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/ 8 May 1998

Bashing the messenger

The National Party tabled a motion in the National Assembly this week (which, needless to say, was defeated) condemning our publication for what it described as an “untrue, vicious and malicious article in an attempt to smear the leader of the official opposition”. The motion was the latest in a series of attempts, mostly by […]

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/ 8 May 1998

The female flesh fetish

Women artists are taking control over their bodies and becoming overt exhibitionists. Joan Smith investigates Two women, two photographs. One shows a model in a dark tunic, her face turned blankly away from the camera, her raised hands holding apart the edges of a fur cape that frames the luminous V of her cleavage. In […]

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/ 8 May 1998

Call of the Wilde

Philip French Movie of the week The cinema has done quite well by Oscar Wilde’s work. There have been versions of Lady Windermere’s Fan by Ernst Lubitsch and Otto Preminger; a plush Alexander Korda film of An Ideal Husband; a superbly cast The Importance of Being Ernest with Edith Evans’s definitive Lady Bracknell; Albert Lewin’s […]

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/ 8 May 1998

Bad trips at festival

Catherine Knox Teenagers as young as 13 and 14 were treated for drug overdoses at last weekend’s annual Splashy Fen music festival, near Underberg, in KwaZulu-Natal. Dr Grant Lindsay, who has been providing emergency services at the festival for the past seven years, said he treated seven to 10 people a night for overdoses or […]

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/ 8 May 1998

Endorsing the rights of workers and employers

Loet Douwes Dekker Celebrations in recent weeks commemorating the democratic elections and Workers’ Day highlighted South Africa’s work to ensure new constitutional rights take effect in practice. In the workplace, this means defining new priorities and guidelines, while taking cognisance of the implications of South Africa having rejoined the International Labour Organisation and the World […]

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/ 8 May 1998

A family wrenched apart

Deborah BosleyGAGLOW by Esther Freud (Penguin, R62,95) It is not always easy to find the novel that will draw one willingly into its narrative and engage us consistently to the final page. Rarer still is the book in which we taste every morsel of food, feel each chill wind and the reproach of a sideways […]

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/ 8 May 1998

Luyt: A lot lighter, but not budging

Angella Johnson There is much less of Louis Luyt these days – 18kg to be precise. The beleaguered rugby boss was in defiant, if slightly subdued mood, as he confessed to a room of Johannesburg businessmen that the pressures facing him had led to rapid weight loss. Just hours before he was expected to face […]

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/ 8 May 1998

Watering down the facts

Kader Asmal and Mike Muller The content and the cloak-and-dagger presentation of the article “Damn dams, look in your own backyard” (Monitor, April 30 to May 7), alleging powerful opposition to the Lesotho Highlands Project by unnamed Alexandra individuals, need to be tested and placed in context. Much of what is said in the name […]

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/ 8 May 1998

Keeping mum about the drugs

Efforts to ensure fair play in sports have not proved an outstanding success, says John Duncan It is one of the biggest contests in world sport: the prize for winning, and the cost of taking part, are measured in millions of dollars. But it takes place not on a track or in a swimming pool […]

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/ 8 May 1998

Phone lines for Africa

Nina Allchurch Telecentres, or common-use public access terminals, are the innovative means government has come up with to get the information society to the vast majority of people who live in remote rural parts of South Africa. These kiosks are part of a pilot project initiated by Minister of Post, Telecommunications and Broadcasting Jay Naidoo […]