No image available
/ 23 November 2007
ON CIRCUIT: Reviews of <i>Balls of Fury</i>, <i>Big Fellas</i>, <i>Captivity</i> and more.
No image available
/ 23 November 2007
Pretoria’s post-rockers kidofdoom have taken the music scene by storm, writes Lloyd Gedye.
No image available
/ 23 November 2007
”In America a woman can be raped and if she has no health insurance then she can’t get help. That’s fucking ridiculous. So what are we doing here telling the rest of the world how to live? We have enough problems to sort out at home.” David Smith recalls a few of the sentiments expressed by United States troops during his stay in Baghdad.
No image available
/ 23 November 2007
Typhoon Mitag intensified as it churned towards the Philippines on Friday, triggering mass evacuations, flight cancellations and exacerbating heavy rains and flooding. In the central Bicol region, Philippines’ typhoon alley, people sought refuge in churches, schools and town halls as over 50 000 people fled their homes
No image available
/ 23 November 2007
He’s been accused of being Fidel’s stooge, but the editor-in-chief of <i>Le Monde Diplomatique</i> says that unrivalled access to the Cuban leader is something that most journalists dream of. John Crace reports.
No image available
/ 23 November 2007
Dineo Bopape on Saul Williams’s third album, <i>The Inevitable Rise and Liberation of Niggy Tardust</i>.
No image available
/ 23 November 2007
Composer Philip Miller brings South African freedom songs into dialogue with the Western-style orchestral tradition. He spoke to Shaun de Waal.
No image available
/ 23 November 2007
The rise of Facebook has introduced many social etiquette dilemmas to the world. I mean, how do you tell that guy from school that you weren’t friends back in the day, that nothing has changed, or your ex that you don’t want to see her again, not even in digital form. If these are some of the issues you are grappling with, then welcome to Hatebook.
No image available
/ 23 November 2007
Low-cost airline Kulula will no longer carry <i>Maverick</i> magazine on its flights, cutting the business monthly’s total circulation by about 66 percent. Kulula marketing manager Nadine Damen said their research showed passengers preferred to read their in-flight magazine Comic Life.
No image available
/ 23 November 2007
The unbanning of the ANC, the return of its leaders from exile and the dawn of democracy marked a reversal of migration patterns. Until then apartheid South Africa experienced tens of thousands of its people going into exile, but post-1994 saw the country becoming home to exiled organisations fighting for autonomy, freedom, democracy and separate states.