strife-struck Malawi? Not that the PM would be heading home to Kirribilli with an arm full of little black toddlers, that sort of context.
alleviation of Malawi's unenviable fundamentals, so Howard will It's not as if he actually hands out drought relief personally, money.
Come to that, given these appearances seem fundamentally, well, useless and self-serving, many folk in Australia's parched Madonna, or at the very least would be happier to see the PM if he down on my knees, I wanna take you there "
And he could take the show on the road. The sight of the PM in spirits of our long-suffering farming men and women.
"Struth, Enid, I know the canola's stuffed, but I've just seen Somehow everything seems better.
I think I'll go and dig a mass grave for the sheep."
the week, not so much for their own sakes, but for the effect that psyche.
Video Ezy, in our hearts we wage a daily battle with the careless brutality of nature, grubbing a living on the sheep's back, our plough.
Australian is six-foot four, in sweat-stained rabbit-felt hat, bowyangs and moleskins, with hands like frying pans and a mouth that manages a constant laconic sneer, despite a cheek full of This is, of course, some distance from the pallid, hamburger-stuffed truth (although that said, the lamb testicles may of agricultural endeavour that, while they might be falling on the wrong side of global warming, are intrinsic to our sense of self. example.
All of which takes us, through a small series of connected causal hoops, to the ongoing hunt for the killers of New Zealand significant publicity early in the week, thanks to State Government understood piece of scientific technology, the synchrotron.
We hadn't realised it before, but once Victoria's synchrotron is up and running, explaining the deaths of century-old taxidermy will become commonplace. Brave new world!
Was it the Mob?
Was it the hapless Tommy Woodcock? Or was the Flemington roses on repeated returns to scale? This was more than even the synchrotron could answer.
get the story from the horse's mouth. As told, perhaps, to Tom Prior.
explosives at Sydney Airport on this day in 2003, despite having a NZ security officer with her.
Australian officials were told who she was but this did not stop them from continuing the scan, and even sending the results to a laboratory for testing. An be carrying any explosives."
Infantry Battalion, comprised of Americans of Japanese ancestry.
Nor was any group more decorated, except with the army's highest them at the time due to discrimination. In 2000, President Bill Clinton belatedly awarded the medal to 21 of those wrongly denied, including Hawaiian Barney Hajiro, 83, one of seven still alive. On this day in 1944, he helped save his battalion, pinned down in Destroyed by Allied bombing in 1945, Dresden's Frauenkirche, or Church of Our Lady, was consecrated on this night last year after an 11-year, $290 million restoration that incorporated the only original wall, deliberately left blackened, into the new structure.
Originally built in 1743, the ruins of the baroque attack throughout the Communist rule of East Germany, until the fall of the Berlin Wall.
One of the masters of 17th century Dutch art, Jan Vermeer, was born in his family's tavern in Delft on this day in 1632. He lived there all his life.
Ending more than two centuries of tradition as a broadsheet, 2004, although the publishers of "The Thunderer", as the paper has been affectionately known, preferred to call it "compact", because "tabloid" smacked of sensationalism.
this day in 1992, aged 100. He was a former mule-skinner and gold prospector who stumbled into film in 1912, serving as stuntman and Laurel and Hardy.
The Great Eastern, the extraordinary ship designed by Isambard Brunel, was launched sideways on the banks of the Thames on this day in 1857. But the vessel moved only a few metres, defying all attempts to shift it for three months, until it launched itself, slipping into the river after having sent its When you see news happening: SMS/MMS: 0406 THE AGE (0406 843 243), or us.
