A decade of austerity, followed by a pandemic and a cost of living crisis, has brought millions of British families to the brink of destitution. According to the Resolution Foundation, 20 percent of people in the UK are not confident about their finances over the next several months, with the figure rising to 32 percent […]
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It already seems an age since visiting Cornwall. Next week I will be putting Re and H on a plane going back to Broken Hill. I will be following them a week later.
Since leaving Cornwall Re and I have been documenting our travels on Facebook and Instagram. I have …
The hills west of the Anduin were tall and white. On its east side there were low shrubs and thin grass and no trees and rocks and stones and dirt near the road which led north and south alongside Mordor. Here they set camp with a small fire and pot simmering skinned conies for a poor stew. The Hobbit and the creature with him sat on a flat stone in the small shade of a drooping, dry shrub. The heat caused the Hobbit to grip at his sweated shirt and the golden burden that lay just under the thinned nap. The other Hobbit, larger in size for Little Folk, would return in an hour, then they would press on to the south to Doom.
“It’s hot,” said the Hobbit.
“Will the fats one comesss back soon, Master?” the creature asked.
“Yes, he scouts ahead. South.”
“We’s close.”
The creature’s gaze followed the Hobbit’s hand and watched him fondle the front of his shirt. The Hobbit caught the creature’s eye and its stare darted back to the view to the west, as though not a thing was out of place.
“The hillsss look like white oliphaunts, precious. Gollum! Gollum!” the creature choked.
“I have never seen one,” the Hobbit said.
- by Psyche Film
- by Steve Minton
LAST weekend local musicians showcased their talent and passion at two open mic events, at the Coffs Hotel and the Golden Dog in Glenreagh. The vibrant music scene drew in crowds, creating an electric atmosphere throughout the weekend. Advertise with News of The Area today. It’s worth it for your business. Message us. Phone us...
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SWITCHING its weekly free meal delivery to Pete’s Place, Coffs Harbour Lions Club set up a table and handed out 60 fresh filled rolls on Monday, 17 July, feeding a steady flow of people using the drop-in service. Chris and Rosemary Hansen, long-time and dedicated Coffs Harbour Lions members donated the rolls and prepped the...
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Anthony Albanese is still stalling on cost of living relief, even after announcing a further budget windfall. The budget surplus has swelled to $19 billion, well ahead of the $4.2 billion tipped in May.
The post Albanese backs military spending surge but won’t act on cost of living appeared first on Solidarity Online.
University bosses are already racing to support the government’s ambitions for nuclear submarines under the AUKUS agreement.
The post Universities rush to back nuclear subs and design courses for war appeared first on Solidarity Online.
There are increasing warnings that Australia’s renewable energy rollout is stalling. This puts even the chance of reaching the hopeless emissions target of the Albanese government at risk.
The post Renewable rollout faltering due to reliance on free market funding appeared first on Solidarity Online.
The Sydney University strike campaign ended in June, with 80 per cent of union members voting to accept management’s offer, and 96.5 per cent of workers supporting the agreement in the final ballot.
The post Sydney Uni struggle wrapped up, but much more to fight on appeared first on Solidarity Online.
Riots swept France in early July after cops shot dead a 17-year-old, Nahel M, and then lied about it.
The post French riots a rebellion against poverty, racism and police appeared first on Solidarity Online.
While the desperate search for a missing submersible covered our news feeds, 750 refugees were left for dead in the Mediterranean after a fishing vessel capsized.
The post Border policies see hundreds of refugees left to drown off Greece appeared first on Solidarity Online.