Protesters have zero chance of success
Australia would cease to function if the anti-fossil fuel lobby had its way and sought to rely on renewables, the head of the national petroleum industry has warned.
Australia would cease to function if the anti-fossil fuel lobby had its way and sought to rely on renewables, the head of the national petroleum industry has warned.
The family of an Adelaide grandmother who vanished in Penang is finally achieving justice, with a Malaysian coroner examining the final days of Anna Jenkins amid serious flaws in the local police investigation.
The former foreign minister has unloaded on the culture of negativity in his hometown, saying progress is being held back.
Twenty years on, Julian Burton remains in near awe as to how lucky he was to survive the Bali bombing – but the road back was long and tough.
Just six months after surging to victory on a promise of fixing ambulance ramping, the SA Labor government has presided over the four highest months of ramping ever recorded.
More than 30 years on, South Australian Police Detective Inspector Geoff Whitford’s family are demanding answers about the circumstances surrounding his death.
An Adelaide electrician facing deportation with his wife and daughter back to his native Scotland has been plunged further into legal limbo.
Henry Young — the 98-year-old behind the ‘Clash of the Centurions’ match — edges one year closer to a century on Monday, with his dream of playing the Australian Open just months away.
A campaign urging 20 to 40-year-olds to embrace South Australia as a place of creativity, excitement and opportunity is aiming to shred Adelaide’s staid and stuffy reputation as ‘The City of Churches’.
I marvel at how many journos sign up to Twitter. It’s not about the exchange of ideas. It’s about the exchange of the same ideas.
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/author/david-penberthy/page/17