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LyrArc brings in selected articles from many of the world's top publications.

Articles are selected by experts and you can see the gist of the important articles.


Mansion Global Original article ›
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Greater Melbourne lost 60000 people in year ending September 2021-Melbourne overtaken by Brisbane, Perth and Adelaide in housing prices by 2026. By 2019 Melbourne housing prices were rising so rapidly it was expected to surpass Sydney. In 2026 Australia's average home is about 900,000 and Sydney at 1.3 million Australian dollars, Melbourne below national average at 800,000. Toorak, South Yarra, and Armadale, Brighton, Hawthorn, Kew are some of the suburbs of Melbourne that are popular.

BBC News Original article ›
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The 6 km Congee to Bondi walk along the coast, and the 10 km Manly Scenic Walk, Sydney Harbour National Park trails, and  the Greater Blue Mountains Heritage Area, are shown here in BBC Travel, parts of Sydney that can be explored on foot.

The Guardian Original article ›
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Black and white pictures from The Guardian of the roles played by Sidney Poitier, who died at age 94, showing black people with new dignity and freedom during the fifties and sixties. The struggles of this period ended segregation in the US. The struggles from the fifties started the fight against Apartheid in South Africa. Sidney Poitier played a role in the emancipation in South Africa with the 1951 movie made from the classic book Cry The Beloved Country portraying the troubles of Apartheid segregated society. In 1996 he played the role of Mandela with Sidney Caine as De Klerk in the movie on the reconciliation and the end of Apartheid South Africa. Between these years he took part with Harry Belafonte in the March on Washington made by Martin Luther King in 1963. 

WSJ Original article ›
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Shift of business underway from Hong Kong to places such as Sydney, Taipei, Tokyo and Sydney, including capital and assets, is the topic of this video report in the WSJ. This follows the passage of national security law in Hong Kong.

NYTimes.com Original article ›
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Wesley Morris provides a look at Sidney Poitier, who changed attitudes towards race in America and Europe, from a New Yorker's perspective. He says Poitier did so much to create the more open cultural attitudes in the US and Europe, and South Africa that we find today, and did this with humility and grace. He puts Poitier's contribution in changing racial attitudes in the longer perspective in America with Frederick Douglas, Harriet Tubman, Martin Luther King. In a larger sense these attitudes also led to changes in attitude towards people from Asia and other countries, that started with Mohandas Gandhi and his efforts against segregation in South Africa in 1900.

NYTimes.com Original article ›
DW.COM Original article ›
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Sidney Poitier accomplished a great deal for the cultural changes that happened since the fifties in race and attitudes in America and Europe, by portraying black people in brave and interesting roles. Here Germany's DW.com looks at Bahamian-American actor, film director, and civil rights activist Poitier in a European perspective. Poitier was born to parents from the Bahamas where he grew up, and lived with his brother in Miami at age 15. There he could barely read and learned reading from a Jewish waiter while doing dishes at a restaurant. DW.com says "In the Heat of the Night" remains one of the best films to deal with the issue of racism. Other Poitier films also took up the issue of racism from different angles to defuse prejudice. Critics said the black characters in his movies are always good hearted, strong, proud, but not showing human flaws. DW.com points out that Poitier would have preferred to also play different roles, but he wanted to contribute to the black community through his acting. Poitier had depth of talent and character. A quote on Arizona State University website for the film school named after Poitier shows his thirst for knowledge: "No one knows all there is to know. The task is to learn as much as you can about as much as you can."  Both Poitier and Belafonte who had backgrounds growing up in the West Indies in families struggling to make a living, never stopped learning. ...
BBC News Original article ›
The Hindu Original article ›
The Guardian Original article ›
Hindustan Times Original article ›
NYTimes.com Original article ›
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Walks in Paris, Rio de Janeiro, Sydney, Seoul, and other cities to explore different parts of the city.

