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*An old typesetting letter once used to print the Quirindi Advocate (Photo: Kirsten Jelinek) In...
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Posted by Central News | Feb 11, 2020
*An old typesetting letter once used to print the Quirindi Advocate (Photo: Kirsten Jelinek) In...
Read MorePosted by Central News | Feb 6, 2020
The Burden Down Below On any given day, Honre Young can tell when she will have a endometriosis flare-up and “all hell will break loose.” “I don’t know what will trigger it…you know it’s kind of like when you...
Read MorePosted by Central News | Jan 31, 2020
UTS Journalism student Pnina Hagege is in Los Angeles where fans of basketball star Kobe Bryant are still gathering in grief at makeshift street memorials.
Read MorePosted by Central News | Dec 17, 2019
The NSW Lake Macquarie region, 150 kilometres north of Sydney, has seen an inexplicable rise in the number of asthma hospitalisations over the last couple of years, and findings may worsen under current heavy smoke conditions.
Read MorePosted by Central News | Dec 17, 2019
Australia has a nuclear waste problem, as Olivia Henderson discovers in this audio documentary.
Read MorePosted by Central News | Dec 16, 2019
Teresa Neilsen was diagnosed with Huntington’s Disease when she was just 35-years-old. But the lack of facilities for young Australians with high care needs, meant she had to live out her days in a nursing home – with people twice her age.
Read MorePosted by Central News | Nov 28, 2019
Average temperatures are increasing across the country, but Western-Central Sydney is defying normal trends and getting hotter faster.
Read MorePosted by Central News | Nov 18, 2019
Jennifer Robinson buys a coffee and a KitKat on her way to work. It’s not her usual order, because the beverage isn’t for her. It’s for her client. He’s in a maximum security prison.
His name is Julian Assange.
Posted by Central News | Nov 6, 2019
A data investigation reveals that more than 90 per cent of all jockeys reported for whipping breaches in NSW are escaping fines or suspension.
Read MorePosted by Central News | Nov 2, 2019
Who gets to speak? How do we cover climate change? And how do we convince governments that journalism is not a crime? UTS journalism students searched for the answers to some of the most vexing issues of our time – at Antidote 2019.
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