Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Sunday Times is a tabloid Sunday newspaper published by Seven West Media, in Perth and distributed throughout Western Australia. Founded as The West Australian Sunday Times, it was renamed The Sunday Times from 30 March 1902. [1] Owned since 1955 by News Limited, the newspaper and its website PerthNow, were sold to Seven West Media in 2016 ...
Perth; daily from Monday to Saturday: 19 December 1897 – present: The Sunday Times: Weekly on Sunday: Perth; distributed statewide. From its origin until 1902 was known as the "West Australian Sunday Times" 1897 - 1954: Albany Advertiser: Bi-Weekly, Monday and Thursday
Masthead from the Perth Gazette and Western Australian Journal, Saturday 1 June 1833. The West Australian traces its origins to The Perth Gazette and Western Australian Journal, the first edition of which appeared on 5 January 1833. Owned and edited by Perth postmaster Charles Macfaull, it was originally a four-page weekly.
The Sunday Independent (also known as The Independent) was a Western Australian weekly newspaper owned by mining entrepreneurs Lang Hancock and Peter Wright, [2] [3] printed and published in the Perth suburb of East Victoria Park. [1] The paper was launched on 27 April 1969 as a Sunday-only publication, under the banner The Independent.
Noel John Whittaker AM (born 1940) [1] is a writer and newspaper columnist. Whittaker has written 22 books, including the bestseller Making Money Made Simple.Whittaker writes columns in major Australian newspapers, including The Age, The Sunday Mail (Brisbane), the Sydney Morning Herald, and The Sunday Times (Perth).
The Community Newspaper Group was a community newspaper business in Perth, Western Australia. Owned by Seven West Media , it published 23 community newspapers within the metropolitan region of Perth, from Yanchep and Two Rocks in the city's north to Mandurah in the south.
Vincent Ross Smith was born in Perth, Western Australia on 21 March 1943.Smith was born in the Tresillian Hospital, Nedlands, to parents Ross and Ina. [1]Both his father Ross Smith (Charles David) and grandfather Charles Patrick Smith were involved in the newspaper business in Perth, with Charles Patrick Smith the managing editor of West Australian Newspapers Ltd. [2]
Opposition was strongest in rural areas of Western Australia with farmers arguing that it caused problems for them. [15] Opponents argued that daylight saving led to more deaths on the roads and that it was inconvenient for families. [17] With daylight saving they also said that electricity consumption was increased, damaging the environment. [16]