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The Age is a daily newspaper in Melbourne, Australia, that has been published since 1854. Owned and published by Nine Entertainment, The Age primarily serves Victoria, but copies also sell in Tasmania, the Australian Capital Territory and border regions of South Australia and southern New South Wales. It is delivered both in print and digital ...
Jonathan Merlo – cricketer; Australia U19s, Cricket Australia XI, Melbourne Stars; James Morrissey – footballer; Leo O'Brien – Australian Test cricketer; 1932–1936; Pat O'Dea – US college football Hall of Fame inductee 1962; Tom O'Donnell – cricketer; Joseph Plant – Australian Rules footballer (Richmond) and Victorian First Class ...
Ronald Peter Tandberg (31 December 1943 [1] – 8 January 2018) was an Australian illustrator and political cartoonist who contributed to The Age newspaper in Melbourne, Australia from 1972. Tandberg's credits include eleven Walkley Awards. [2] He was inducted into the Melbourne Press Club's Victorian Hall of Fame in 2014. [3]
The Argus was a morning daily newspaper in Melbourne, published since 1846 and considered to be the general Australian newspaper of record for this period. [4] Widely known as a conservative newspaper for most of its history, it adopted a left-leaning approach in 1949, and after twenty years of financial losses, closed on 19 January 1957. [5]
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Mokbel was successfully extradited to Australia on 17 May 2008. 26 March 2006 – Lee Patrick Torney's body was found dumped down a mineshaft. He was a violent Melbourne criminal and drug trafficker connected to the Williams family and suspected of being involved in several murders, including the 1982 shooting of his former associate Sidney ...
David Syme (2 October 1827 – 14 February 1908) was a Scottish-Australian newspaper proprietor of The Age and regarded as "the father of protection in Australia" who had immense influence in the Government of Victoria. [1] His first biographer, Ambrose Pratt, declared Syme "could hate as few men can [and] loved power as few men ever loved it". [2]
On completing his degree, Macdonald returned to Australia and worked as a cadet reporter at The Age for three years, until a fortuitous golf game with a US naval captain at Royal Melbourne Golf Club, led to an introduction to Ed Barrett, Dean of the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. Macdonald had scribbled his details on the ...