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  • Rosie the new face of Aussie ModelCo

    News.com.au - Saturday 25th May, 2013

    GLOBAL "It" Girl, burgeoning actor, model and style muse, Rosie Huntington Whiteley is the latest global recruit to Aussie beauty brand, ...

  • Sydneys new million-dollar suburbs

    Sydney Morning Herald - Saturday 25th May, 2013

    Sydney house prices are back on the rise and suburbs such as once-cheap(ish) Manly Vale have just joined the million-dollar club. Always considered Manly's poor cousin, Manly Vale's median house price has hit $1,005,000 - a rise of 10 per cent on a year ago. ''I've always thought it was one of those hidden gems that not many people knew about,'' said ...

  • Charity watchdog investigates rogue individuals

    Sydney Morning Herald - Saturday 25th May, 2013

    Scores of complaints have been lodged about the conduct of charities months after a watchdog was set up to police the not-for-profit sector. The Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission says it has received 119 complaints, with 72 warranting further investigation and 37 investigations under way. Director of compliance and strategic intelligence Andrew Sealey said the majority of ...

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  • Fears mount over information hacking

    News.com.au - Saturday 25th May, 2013

    The national survey of 1200 Australian adults found three-quarters were worried about hacking and privacy breaches of financial institutions.Sixty per cent of of those poll were extremely or very concerned about other people obtaining or using their credit/debit card details.Two-thirds were worried about data breaches by the telecommunication providers.It also found more than half those surveyed ...

  • Vivid Sydney timelapse a spectacular canvas of light covers city landmarks - video

    The Guardian - Saturday 25th May, 2013

    Some of Sydney's famous landmarks, such as the Opera House, Museum of Contemporary Art and the city's Circular Quay, are transformed into a spectacular canvas of light as Vivid Sydney takes over the city after dark. Vivid Sydney is an annual event where immersive light installations and projections illuminate the city from 24 May until 10 June. In recent years the event has attracted ...

  • Charities left at the altar after Edelsten wedding

    Sydney Morning Herald - Saturday 25th May, 2013

    It was billed as the ultimate wedding with a conscience. When Geoffrey Edelsten married Brynne Gordon, no expense was spared. A star-studded guest list, a video invitation made by the director ...

  • Ill wind blows through Liberal ranks

    Sydney Morning Herald - Saturday 25th May, 2013

    A rift is widening in Coalition ranks over renewable energy targets, with several Liberal MPs planning to publicly defy the party line by attending a Tea Party-style anti-wind farm rally at Parliament House in Canberra. The rally is scheduled for June 18 and is being promoted through a clandestine group using a website called StopTheseThings.com, which provides no names of organisers or ...

  • Industry push to allow gluten in gluten-free foods

    Sydney Morning Herald - Saturday 25th May, 2013

    Australian food manufacturers and suppliers are pushing to increase the amount of gluten allowed in so-called ''gluten-free'' foods on which thousands of people with digestive problems rely. The Australian Food and Grocery Council is preparing to ask Food Standards Australia New Zealand to relax its current standard, which states there must be no detectable gluten in foods ...

  • Help for women veterans out of step study shows

    Sydney Morning Herald - Saturday 25th May, 2013

    Women veterans are not receiving the help they need to deal with sexual harassment and trauma, a three-year study has found. Many had served in Afghanistan, Iraq and the Gulf War and in key peacekeeping roles. Speaking anonymously, the 60 women who took part in the study told of a struggle with support services on return from deployment having, in many cases, been exposed to extreme trauma and ...

  • Green light to work up a sweat

    Sydney Morning Herald - Saturday 25th May, 2013

    Parks and bushland are not just a soothing escape from the city grind - they also encourage people to exercise harder and more often. A new study of more than 200,000 Australians aged over 45 confirms that the grey-versus-green ratio in neighbourhoods can influence residents' health. It shows the more green space you have within one kilometre of your home, the more likely you are to walk, ...

  • Wired for pain may be all gain

    Sydney Morning Herald - Saturday 25th May, 2013

    Imagine feeling pain and not being upset by it, or running a marathon and not feeling tired. It sounds like science fiction, but a group of researchers at the University of Canberra are at the cutting edge of research into how people can be made to feel differently about what happens to their bodies. Transcranial direct current stimulation, which is being tested at a number of universities ...

  • So bad its good plain cig pack wins design plaudits

    Sydney Morning Herald - Saturday 25th May, 2013

    Cigarette packaging is deliberately unappealing. They are hated by smokers, show graphic pictures of rotting limbs and diseased eyeballs and have been the subject of a High Court challenge. But Australia's controversial olive-green plain cigarette packages have been shortlisted for a prestigious British design award. A panel of judges at the London Design Museum nominated the packaging ...

  • Private schools foster prejudice ex-judge

    Sydney Morning Herald - Saturday 25th May, 2013

    Some non-government schools foster outdated prejudices about homosexuality, while Australia's public education system provides greater equality for gay and lesbian students, according to former High Court Justice Michael Kirby. In an address to Canberra's National Press Club, Mr Kirby said the increasingly disproportionate number of senior politicians and judges who were privately ...

