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/ 30 July 2007

A feisty little shark

The facelifted Hyundai Tiburon (Spanish for "shark") perfectly illustrates just how far this young Korean manufacturer has come in a short space of time. Given that it’s a sports coupĂ©, Hyundai took the opportunity to use Wesbank Raceway to take motoring scribes through an advanced driving course using the new Tiburons.

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/ 30 July 2007

Honest little car

Remember the Fiat Uno? The car everybody made jokes about — and then bought? Between 1990 and 2005, the little cars — then assembled by Nissan South Africa — became favourites with people who wanted a simple, reliable car that didn’t cost an arm and a leg to buy or to run.

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/ 30 July 2007

A typical Toyota with a confusing name

Four engines, three specification levels, two pronunciations and — no doubt — number-one seller in the C-class hatch sector. That’s the new Toyota Auris for you. At the launch preview in the United Kingdom a couple of months ago, we asked the Toyota UK representative handling the presentation how the name was pronounced, and he told us that it was "Owris".

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/ 30 July 2007

A silent character

My first car, a Ford Sapphire, was an absolute disaster. I owned it for six months before trading it in for a Toyota Corolla 1,3-litre. But my third car, a Corolla 160i, was, in my book, my first real car. I loved it. Its acceleration was smooth, it handled twisty bits with confidence and it never let me down, writes Sukasha Singh.

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/ 30 July 2007

Gauteng commits R85m to hostel development

The Gauteng provincial housing department has pledged R85-million towards the development of four hostels in the province. Provincial housing minister Nomvula Mokonyane held talks with African National Congress and Inkatha Freedom Party supporters who lived in hostels where a number of protests took place earlier this month.

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/ 30 July 2007

Halfway house to an atomic bomb

In the bowels of Iran’s uranium conversion facility in Isfahan strands of black and red wire stretch from the concrete wall to giant white tanks full of a volatile uranium compound. It is by these slender cords that the international community hopes to hold Iran’s atomic ambitions in check.