Editorial: It's the taking part that counts
They are calling it Woeful Wednesday - or maybe it should be Terrible Tuesday, depending if you are on NZ time or Brazilian time. Either
They are calling it Woeful Wednesday - or maybe it should be Terrible Tuesday, depending if you are on NZ time or Brazilian time. Either
I'VE recently had a few weeks in the Far North - the place which people who don't live there cannot refer to without prefacing it
Lego. What a truly magnificent product and a case study for all business in terms of adaptation and staying ahead of the curve. On
I came to my skepticism of political advertisement early in life. World War II ended shortly after my 10th birthday and I remembered
In some ways many of today's kids do have it easy. Calculators and tablets for schoolwork, mums (and dads) zooming them everywhere in cars for after-school activities, bugger-all real chores to do. But in other ways today's kids have it harder.
THE five most ignorant countries in the world are Mexico, India, Brazil, Peru and New Zealand. And the five best informed are South
The issue of paying Whanganui councillors for attending meetings - or, more pertinently, not paying them when they do not turn up
In the 1960s an eccentric English aristocrat, Alexander Thynn, the 7th Marquis of Bath, proposed that the world should consist of
MONDAY Chiefs CEO Andrew Flexman: The boys are hurting over their loss to the Hurricanes. But that's rugby. At the end of the day
Over the years I've never made a secret of the fact that I call it like I see it. My no nonsense approach has meet with criticism
In Liverpool they sing You'll Never Walk Alone; in Patea they sing Poi E. When I arrived in Patea more than 30 years ago to work
AWHILE back I was talked into attending a live Super Rugby game -- the Hurricanes against the Blues at Wellington's Cake Tin. The
LAST week Prime Minister John Key announced a plan aimed at making New Zealand predator-free by 2050. At the heart of the programme
NOW that both political parties have chosen their nominees for president, the US public can look forward to 100 days of raucous campaigning
By Anna Wallis Air Chathams and Whanganui Airport have certainly started things off with a bang. There was a large crowd out at
By Fred Frederikse I AM not a great musician, but to quote Kinky Friedman: "I like hanging around with musicians because they have
By Scott Lee WHAT if I said: "Everyone is already wealthy." Would you respond: "Go on, Scott -- you're having a laugh." Or would
CELEBRATING is something uniquely human that transcends cultures, demographics and history. No matter when you were born, in what
The bright sparks of Whanganui converged on the War Memorial Centre on Wednesday evening where their creative credentials were given
The notion that if we want action on a specific issue it requires a Minister of the Crown to have personally experienced it has been
Curtains. Not a very sexy topic. Nor is moisture management; but both are essential for warm, healthy, environmentally-friendly homes
I was so excited to read John Maslin's piece on Pensioner Housing, earlier in the week, until I actually read it. No offence to the
Don't be so eager to leave, says former Youth MP Timothy Rowe I LOVE Whanganui - the river where I used to train, the schools that
Ah, the sweet smell of success. Whanganui could create a tourist attraction by turning Virginia Lake into a treatment pond.
By Paul Brooks There is little realism in a format designed to titillate the voyeuristic ... What is it about television bosses and
By Mark Dawson ACCIDENTS will happen ... no matter what. So it becomes a question of how much we want to invest in limiting the
MY lawn is so wet, it's ridiculous. I live on top of a hill with a gully behind and a sloping section. You'd expect the water to
MISTAKES are inevitable but learning from mistakes is what makes their next possible iteration avoidable. Years ago I bought an old
THE decision by the Ministry of Health not to fund pepi-pods doesn't seem right. Arguing that the worth of the pods in saving babies
By Fred Frederikse SOMETIMES I get the urge to write columns again ... The lack of a deadline meant I no longer had the commensurate