But enough is enough. Now, sergeant hunter, do you have any real evidence that even remotely links him with these murders . No, i dont. Then captain devane, i must insist that you release him now. Your captain devane just mad an enormous mistake. Mstances, i think he did the right thing. This is wrong. Well, what do you expect him to do . The man doesnt have any warrants in england or in this country. Oh, that means nothing. Oh, susannah, you cant take a mans rights away because he talks to a prostitute. How are we doing on Everything Else . Nothing. Oh, good. Good god, tony. This isnt at all like you, getting into such a mess. Why would you even want to photograph a prostitute . Come now, a arew. I thought it would make a wonderful highlight for my book. Some highlight. Frankly,y,ts a disgrace that so many young women f we do something to bolster our economy, they can ply their trade at home. That is not funny. Come now, quit being so s sffy, andrew. Well, its easy for you to say. If
The University of Canterbury is commemorating 150 years since the birth of one of its most famous scientists, academics and alumni,.Ernest Rutherford was awarded the 1908 Nobel Prize in chemistry for his investigations into the disintegration of the
JOHN KIRK-ANDERSON/STUFF
Christchurch Arts Centre chief executive Philip Aldridge says being denied $48m in shovel-ready funding to restore five heritage buildings was heartbreaking . (First published September 2020.)
THE PRESS 160 YEARS is a series marking the launch of
The
The Press will revisit stories from every year of publication. One of New Zealand’s most famous sons made his final trip home in 1925. “A big man – big mentally and physically, with blue eyes that every now and then light up with merriment – that was the interviewer’s first impression of Sir Ernest Rutherford,” an unnamed reporter wrote in
The Press on November 2, 1925. “It was at first difficult to realise that he was one of the greatest men of the age: his manner is so charming, so unaffected, that in a few seconds he puts anyone to whom he is speaking perfectly at ease.”