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Society & Culture:Relationships
Australian swimmer Michelle Ford competed in the 1980 Moscow Games, at a time when the Australian Government did not want their citizens to go and when the East German Olympic team was dominating the pool. Michelle went on to win gold and bronze at those games.
Later it would be revealed that a state-wide campaign of doping athletes was being orchestrated in East Germany.
Michelle Ford-Eriksson has written about her experiences in Turning the Tide, and she wants justice for competitors who failed to be awarded Olympic medals, despite evidence of doping emerging after the fall of the Berlin Wall.
Peter Goldsworthy on learning about life when faced with death
Balancing the books on the shadow education system
Is the travel industry ageist?
What do you get out of being a fan?
Will switching to a 'dumb phone' bring your attention back?
Ask Aunty: the awkward job interview with a younger boss
Turning bad sex into good sex
The unparalleled joy of watching a muster dog round up sheep
When was the last time you came face-to-face with wildlife in your area?
Rodney and Jeff have 7 kids co-parented with five other couples. How do they make it work?
For Social Betterment, social work education in Australia
How to talk to teens when they get benched
Can higher education make us a more equal society?
Jim Moginie, The Silver River
Minions, not overlords: Finding answers in a digital future
Have you talked to your loved one about their end-of-life choices?
The relationship is the project: building together as a community
Are airline point schemes worth it?
Rethinking housework: how mindful housekeeping can boost wellbeing
Ask Aunty: I'm stuck in the middle of a sister feud on the netball court
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