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/ 4 November 2005
One of the world’s most famous landmarks, the 82-year-old Hollywood sign perched high above Los Angeles, is to follow Tinseltown tradition and get a facelift, officials said on Thursday. The giant letters spelling out the word that is synonymous with movie production will undergo a little restoration and some cleaning.
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/ 4 November 2005
The trend of artists donating their time and their art to raise funds for various worthy causes is an indication of things to come: that various sectors of our public life will now look to artists to help them raise funds, writes Mike van Graan.
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/ 4 November 2005
A new city is being forged in Johannesburg. Regeneration projects such as the Nelson Mandela Bridge and the Newtown Precinct have made an impact on the landscape of the inner city. John Hogg takes a look at two new books depicting life beyond the facades of inner Jo’burg.
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/ 4 November 2005
A robot designed to disarm bombs was sent on Friday to rescue a pet bird from a Sydney apartment building crumbling because of a tunnel collapse. The cockatiel, Tweety, was stranded in an apartment directly above a section of the building that partially collapsed when a giant hole opened up near the site of a new tunnel earlier this week.
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/ 4 November 2005
Further serious rioting broke out on the outskirts of Paris early on Friday as gangs of youths challenged authorities’ vow to crack down on urban violence that has plagued the French capital for more than a week. Police said about 400 cars were torched, mostly in the Paris region, while 27 buses went up in flames at a depot.
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/ 4 November 2005
Claims that South Africa’s economy could be creating 1 000 jobs a day should be met with scepticism, Congress of South African Trade Unions economist Neva Makgetla said on Thursday. Makgetla was reacting to findings by independent economist Mike Schussler in the second South African Employment Report, commissioned by the Union Association of South Africa.
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/ 4 November 2005
Like two small girls in a playground suffering from prepubescent bitchiness, they trade verbal blows day after day. In the red Alice band, Arsene Wenger; in the blue ribbons, Jose Mourinho. And the battle of the handbags remains in the balance. This week, Mourinho kicked off by accusing Wenger of voyeurism.
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/ 4 November 2005
Enthusiasm is something Mimi Mthethwa, newly elected president of Netball South Africa, has in plentiful supply. The Empangeni-based deputy chief education specialist is still working on getting things in order. Julia Beffon speaks to the new boss of South Africa’s biggest women’s sport.
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/ 4 November 2005
The appointment of Mfanano Majola as the Premier Soccer League’s (PSL) national safety and security head earlier this year was supposed to waft a breeze of change through professional football. This week he lashed out at his bosses for failing to implement his suggestions and lacking vision in tackling and curbing crowd violence.
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/ 4 November 2005
There have been strong links between the Springboks and the Pumas since 1965, when Danie Craven took it upon himself to give the South American game a leg up. Forty years later, Jake White’s Springboks can boast a massive pack of forwards, but no one is kidding himself that Saturday’s Test match will be a pushover.