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/ 9 September 2005
If the 2004 Tri-Nations will be remembered for Jake White’s miraculous revivification of the Springboks, what of its 2005 counterpart? From a parochial perspective, South Africa can hold their heads high despite a second-place finish, but from an international perspective the 2005 tournament will be remembered for the implosion of Australia.
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/ 9 September 2005
Ding, dong, the witch is dead! Clap your hands, get out of bed! Ding, dong the wicked witch is dead! There might be half a Test match left to play, but celebrations have started early for the Munchkins of the cricketing world, and with good reason: regardless of where the Ashes go on Monday, the Australians have been roundly thrashed.
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/ 9 September 2005
There will be no happier locker room at the United States Open this weekend than if Kim Clijsters wins her first grand slam title. ”To me she’s the favourite,” said Patrick McEnroe, the US Davis Cup captain, television pundit, and altogether less abrasive brother of John.
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/ 9 September 2005
By refusing to accept Stuart Baxter’s resignation and steadfastly dispelling any notion that the beleaguered coach might be forced to step down, the South African Football Association is at last positing itself as an organisation that won’t be swayed by popular sentiment but by long-term principles and objectives whose overall aim is to find solutions to the current problems.
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/ 9 September 2005
Roy Hardy’s task was simple when he was hired in 2002 to market Hong Kong Disneyland: make Mickey, Donald and company as familiar to families in China as they are in the West. To kids in the United States and Europe, where for three generations Disney’s cartoons and movies have been a part of growing up, it may seem a no-brainer.
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/ 9 September 2005
Hurricane Katrina delivered a "severe" shock to Gulf of Mexico oil supplies, wrecking pipelines and damaging scores of platforms, but 90% of production can be back on stream within a few months, the International Energy Agency said on Friday.
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/ 9 September 2005
The road to Shiluvari, situated between Polokwane and Makhado, formerly part of the Bantustans of Venda and Giyani, doesn’t seem to have much to recommend it to tourists at first glance. It has its fair share of arid land eroded by the ubiquitous goats, flanked by potholed dirt roads.
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/ 9 September 2005
For the second time in recent months, a high court judge has issued a broad gagging order on the media preventing them from reporting information already in their possession. Johannesburg High Court Judge Francois Malan ordered environmental group Earthlife Africa not to disseminate documents about potential business risks involved in producing pebble-bed modular reactors.
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/ 9 September 2005
South African Rugby managing director Johan Prinsloo has defied an order by SA Rugby Union vice-president Mike Stofile to go on leave following accusations of sexual harassment against him. ”Mike does not have the power to do that,” Prinsloo said on Thursday. ”I think he may have been advised incorrectly.”
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/ 9 September 2005
Key rebuilding projects in Iraq are grinding to a halt because United States money is running out and security has diverted funds intended for electricity, water and sanitation, according to US officials. Plans to overhaul the country’s infrastructure have been downsized, postponed or abandoned because the -billion budget approved by Congress has been dwarfed by the scale of the task.