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10 things you need to know this morning in Australia

Sunday 27 November 2016

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Suddenly, Donald Trump has faith in the electoral system. How to get free McDonald's for life. Princess Beatrice stabbed Ed
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10 things you need to know this morning in Australia

Suddenly, Donald Trump has faith in the electoral system. How to get free McDonald's for life. Princess Beatrice stabbed Ed Sheeran with a sword. And all is well in the cricket again.
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Here's the $5.3 million mansion the Obamas will live in after the White House

As President Obama's presidency comes to a close, reports indicate he will move into a mansion in the Kalorama neighbourhood of Washington, D.C.
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6 things Australian traders will be talking about this morning

New record highs for the big four US stock market indexes capped off a strong Thanksgiving week for markets. European stocks were higher as well while the ASX 200 had its best weekly close since June.
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PODCAST: The art of finding, hiring, and leading great people

High quality people aren't trawling the internet looking for work. As Gregory Robinson, a founder at Blenheim Partners, puts it. "They're busy being successful".
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Justin Trudeau walks back his comments on Castro after getting slammed for praising the dictator

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau clarified his comments on the death of Cuban president Fidel Castro after being harshly criticised for them. 
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'In the history of Europe, nationalism has always meant wars'

With financial markets poised to react to the pivotal Italian constitutional referendum on December 4, consensus suggests that a 'yes' vote to the reforms will be positive for asset prices and a 'no' represents a sell signal.
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18 things you should accomplish before turning 30

Go skinny dipping, stay up all night partying in a foreign city, climb a mountain -- there are plenty of adventures you should check off your personal bucket list before turning the big 3-0.
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A declassified CIA paper shows how close the US and the Soviets really came to war in 1983

The CIA declassified scores of articles from Studies in Intelligence, the agency's internal journal on "historical, operational, doctrinal, and theoretical aspects of intelligence."

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