  • Mums the word but bureaucracy isnt listening

    Sydney Morning Herald - Saturday 25th May, 2013

    How to prove your mother is indeed your mother without a birth certificate or an old family snapshot - items lost when fleeing a bitter conflict that left thousands dead? Perhaps turn to a priest to lend support. Or better still, you will soon join the clergy and so swear an oath to God this is the woman who brought you into the world. But the word of Ladu Yanga, a deacon at Holy Spirit ...

  • $5.5b indigenous reforms at risk

    Sydney Morning Herald - Saturday 25th May, 2013

    The promise of $5.5 billion to narrow the gap between indigenous and non-indigenous students will be at risk if the states do not sign up to the Gillard government's plan for school improvement, Schools Minister Peter Garrett has warned. More than $200 million is earmarked to improve the results of about 11,500 indigenous students in more than 1500 Victorian schools under the plan that so ...

  • Battle not over for women returning home

    Sydney Morning Herald - Saturday 25th May, 2013

    Life-changing: Iraq veteran Karen Edwards, with daughter Lauren, 6, has endured the turmoil of PTSD. They are exposed to all the trauma of the front line and are employed in key peacekeeping roles. As medics they undertake some of the most horrifying tasks of war, treating the injured and coping with the dead. But recognition of returned servicewomen is scant compared with that afforded their ...

  • Fighting cancer with a body of knowledge

    Sydney Morning Herald - Saturday 25th May, 2013

    A woman lies on an operating table, her breasts exposed. A surgeon uses a scalpel to pierce her skin with a scalpel, removing a small, hard lump of tissue - a tumour - and places it in a sterile tray. This clump of unruly cells has probably caused its owner unimaginable grief and worry, but its work is not done yet. A small laboratory in the corridors of Westmead Hospital awaits its arrival. ...

  • Union fails to meet expectations

    Sydney Morning Herald - Saturday 25th May, 2013

    At the request of the happy couple, the guests were told bring envelopes containing donations rather than gifts. The Royal Children's Hospital, beyondblue, the Lighthouse Foundation - the list of charities set to benefit from the 2009 nuptials read like a roll call of Australia's top philanthropic bodies. But more than three years later, some of the charities say they are yet to ...

  • More travellers taking a trip theyd rather forget

    Sydney Morning Herald - Saturday 25th May, 2013

    Behind bars: Number of Australians imprisoned overseas. Four Australian travellers a day are arrested for crimes around the world and statistics show a jump of almost 50 per cent from previous years. Figures from the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade revealed that 1507 Australians were arrested or jailed for various crimes in the 2011-2012 financial year, up from 1067 in 2010-2011. ...

  • Female veterans lack support study

    Sydney Morning Herald - Saturday 25th May, 2013

    Struggle: Karen Edwards. Former servicewomen have spoken of a lack of post-deployment support, with extreme trauma and sexual harassment raised as concerns in a three-year study. The in-depth report into the health and wellbeing of Australian female veterans has provided a stark insight into the support they receive after leaving the forces. The study commissioned by the Department of ...

  • Capsized boat details mired in secrecy and difference in accounts

    Sydney Morning Herald - Saturday 25th May, 2013

    Secrecy still surrounds the events before an asylum seeker boat capsized, leaving 17 men drowned and another 73 missing, presumed dead, as the federal government keeps an official review of the incident under wraps. Widespread concerns were raised about the incident on June 21, after people on the boat rang authorities for help at least four times before the tragedy. On one occasion, they ...

  • A race to drive you butternuts

    Sydney Morning Herald - Saturday 25th May, 2013

    Lake Burley Griffin is well known as the training ground for Australian Olympic rowers but the hollowed-out pumpkins racing on its waters are no challenge in the lead-up to the 2016 games. The inaugural pumpkin canoe race had only one starter on Saturday, a 202.5-kilogram monster, from the NSW town of Collector. Two pumpkins, both place-getters in the town's pumpkin competition, made ...

  • Chinas rich pay way to new home

    Sydney Morning Herald - Saturday 25th May, 2013

    Wealthy Chinese immigrants are buying their way into Australia with 90 per cent of the 435 applications for a $5 million minimum investment visa taken up by Chinese nationals. So far two visas have been granted. The first was to a Chinese national. The Department of Immigration refused to reveal the nationality of the second. A spokesman from the department said there was an expectation ...

  • Public sector better for gay students Kirby

    Sydney Morning Herald - Saturday 25th May, 2013

    Australia's public education system provides greater equality for gay and lesbian students while some non-government schools foster outdated prejudices about homosexuality, according to former High Court justice Michael Kirby. Speaking at Canberra's National Press Club on Friday, Mr Kirby said the increasingly disproportionate number of senior politicians and judges who were privately ...

  • Natures gift is not yet history

    Sydney Morning Herald - Saturday 25th May, 2013

    series was watched by 500 million viewers), and the responsibility that brings is not lost on the veteran broadcaster. ''If you appear as frequently on television as I do, at least in Britain, that puts a bit of a responsibility on you. If I continually appear making natural history programs, people think I know something about it … but that's a heck of a lot of people who ...

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