Was Adam Marshall a hero or a villain when he dressed as Barnaby Joyce?
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Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, right? Presumably that’s how NSW Agriculture Minister
Adam Marshall is hoping his attempt at fancy dress will go down after he attended a Heroes and Villains themed party on Saturday night.
Adam Marshall dressed up as Barnaby Joyce.
Marshall amused - and bemused - fellow partygoers appearing at the costume event dressed as his federal Nationals colleague
Barnaby Joyce, his former national leader.
Whether Teichrieb can pay that amount and how remains to be seen. Teichrieb is in prison as he serves a seven-year sentence after pleading guilty in 2018 to aggravated assault. He had originally been charged with attempted murder. The attack outside Teichrieb’s Brocklehurst home left Simpson with a catastrophic brain injury, confined to a wheelchair and in need of round the clock care the rest of his life. Dley granted Simpson $393,000 in non-pecuniary damages, $87,000 for past income losses, $1.3 million in future income losses, $3 million for the cost of his future care, $50,000 for Simpson’s loss of housekeeping capacity, $75,000 for an in trust claim, $42,689 in special expenses, $432,490 in trust for a crime victim assistance program and $1.4 million in trust for the Ministry of Health.
Room to spare at the Australian Open
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Day one of the Australian Open’s brave new world and already the social and financial hierarchies were firmly establishing themselves. These are uncharted waters (being February), which left many discombobulated and dreaming of the good old days.
It was slow going at the Founders Club behind a wooden paling fence opposite Rod Laver Arena. There, patrons who have dropped up to $70,000 for the privilege can enjoy access all areas over the fortnight of the tournament.
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News Corpâs examples of cultural Marxism come up short. Plus: Alan Jones apology relegated to Sky News corrections page
A Daily Telegraph story claimed HSC students were marked down for using gender and cultural stereotypes. Photograph: James Horan/AAP
A Daily Telegraph story claimed HSC students were marked down for using gender and cultural stereotypes. Photograph: James Horan/AAP
Thu 4 Feb 2021 17.44 EST
Last modified on Fri 5 Feb 2021 00.47 EST
Days after News Corp chairman Rupert Murdoch warned of an âawful woke orthodoxyâ, the Daily Telegraph demonstrated the bossâs point with a front-page story about political correctness in education. âSchool of Hard Wokeâ was designed to stir anger in readers about the âactivist teachersâ who apparently penalised students for not giving âwokeâ answers in the HSC exams last year.
We shouldn t forget which Australian commentators carried water for Trump msn.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from msn.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.