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/ 19 November 2004

Indian space odyssey speeds local development

Because it breeds deep inside forests, <i>Anopheles dirus</i>, a deadly species of malaria-carrying mosquito had been evading detection by regular ground surveys. So Aruna Srivastava from the Malaria Research Centre in New Delhi devised another approach to find them. This is a tale of how space-age technology can fight age-old enemies of man.

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/ 19 November 2004

Truworths: No reason to hound us

Truworths CEO Michael Mark has hotly denied trade union claims that the retail chain is increasing cheap imports at the cost of local manufacturing jobs. "We find it very frustrating that they are targeting us in this way when we have done so much to ensure we import as little as possible, while other retailers have not," said Mark.

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/ 19 November 2004

Internet cannibalism grows

The shift from reading newspapers to surfing the net appears to be speeding up. A study of declining circulation figures and the statistics that show the increasing use of newspaper websites suggests that the switch from print to screen is happening more swiftly than web missionaries might have predicted. People of all ages are becoming used to obtaining not only breaking news through their computers but also analysis of, and comment on, the day’s main stories.

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/ 19 November 2004

A $33-million nose-wrinkler

One might think a movie called Number 5 is a low-budget work by an austere auteur who regards narrative titles as suspiciously commercial: one to four were probably 8mm experimental pieces he made in film school. But Number 5 is, at an estimated -million a minute, the biggest-budget movie ever made and could hardly be more commercial.

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/ 19 November 2004

‘UN has not done enough’

Human Rights Watch has called on the United Nations Security Council to take action against what it claims are ongoing rights violations in the western Sudanese region of Darfur. The NGO made the appeal in Nairobi this week during the launch of a report on the political and humanitarian crisis in Darfur, entitled If We Return, We Will Be Killed.

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/ 19 November 2004

Wednesday’s fan is full of woe

Few that have been relegated from the Premiership have fallen as far as the Owls. In 1992/93, Sheffield Wednesday were having, arguably, the most successful campaign of their history. They reach both domestic cup finals, play in Europe, and finish a creditable seventh, immediately above Tottenham, Manchester City, Arsenal and Chelsea.

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/ 19 November 2004

People back flip-flop fighters

In a statement that directly echoed United States President George W Bush, Qasim Daoud, Iraq’s interim Minister of State for National Security, told a news conference last week: ”Mission accomplished … Fallujah has been liberated.” He proudly recited the list of the dead — 1 400 terrorists, foreigners and Saddamists. And what about civilians, the women and children trapped in the fighting zone. Any casualties? He avoided the question.

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/ 19 November 2004

Don’t ditch the dinosaurs

Though it follows that some managers are not right for certain clubs, others fit, being in the right job at the right time for the club’s development. Harry Redknapp is one such. Redknapp’s reputation in the game is legendary, from playing on the right wing in West Ham’s Moore-Hurst-Peters days, to managing the club and going on to Portsmouth.

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/ 19 November 2004

War heroes up for new battle

Teodósio Alexandre (21) spends his days knee-deep in garbage. Picking through rubbish at the dump in the Maputo township of Hurlene, he makes 30 000 metacais (about R10) on a good day, selling scrap metal. He believes that Mozambique’s governing party, in power for 29 years, has done nothing for him. But he will vote for it anyway. ”Whether I vote for Frelimo or Renamo, it will be the same.”

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/ 19 November 2004

The fastest lawyer in the world

Something unexpected happened when a teetotal country bumpkin participated in a fun run organised by a Wits University residence 13 years ago. He won the race. Hendrick Ramaala was not much of a political firebrand while staying at Glyn Thomas, a bastion of resistance against apartheid and Wits liberal policies.