Karl and Jasmine’s crazy romance
Karl Stefanovic and Jasmine Yarbrough’s relationship made headlines from the minute they canoodled on a yacht. This is how their love for each other grew in a very public way. SEE THE PHOTOS
Karl Stefanovic and Jasmine Yarbrough’s relationship made headlines from the minute they canoodled on a yacht. This is how their love for each other grew in a very public way. SEE THE PHOTOS
PEARL Harbor was no surprise. A US spy had seen it all before. Despite his urgent warnings, nobody listened. So why does the myth persist?
A future proofed masterplan for a rapidly growing city in Sydney’s northwest has been approved by the Hills Shire Council — resulting in planning changes that would allow hundreds of homes to be replaced by towers of up to 20 storeys high.
The ARIA gongs have been dished out, but there’s still plenty of time for the internet to weigh in on the celebs’ fashion choices. Here are the best images from music’s big night.
PATRIOTIC and extremist groups are on the rise in Australia, bringing the language of hate to the mainstream. Paul Toohey investigates.
PART FIVE: After 25 years of locking up and killing some of Sydney’s worst criminals, Roger Rogerson was about to get a taste of life on the other side. On June 18, 1985 the Detective Sergeant spent his first night in a NSW jail.
PART FOUR:AT 6.10pm on June 6, 1984 undercover police officer Mick Drury should have been dead — murdered by hitman Christopher Dale Flannery, with Detective Sergeant Roger Rogerson sitting in a police car nearby.
PROLOGUE: He was the ‘bastard cop from Bankstown’ who loved booze and women and saw himself as Australia’s answer to Dirty Harry. Cold, pragmatic, evil, Roger Rogerson loved nothing more than killing crooks and boasting about it.
PART ONE: It was a baptism of fire. Roger Rogerson rode shotgun with the toughest and dirtiest at a time when Sydney was plagued by as many bank robberies as New York. It was the perfect time to be a cop.
IF you are catastrophically injured in a motor vehicle accident in WA after July 1 you will be covered for treatment, care and support.
ROSLIND Witham was just 18 when her life changed forever — to a horrific soundtrack of crunching metal, shattering glass and screams from her friends.
1300 years ago, someone hastily buried sacks full of treasure ripped from the bodies of fallen warriors. They never returned. Now this Saxon gold is spilling the secrets of a Dark Age.
DEEP in the woods of north Bosnia, Charles Miranda takes tea in what some European authorities suspect is a jihadi staging post for Islamic State’s foreign fighters.
AUSTRALIANS think soldiers are cared for after leaving the battlefield. But the number of veterans facing homelessness and post-traumatic stress reveals a different story.
Original URL: https://www.weeklytimesnow.com.au/in-depth/page/49