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/ 1 September 2003
Andy Roddick unfurled his body and unleashed an ace that forced a line judge to duck as the ball slammed against the wall with a thud. It was the loudest display the American produced on Sunday in his victory over Flavio Saretta of Brazil in the US Open.
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/ 1 September 2003
A low turnout in Zimbabwe’s municipal elections at the weekend — probably no more than 30% of registered voters — has been blamed on apathy and the country’s long-running economic crisis.
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/ 1 September 2003
One might have thought that retaining her women’s high-jump world title would have made it a good day for South Africa’s Hestrie Cloete at the World Championships in Paris on Sunday, but the opposite was true.
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/ 1 September 2003
After some tenacious play in England, it smells like team spirit. Every time England faltered, South Africa swarmed all over them. That’s the mark, not necessarily of a great team — although great teams always possess this quality — but of a good team that believes in itself.
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/ 1 September 2003
Chelsea have completed the €24-million euro transfer of French midfielder Claude Makelele from Real Madrid. The move appeared threatened because Real were said to be refusing to give the player his slice of the transfer fee.
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/ 1 September 2003
What was once the world’s largest hippopotamus population has been slashed by 95 percent by civil war and poaching, the World Wide Fund for Nature said last week.
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/ 1 September 2003
Springbok and Blue Bulls lock Geo Cronje on Monday spoke publicly for the first time since the alleged ”racism” row between himself and fellow Bok lock Quinton Davids became public last week.
Did he lie or didn’t he? University of Durban-Westville (UDW) vice-chancellor Saths Cooper’s various statements about his remuneration package are now at the centre of the governance crisis rocking the conflict-ridden campus.
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Where in the world would a deputy president have been subjected to a public investigation without any pressure being exerted by his supporters? One only has to look at the shenanigans of Blair’s Labour party to realise that we are about as good as it gets in the real world of accountable democracy.