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South Australia coronavirus cluster grows again as pizza bar link confirmed
Source: ABC News/Topic: Health
Telstra to face $50m fine for unconscionable conduct 'right off the scale'
Source: ABC News/Topic: Business, Economics and Finance
Phone and internet customers reveal debt trouble with telco companies during pandemic
Source: ABC News/Topic: Business, Economics and Finance
Featured
After a year of changed plans, does a wedding make sense in 2021?
It's likely 2021 will be a bumper year of weddings due to the pandemic, and despite the ongoing uncertainty there is a silver lining — they may become more affordable.
Source: ABC Life/Topic: Marriage
Editor's Choice
Maggie Beer on how COVID-19 is changing Australia
Much-loved cook Maggie Beer says a positive that's come out of COVID is that it's taken us back to a slower life and people have had more time to care about others.
Source: 7.30/Topic: Community and Society
Magpies destroyed in Gippsland after attacks on at least five people
Two magpies responsible for a spate of attacks on five people — two of whom required emergency eye surgery — have been killed by Gippsland authorities.
Source: ABC Gippsland/Topic: Animal Attacks
'Sorry I'm late, I didn't want to come': How being a little less serious can give you a competitive advantage at work
Are you funny at work? These Stanford teachers say humour is vastly underleveraged, and could lead you to career success — if you know how to use it.
Source: ABC Radio National/Topic: Work
Promotion
AusMusic Month
ARIAS 2020: Tame Impala and Sampa tidy up
Source: triple j/Topic: Music
Mark Seymour immerses himself in the idea of history
Source: ABC Radio National/Topic: Bands and Artists
Moments in History
A history of attacks on knowledge
For as long as we've recorded information, there have been attempts to control it. Trace the 3,000-year journey of knowledge, and the attempts to both destroy and preserve it.
Source: ABC Radio National/Topic: Human Interest
Bloody Sunday massacre still resonates in Irish sport 100 years later
One hundred years ago, 14 people attending a Gaelic football game in Dublin were killed when British forces opened fire. The events left an indelible impression on Irish sport.
Source: ABC News/Topic: Human Interest
The life and crimes of Captain Moonlite
Captain Moonlight's crimes ranged from robbing banks to stealing gold. He also led an unlikely band of bushrangers, one of whom he was deeply in love with.
Source: ABC Radio/Topic: Human Interest
The problematic polymath that was J.B.S. Haldane
J.B.S. Haldane was a brilliant and eccentric British scientist, as famous in his day as Albert Einstein. His passion for science was matched only by his passion for politics.
Source: ABC Radio National/Topic: Human Interest
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