
Missed something in InDaily this week? Here are quick links to the week’s news, opinion and features, as seen through our eyes.
Should we judge an artist on work that we haven’t even seen yet? We say – no.
The State Government’s vision of a restaurant-lined Riverbank may be further away than we’ve been led to believe.
SA’s legal aid body, the Legal Services Commission, moved into its new premises this week. It scrimped and saved to pay for the move out of its usual budget.
Political strategist Bruce Hawker has been involved in every State Labor election campaign since 1997 – he hasn’t been invited back.
The Torrens Rowing Club says the actions of the Adelaide City Council will force them from their riverbank rowing sheds.
We speak to the man running the comprehensive review of the state’s planning laws.
A lawyer who has been struck off the roll of legal practitioners is working for Legislative Council member Ann Bressington.
Take a look at the progress on Rundle Mall’s redevelopment.
Tony Abbott’s new ministry was sworn in – and he immediately took a scalpel to the Canberra bureaucracy.
Disability advocates warn that poor food and lack of information are leading to obesity among the disabled.
It seems there is a cure for wind turbine syndrome – money.
Tony Abbott’s women-lite Cabinet.
OzAsia reviews, film reviews, poetry and more.
The Forager’s look at late night dining; Philip White’s fascinating account of the history of wine additives; why the Mediterranean diet is so good for you; and a recipe for hot and sour Thai soup.
You won’t believe the weird and wonderful ideas that designers have pitched for the old Royal Adelaide Hospital site.
A house built in the early 1970s for just $17,000 has been recognised four decades later for its sustainability.
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