A post template

No image available
/ 17 March 2005

Exhibitionists, one and all

By far the most popular attractions each year at Sasol SciFest, the exhibitions are set to outdo themselves this year with the return of old favourites, some fresh young blood and the winners of last year’s best exhibit awards. Running each day of the festival, the exhibitions are open from 9am to 5pm. Entrance is free.

No image available
/ 17 March 2005

Paris, city of the dead

The idea that the French respect their intellectuals dies hard among the British. And when you wander around the streets of any French city it’s easy to see why. Rues Voltaire, Hugo and Racine tend to recur just round the corner from the equally conventional Rue Bonaparte.

No image available
/ 17 March 2005

For the birds

There are a mere 1 000 Cape Parrots left in the wild, and the forests where they live are fast disappearing. Flying the Cape Parrot flag high at SciFest 2005 will be Professor Mike Perrin from the University of KwaZulu-Natal.

No image available
/ 17 March 2005

The light fantastic

For years scientists have been researching and developing methods to treat cancer. Surgery, radiation, chemotherapy and immuno-therapy are the primary means of treating the disease but new methods of improving existing methods are being discovered. A chemistry professor is dyeing to treat cancer.

No image available
/ 17 March 2005

Mbeki calls Côte d’Ivoire opponents to meeting

South African President Thabo Mbeki, who has been mediating in the conflict in Côte d’Ivoire, has called all sides to an ”urgent meeting” this month in South Africa. ”This urgent meeting is to be held during the month of March,” though no specific date has been set as yet, said Amadou Coulibaly, an official in the Rally of Republicans opposition party.

No image available
/ 17 March 2005

Now you has jazz

A lot of the Dorsbult regulars lost interest in popular music when Perry Como retired, so when somebody called Mel Botes assured us this week in a television advert that he’d be performing at the 46664 concert in Fancourt, the manne didn’t have a clue who he was. A quick web search revealed him to be a jazz muso; but not before it demonstrated a funky penchant for literary ad-libbing.

No image available
/ 16 March 2005

Baboons hamper education in Uganda

Bands of marauding baboons in eastern Uganda are forcing parents to keep their children at home to guard crops, causing rampant absenteeism in the region’s primary schools, officials said on Wednesday. More than 85% of children in Uganda’s Busia district are staying home from school due primarily to the menace of the baboons.