Articles

  • Nov 21, 2024 | afr.com | Tim Moore |Cecile Lefort |Alex Gluyas |Joanne Gray

    0.0002 (0.03%)0.03%83.00 (0.99%)0.99%-3.30 (-0.04%)-0.04%-12.10 (-0.14%)-0.14%10.29 (0.22%)0.22%-103.90 (-0.53%)-0.53%-326.17 (-0.85%)-0.85%View all LiveNov 22, 2024 – 7.36am or Subscribe to save articleEmailLinkedInTwitterFacebookGo to latestPinned post – 7.35AMASX to rise, Dow advances, bitcoin tops $US98,000Timothy MooreEmailLinkedInTwitterFacebookAustralian shares are poised to rise. On Wall Street, the Dow advanced broadly, paced by Salesforce, IBM and Goldman Sachs.

  • Oct 24, 2024 | telegraph.co.uk | Tim Moore

    Tim Moore (fifth from left) with his siblings and friends in Porto San Giorgio in 1969 Credit: Tim Moore Nobody now recalls what led us to the Adriatic coast in the summer of 1969. Three families from Ealing with eight small children, crammed into a mysteriously sourced pair of mid-rise seafront apartments, at a resort otherwise exclusively populated by Italians. The likeliest go-between: a jolly, corkscrew-haired enigma remembered only as Julius, who in common with a narrow majority of our...

  • Sep 8, 2024 | telegraph.co.uk | Tim Moore

    According to its origin myth, air guitar was born at Woodstock in 1969, when Joe Cocker accompanied the intro to his cover of With a Little Help From My Friends on an imaginary instrument, left fingers working an absent fretboard while the right struck invisible strings.

  • Sep 8, 2024 | yahoo.com | Tim Moore

    According to its origin myth, air guitar was born at Woodstock in 1969, when Joe Cocker accompanied the intro to his cover of With a Little Help From My Friends on an imaginary instrument, left fingers working an absent fretboard while the right struck invisible strings.

  • Jul 14, 2024 | telegraph.co.uk | Tim Moore

    'It transpires that for a particular kind of foreign visitor, there's nothing quite like a scorched alien wilderness,' writes Moore Credit: Jonathan Browning The volcanic episode that began on 19 September 2021 on the Canary Island of La Palma was what you might call a slow burner. No shattering explosions, no incandescent boulders thrown miles into the sky, no pyroclastic flows of superheated pumice and gas hurtling murderously downhill. After a week of portentous earthquakes, lava spouted...

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