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/ 29 July 2005

Betting on fragile confidence

"Didn’t it all come together rather well in Johannesburg last weekend? I thought it did, but then again, most people with the slightest interest in rugby would have told you that the Springboks’ Achilles-heel back line was pivotal in their victory. Now, the Tri-Nations is about to start and South Africans have good reason to feel bullish," writes Rob Davies.

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/ 29 July 2005

SA authorities mum on London terror suspect

South African authorities on Friday declined to comment on a report that a suspected organiser of the London bomb attacks, Haroon Aswat, was under surveillance in this country before he was detained in Zambia. Aswat is suspected of playing a role in organising the July 7 suicide bomb attacks in London that killed 52 people.

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/ 29 July 2005

Jo’burg Gay Pride returns to inner city

The Johannesburg Lesbian and Gay Pride Heritage Week’s Pride march will return to Johannesburg’s inner city on its 16th anniversary this year. Jo’burg Pride coordinator Paul Tilly said the festival, running from September 17 to 24, is themed Pride: Sweet Sixteen: the Right to Be, the Freedom to Express.

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/ 29 July 2005

Dramatic police raid launched in London

A massive police hunt for the remaining fugitive London bombers appeared to be paying off on Friday as officers launched a massive raid in the capital, reportedly targeting another of the wanted men. Residents of the White City suburb saw police swiftly seal off streets before a large explosion was heard, followed by a series of smaller blasts.

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/ 29 July 2005

SA dinosaur embryos the oldest in the world

Two dinosaur embryos discovered in the Free State in the 1970s have been identified as the world’s oldest ”rotten eggs”. Dr Michael Raath, a palaeontologist at the University of the Witwatersrand, said the two embryos are the oldest known embryos for any terrestrial vertebrate from anywhere in the world.

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/ 29 July 2005

New biography reflects dizzying life of Jimi Hendrix

Jimi Hendrix might have stayed in the army. He might have been sent to Vietnam. Instead, he pretended he was gay. And with that, he was discharged from the 101st Airborne in 1962, launching a musical career that would redefine the guitar, leave other rock heroes of the day speechless and culminate with his headlining performance of The Star-Spangled Banner at Woodstock in 1969.