If Hootie Johnson, the chairperson of the Augusta National golf club, did not already know that the wholesale changes to the most familiar golf course in the world were unpopular with those who have to play it at the Masters this week, he knows now.
He is likened by many of his devoted South African followers to a persuasive soccer version of Rhema’s Pastor Ray McCauley. Matsilela Ephraim Sono, affectionately known as Jomo Sono and lumped with the moniker of ”Black Prince”, waits at this moment for the fulfilment of his calling as Bafana Bafana coach at the World Cup on home soil in 2010.
Just after South Africa were beaten, and just before they were beaten again, Graeme Smith was interviewed by the eternally blithe Dave Papenfus on Radio 2000. Papenfus is that admirable breed of commentator who, like Parkinson, makes his guests feel utterly adored. One hesitates to say he shields his subjects from harsh questions, but in the world of sports writers — most of us Pinocchios — he is Jiminy Cricket and Tinkerbell rolled into one.
Defending champion Tiger Woods likes his chances of winning a fifth Masters title after an opening-round par 72 in Augusta on Thursday, his top first-round showing at Augusta National Golf Club since 2002. World number one Woods, who stood five strokes behind leader Vijay Singh of Fiji, opened with a 74 in 2005 but went on to win a playoff over Chris DiMarco.
Recent brief but heavy rains in drought-hit parts of Kenya threaten to worsen the already fragile food situation, with flooding displacing thousands. British charity Oxfam International and the Kenya Red Cross Society said the rains will not end the drought and that an urgent boost in the humanitarian aid was still critical to avert disaster.
With black economic empowerment (BEE) codes of good practice and industry charters set to impact on businesses in South Africa, auditing and advisory firm KPMG is to conduct annual BEE surveys, it announced in a statement on Friday. The surveys will be conducted as at December 31 each year, starting with 2005 and the results of the first survey are scheduled to be released in June.
Manchester United have done a record-breaking shirt sponsorship deal with American insurance giant AIG but it is Premiership leaders Chelsea who are in the market for some protective cover this weekend. Jose Mourinho’s side are in need of the nerve-calming tonic that a victory over West Ham in Sunday’s London derby would provide.
Life assurer Old Mutual was on Thursday ordered to pay a yet-to-be-determined amount of compensation to a black employee labelled a ”kaffir” by a colleague. ”At the heart of this matter lies a view, shared by far too many people, that the word ‘kaffir’ is not as hurtful as some others [Africans in particular] would have it,” Labour Court Judge Elna Revelas said in a ruling handed down in Cape Town.
The shooting dead of British cameraman James Miller by an Israeli soldier in Gaza was murder, an inquest jury found on Thursday. The jury also said Israeli authorities had ”not been forthcoming” about how and why Miller (34) was killed by a single shot fired by the soldier.
Life expectancy for women in Zimbabwe has plummeted to just 34 years, by far the lowest in the world according to data released on Friday by the World Health Organisation. Women in the Southern African nation and in nearby Swaziland are the only ones in the world who are not expected to live into their forties.