Good morning, Canberra. We're in for a mostly sunny Monday with a top of 20 degrees. Here's what's making news in the capital. |
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Canberra cleaning and IT businesses have been among the few winners since the start of the coronavirus pandemic. |
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The journalism you trust to keep you connected |
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Subscriber only: A new report has recommended new mountain biking trails be created to establish the ACT as the sport's capital in Australia. |
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Subscriber only: Five new nurse-led walk in centres will be built in growing areas of Canberra if ACT Labor is re-elected, it says. |
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Subscriber only: A man has avoided time behind bars for a one-punch attack outside Mooseheads that left a victim with a brain injury. |
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Subscriber only: One ACT musician has helped to create masks for brass instruments to stop any potential coronavirus spread. |
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Subscriber only: The Liberal party will reduce the cost of private car registration to New South Wales levels if it wins the territory election. |
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The latest police recruit class to graduate from the AFP college at Barton had one of the strangest educational processes ever. |
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Subscriber only: He's been physically ready, but the past couple of weeks have been about rebuilding Sia Soliola's confidence. |
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Opinion: When it comes to defence, there's a new way of doing things and this requires new ways of thinking, writes Nicholas Stuart. |
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Explainer: There's seven weeks to go before a very big election with very big ramifications for the United States and the world. |
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Subscriber only: Tony Abel shudders to think of how much time he spent loading up trolleys to feed a family full of rugby players. |
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| Times Past Making news this day 42 years ago, was the birth of a duckling that came from an egg found on O'Malley Hill. When 13-year-old Bernard McCoy, of Garran, found an egg on O'Malley Hill he was not confident that it would hatch. You see, Bernard had found an egg once before on one of his walks which evidently turned out to be a hard-boiled one. However, with this newfound egg, he kept it on a shelf in his bedroom for a week. Then one of his family's Chinese Silkie hens became broody and so, Bernard put the egg beneath her. READ MORE |
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