Good morning, Canberra. After a frosty start to Anzac Day, we're expecting a pleasant day of 19 degrees. Here's what's making news in the capital. |
|
Canberra veterans say their experiences of service and mateship have helped them stay strong - lessons they say are relevant for all Australians. |
|
The journalism you trust to keep you connected |
|
Subscriber: Rising house prices across Canberra show no sign of slowing down, as other capital cities look set to reach a peak. |
|
|
Ex-Defence members dishonourably discharged under historic policies banning LGBTI people are ramping up their campaign for an apology. |
|
|
Followers of the Anzac Day heater rule now have scientific backing as new data shows why the Canberra tradition is justified. |
|
|
A small group has gathered on Turkey's Gallipoli Peninsula to remember soldiers who died during World War I. |
|
|
Subscriber: A Woden office building, Scarborough House, where close to 1000 health department workers are based, is on the market. |
|
|
The enthusiasm of the government to transform its fleet to zero emissions vehicles was not matched by the public servants who drive them. |
|
|
Travellers who returned from Western Australia exposure sites before 8am Saturday must now present for a COVID-19 test. |
|
|
An application for a medal yields a story my father, a modest navy veteran, kept mostly to himself, writes Hamish McDonald. |
|
|
A controversial Justin O'Neill try capped an 18-point North Queensland Cowboys comeback to hand Canberra a third-straight loss. |
|
|
It's quite amazing the impact Sam Mac has had on his fans. Even he wasn't prepared for just how loyal Sunrise fans were. |
|
|
Opinion: With only a week or so until kick-off, I'm wondering if there are some behaviours I need to change, writes Karen Hardy. |
|
|
| Times Past Adorning the front page of The Canberra Times this day, 52 years ago, was a photograph of ANU female students drinking schooners while protesting for women's rights to drink in public bars. "We will stay here until we quench our thirst," political science student, Miss Merril Sernack, declared as she chained herself to a group of women's rights demonstrators in the saloon bar of Hotel Civic. It proved to be no idle boast. READ MORE |
|
|
|