
But now, Parry is beginning to doubt his chances. His crew is hauling their equipment and food on heavy sledges through soft snow. They have to take time-consuming detours when their way is blocked by giant piles of ice. The slushy terrain is soaking the men up to their waists. They’d be fainting with cold if they could actually feel their legs.
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