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/ 18 November 2005
New Zealand promised ”a tournament based on traditional rugby values” and stunned observers when it won the rights to host the 2011 Rugby World Cup. A promise of government support ”both moral and financial” and a campaign that turned New Zealand’s diminutive size into an asset clinched the tournament for New Zealand.
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/ 18 November 2005
There is a romance in local football circles that will forever link Jomo Sono to Orlando Pirates. He is arguably the Soweto club’s favourite son of all time. This sentimentality was again at the fore when Sono’s team, Jomo Cosmos, beat Kaizer Chiefs 2-0 in the Coca-Cola Cup quarterfinals.
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/ 18 November 2005
South African food group Astral Foods on Friday reported a 48% increase in diluted headline earnings per share to 893 cents for the year ended September 30, from 605 cents a year earlier. Headline earnings per share were up 45% to 918 cents from 631 cents previously.
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/ 18 November 2005
Wigan versus Arsenal: the Jewell in the Crown against the Frenchman with a Frown. On Saturday in front of a record crowd, the Gunners must come to terms with the fact that their unfashionable northern visitors are five points ahead of them in the Premiership title chase and firmly tucked in behind Chelsea in second place.
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/ 18 November 2005
The unemployment rate for youths aged between 16 and 25 is 52% in South Africa, while in the Western Cape it is 49%, compared with a national average for all ages of 26,5%, Minister of Finance Trevor Manuel said on Thursday evening in Cape Town. "A large chunk of the answer to unemployment lies in upgrading the available skills," he said.
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/ 18 November 2005
For someone in danger of being fired, Alain Perrin displays a fine line in self-deprecatory humour. According to the latest whispers, George Burley has turned down the job and Neil Warnock has been lined up by chairperson Milan Mandaric to take Perrin’s place. Darren Tulett speaks to the Pompey manager.
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/ 18 November 2005
In the mystery of the Scot and the disappearing HIV, it could be the vitamins that did it. But the culprit is far more likely to be an inaccurate blood test or a hidden viral infection. Recently, a 25-year-old Scot living in London said in paid interviews with two British tabloids that he was "the first in the world to be cured of HIV".
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/ 18 November 2005
Mzi Khumalo faces penalties that could reach R130-million for stashing offshore the benefits of a botched empowerment deal, which saw him acquire, and quickly sell, a large stake in Harmony Gold three years ago. In an apparent violation of exchange control regulations Khumalo managed to use the proceeds of the deal to gain access to more than R700-million in foreign currency, effectively taking his profits offshore.
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/ 18 November 2005
A Namibian NGO producing comic strips to promote use of information and communications technology has won an award in the community-engagement category at the just-ended World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) in Tunis, Tunisia. The NGO, Schoolnet Namibia, exhibited at the WSIS its comic-strip project.
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/ 18 November 2005
The toughest season in Springbok history has two games left and it is some measure of the renaissance achieved under coach Jake White that both games could be lost and no one would be calling for his head. White’s team lost just once in the Tri-Nations and came within five minutes of winning that game against New Zealand.