New York Times Original article ›
Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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Home prices are surging in Australia in 2015, with home prices in Sydney up about 39% since June 2012, according to CoreLogic RP Data. As a multiple of annual income home prices in Sydney are at 9.8, Melbourne 8.7, and Wollongong near Sydney 7.5, compared to 6.1 for New York and 8.5 for London, according to a 2015 affordability survey by Demographia. Australia's surging home prices are happening just as the mining boom that powered its economy is winding down and unemployment is up to 6.1%. Interest rates are down to 2.25%, and low interest rates with speculative purchases are likely to fuel the market up further, say experts. About 40% of home loans approved in Feb. 2015 were to investors, increasing from 31% in 2009, according to official data. According to Australia's Reserve Bank the wealthiest 40% of the population have 75% of the debt. This surge when the economy is feeling the effects of the slowdown in China, and the rest of the world is cutting down on debt, puts Australia in uncertain territory....
The Wall Street Journal Original article ›
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Robert Redford American actor and founder of Sundance Film Festival of Utah passed away at age 89 years in September 2025. He is remembered for giving independent films a start by develping the infrastructure for this in Utah. Redford started buying land in Utah early in his career as he realized that the Los Angeles area where he grew up was becoming congested and lacked green space with expanding development. Utah also offered him the wide open spaces in the mountains and an opportunity to work with independent films of artistic value. He worked with director Sidney Pollack and actors Paul Newman and Dustin Hoffman, Jane Fonda, in many popular films including- Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, The Sting, The Way We Were, and Out of Africa. He also directed films such as The Ordinary People winning an Academy Award for direction.  After Van Nuys High School, he attended the University of Colorado on a baseball scholarship before dropping out. He spent time in Europe followed by study at the Pratt Institute in New York, and classes at American Academy of Dramatic Arts, which led to his acting in a Broadway play Neil Simon's Barefoot in the Park in 1963.  Of films Redford never let the publicity affect him and cared little for being well known, preferring the wide open spaces of Utah exactly because he knew so little about the area and also because it felt like home not being so well known. Sydney Pollack sees Redford as representing a little bit of the American essence as it were, part of the old American landscape of the 1950's and 1960's, of the old heroic figures of that period in American history. ...
The Guardian Original article ›
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Doing a 2 hour walk in Sydney, Australia, using ChatGPT turns out to be not so much fun with inaccurate replies casually given, and distances being off, restaurants closed and train stations nonexistent, says travel expert Kate Hennessy in The Guardian.

DW.COM Original article ›
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DW.com reporter Sean Goodwin goes from Germany to Australia and finds a very different attitude to coronavirus, kind of laid back. Australians he says have a sense that it is a lucky country, and that "she'll be right." The government and Sydney have been slow to adjust to the reality. A stay at home order is now in place in Sydney and New South Wales state.  Australians seem to think they are somehow far away and isolated from the world's problems. It is a cruisy optimistic mentality, says this report.

 

Original article ›
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A yearly fee for use of news media content by tech companies from the  government of prime minister Albanese in Australia would generate 503 million British pounds for local news media companies. This includes media companies News Australia, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, the Guardian Australia, and the Sydney Morning Herald.

The Times Original article ›
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Pictures of huge floods in Sydney and other parts of New South Wales in Australia. About 20,000 people have been evacuated. In one place a mobile home floated for one mile in flood waters.

The Guardian Original article ›
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The worst floods since 1929 put much of New South Wales and Sydney under water. This report in The Guardian looks at scientific data about weather and rainfall, rivers and climate, to reveal that many factors have combined to produce so much rain at one time over a vast region.

The Guardian Original article ›
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These pictures of the Atacama desert and Patagonia in Chile, and the Los Flamencos Nature Reserve, in The Guardian, show reflections on Nature on quiet days. The pictures are being shown at the Woolahra Gallery in Sydney's eastern suburbs. Rae Begley shows a rainbow in Patagonia in one of the pictures after some rain on a walking day. Take a trip through this geological landscape and experience the breathing of the earth as a living organism, as Begley puts it.

WSJ Original article ›
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The Australian bushfires may have killed more than a billion animals, according to estimates by Chris Dickman, ecology professor at the University of Sydney. The vastness of this year's fires leave some species little chance for survival. The government of New South Wales  state airdropped thousands of pounds of carrots and sweet potatoes to endangered brush-tailed wallabies that survived by taking refuge in the rocks.

The Hindu Original article ›
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The Quad meeting of the US, Australia, Japan and India took place in Hiroshima, as shown here. The leaders expressed their deep concern over the economic effects of the Ukraine war, including "food, fuel and energy security, critical supply chains. The meeting was to take place in Sydney, Australia, but was cancelled due to debt talks taking place between Biden and Republicans in the US Congress. The next Quad meeting is in India in 2024. Biden will meet pm Modi in the US June 22. PM Modi also meets Macron on Bastille Day in Paris on 14 July as a special guest of France.

The Times Original article ›
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Disbelief at what happened in the Sydney cricket Test with the comments of Paine to Ashwin and the activity on the crease by Smith, as Indian batsmen held on to save the day. Readers comments are interesting. One reader says Brett Lee is the Australian bowler who should be the role model for Australia. Then again Richie Benaud from the sixties and seventies going far back is what the Australians need to go back to. Other readers say this is not just Australian cricket, it is cultural in Australia.

NYTimes.com Original article ›
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As a civil rights campaigner Harry Belafonte's efforts were legendary. NYT gives these black and white pictures of Belafonte in an anti Apartheid protest outside the South African embassy in 1964, addressing a civil rights rally in New York in 1960, with Sidney Poitier at a civil rights rally (he studied theater at the American Negro Theatre with Poitier), and checking on free primary education in Kenya in 2004 for UNICEF.


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