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/ 7 June 2006

Could two time zones help electricity demand?

South Africa should consider the introduction of two time zones in order to alleviate Eskom’s electricity peak-demand woes, said Professor Christo Viljoen, a professional electrical engineer and former member of the then-Eskom council, this week. "If South Africa is … divided into two time zones … the peak demand of the two zones will not coincide.

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/ 7 June 2006

North Africans fear missing World Cup

Many soccer-crazed North Africans fear they could miss out on televised World Cup action because of the high fees levied on broadcasts of the event. officials and public TV executives in North Africa have been scrambling to strike deals with a Saudi Arabia broadcaster which has the rights to air the games in the Arab world.

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/ 7 June 2006

Meteor may have caused mass extinction

A massive crater in Antarctica may have been caused by a meteor that wiped out more than 90% of the species on Earth 250-million years ago, an American geologist said on Wednesday. The 480km-wide crater lies hidden more than 1,5km beneath a sheet of ice and was discovered by scientists using satellite data.

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/ 7 June 2006

Cost to your pocket

Cost-to-company packages might not be as lucrative as they appear. Before you decide to leave your job for a better offer, read the fine print carefully. Cost-to-company packages are becoming a popular form of remuneration, but it can leave you with a nasty shock.

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/ 7 June 2006

Keep out of Somalia, Islamist warns US

The leader of Islamist fighters controlling Somali capital Mogadishu warned the United States it would pay dearly for any intervention in the country, a pan-Arab paper reported on Wednesday. Sheikh Sharif Ahmed, the chairperson of the Islamic courts, said the US would face a disaster similar to a botched 1993 intervention.

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/ 7 June 2006

Boks bring back the big guns

The Springboks will field one of their most-experienced sides when they line up against Scotland in the first of two rugby Test matches against the British side on Saturday. The team was named on Wednesday morning, while Scotland are expected to name their team later in the day.

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/ 7 June 2006

Zim journalists struggling to make ends meet

Journalists for Zimbabwe’s state-owned media earn tiny salaries well below the poverty line, a situation that means they can be easily ”manipulated”. Some reporters for the public media are taking home a monthly salary of Zim-million (), a wage that is far below the poverty line of Zim-million, reported the Herald, itself a state-owned daily.