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Here are nine Premium stories from the past several days – just part of the wide mix of content available.
How to train a unicorn
Dropout. Military man. Richlister. Marijuana investor. Walker. This is Guy Haddleton.
Every day cancer patients are being failed by our health system as signs of the deadly disease are ignored or misdiagnosed. As a result lives are being lost. In a new series, health reporter Emma Russell looks at what's going wrong and what needs to change to ensure patients are diagnosed early enough to give them a fighting chance of survival.
Best-known for its towering smoke stacks and a dilapidated sign for a department store, Huntly is a place where locals say things are actually looking up - it's a town on the move. The riverside settlement has a not-so-proud history of being a lazy punchline, but Waikato News reporter Tom Rowland and editor Peter Tiffany find a town determined to have the last laugh. Read the full story here
Shane Jones is one of Parliament's characters. He throws one of the biggest parties on the political calendar each year around Waitangi and people from across the House scramble for an invitation. But just how much more of his antics can the coalition take?
Her father was executed for murder. She still wants to know if he did it
Sedley Alley went to his death based on scant physical evidence and a confession he said had been coerced. His daughter hopes DNA testing will provide answers. Read the full story from The New York Times here
Liam Dann: Big Wednesday looms
If the definition of news is something rare and unusual, tomorrow is shaping up as one of the biggest days the finance pages have seen for years. The Reserve Bank may actually cut interest rates. Read the full story here
'Once were brothers': The rise and fall of Josh Masters and the Killer Beez
Even the judge who sentenced Josh Masters to 10 years in prison recognised the genuine leadership and business acumen. The rapper tapped into US hip hop culture to grow an army - the Killer Beez. Now, less than 12 months after being released from prison, Masters is lying in a hospital. One of his closest friends is alleged to have put him there.
Auckland Transport is in big strife over a proposal for 12 new pedestrian crossings and loss of 40 carparks in St Heliers, raising wider issues over how it consults and claims of an arrogant culture. Read the full story here
The girl who disappeared
Fifty-eight years since the budding model went missing, there is a new theory in the Wendy Mayes case. Read the full story here.
As well as the Premium articles highlighted on our nzherald.co.nz homepage, here's some easy bookmarks to delve into the brilliant range of articles: