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/ 25 February 2005

The salesman who admitted graft

The downfall of Jim Miller, a British-born technology salesman, may be his frankness. When a partner objected to his large expense claims, he admitted to paying what amounted to kickbacks. Miller started working for a United States technology company in South Africa in 1974. When it divested he set up local operations to fill the gap.

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/ 25 February 2005

DRDGold shares plunge 20% on results

Shares in South African gold miner DRDGold on Friday plunged 20% following the group’s results for the half-year ended in December 2004, which were released on Thursday, and which analysts and brokers termed "shocking". At 10.15am on the JSE Securities Exchange, DRDGold was quoted down 20% or R1,60 at R6,25.

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/ 25 February 2005

Tutu to build peace centre in Cape Town

Nobel Peace Prize winner Desmond Tutu said he hopes South Africa’s experience in coming to terms with apartheid will be an inspiration for a new peace centre bearing his name to be built later this year. The centre has collected -million in donations, and another -million is needed to complete the facility.

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/ 25 February 2005

Top Armscor officials suspended

The chief executive and two senior managers of arms procurer Armscor have been suspended, the News24 website reported on Friday. They were told on Thursday to vacate their offices immediately, and were prohibited from speaking to employees or the media about the matter.

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/ 25 February 2005

Wenger fails to see failings

Arsène Wenger has made a reputation for himself as the man who is
always looking the other way when things go wrong. When asked about any indiscretion on the part of his Arsenal players, the elegant Frenchman dances around the issue by saying: ”From where I was I did not see that.”

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/ 25 February 2005

Call time

MOVIE OF THE WEEK: Cellular is a movie that manages to refresh the clichés for long enough to provide a fun movie-going experience, and to keep the join-the-dots moralising to a minimum, writes Shaun de Waal.

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/ 25 February 2005

Super 12 swansong

As the four South African franchises have one last go at winning the Super 12, the competition that gave southern hemisphere rugby its identity is being somewhat overshadowed by events elsewhere. The lobbying has begun for the right to host the 2011 World Cup and International Rugby Board chairperson Syd Millar is already accusing the Japanese media of misquoting him.

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/ 25 February 2005

Hope for underdogs in the Absa Cup

Lower-division teams will have an uphill battle in the Absa Cup this weekend, with only four of the 16 ties pitting non-Premier Soccer League (PSL) sides against each other. But the Davids might surprise as a couple of the PSL Goliaths are playing poorly at the moment. In particular, Santos and Sundowns — both former league champions — look ripe for a fall.