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/ 9 April 1998

A life radically altered

Anthony Egan MY WINDS OF CHANGE by Wilhelm Verwoerd (Ravan, R59,95) If ever a country deserved a “paradox” theory of history, it is South Africa. Where else would one find a situation where today the grandson of HF Verwoerd, the grand architect of modern apartheid, is a member of the African National Congress, the movement […]

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/ 9 April 1998

Sex, age and underpants

John Updike’s new novel is dividing the critics. He spoke to Joanna Coles Waiting for the lift with John Updike at his Park Avenue hotel, he catches sight of himself in the chrome doors, his face a beige pancake from an earlier television appearance. “Oh dear,” he giggles brightly, his jaunty green eyes staring back […]

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/ 9 April 1998

In awe of simple beauty

Alex Sudheim: On show in Durban ‘I do not care about fashion, only about permanencies,” proclaims neo-modernist Jeanette Winterson, tireless defender of the timeless, transcendent nature of great art. A point of view which has been heavily denigrated with the establishment of postmodernism’s hypercriticality. “What is certain is that pictures and poetry and music are […]

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/ 9 April 1998

Unita rift could ignite Angolan war

Tangeni Amupadhi The civil war in Angola could resume as early as this month despite recent concessions by the rebel Unita movement to the terms of the Lusaka peace accord, a report by the Institute for Security Studies (ISS) says. According to the ISS, a rift has emerged within Unita between those opposed to war […]

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/ 9 April 1998

French abandoned wounded Tutsis

Victoria Brittain The fourth anniversary of the genocide in Rwanda will be marked this week at Bisesero, where new evidence shows Tutsi survivors fought hand-to-hand battles against Hutu extremists led by local officials and businesspeople for 10 weeks. The survivors’ testimony also reveals how French soldiers drove away, leaving wounded and starving Tutsis at the […]

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/ 9 April 1998

From one level to the next

James Garner South African rock bands may come and go at a rate that makes the turnover of Bafana Bafana managers look comparatively pedestrian, but Cape Town four-piece Lithium are one group that has managed to keep things together and develop their sound over a period of time. Many people felt that the band’s days […]

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/ 9 April 1998

Short cuts and fast-food sex

Herman Lategan: On stage in Cape Town Pick-Ups is the first play in Australian Alex Broun’s trilogy on the current state of easy sex, dysfunctional relationships and the fragility of the human condition. So what’s new? For years these clichs seem to have been the universal leitmotif in most of the world’s literary genres. But […]

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/ 9 April 1998

Medical Council shut for doing its job properly

I am pleased that the Mail & Guardian regarded the recent disbanding of the Medicines Control Council (MCC) as sufficiently important to run as a cover story (“Zuma shuts down health watchdog”, March 27 to April 2). As a medical practitioner, I’d appreciate the opportunity to convey my anger and disillusionment at the outcome of […]

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/ 9 April 1998

Managing apartheid’s deficit

David Coldwell Have you ever wondered if the labourer mowing your lawn or the cleaner of your office might have been an engineer, a scientist or a successful business person had they had access to a good education? The question may be a little cliched and the same could certainly be asked in New York […]

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/ 9 April 1998

Heralding the master’s truth

Mercedes Sayagues It used to be that every morning when Zimbabwe’s only English-language daily, The Herald, was delivered to my home, I would read it at leisure over coffee, or take it to the office for a mid-morning perusal. A quick read was enough, since the government-owned Herald served a bland porridge of watered-down local […]

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/ 9 April 1998

A dead tree full of live birds

Poet, novelist and critic Lionel Abrahams is one of the most influential figures in South African literature. Mark Gevisser pays tribute to him on the occasion of his 70th birthday There is something transformative about a first encounter with Lionel Abrahams. At the outset, it is hard not to be overwhelmed by his extreme physical […]

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/ 9 April 1998

Damn the change rooms

Andrew Muchineripi Soccer Another Sunday, another hot Highveld afternoon, another match in the seemingly endless Castle Premiership programme. Fixture number 270 to be precise. Mid-table Moroka Swallows versus relegation candidates African Wanderers. The setting last weekend was George Goch Stadium, a modest, homely stadium one long goal kick from the M1 highway that, like so […]

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/ 9 April 1998

Sick and tired of the office

Working overtime may lead to promotion, but it can ruin your life, writes Charlotte Denny The Japanese have a name for it: karoshi – death through overwork. During the recent Japanese financial crisis, a 38-year-old accountant employed by the failed securities firm Yamaichi worked 14 days straight without a break and then went home to […]

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/ 9 April 1998

Unearthing the living dead

Bog bodies are an archaeologist’s dream come true. They can bring history alive more than any old document. But now, exploitation of the preservative peat in which they are found stands to rob us of this crucial link, writes Michael Pitts Given that he was an archaeologist, you wouldn’t think he’d have needed a drink. […]

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/ 9 April 1998

Meiring’s passing comes none too soon

Peter Vale: A SECOND LOOK We made the military, now the military makes us: to recognise this bromide is to understand the inevitability of what historians one day will surely call Georg Meiring’s Folly. Far too quickly for democratic comfort have searching questions over the military been driven to the corners of our national life. […]

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/ 9 April 1998

Rising from the heart of darkness

Njongonkulu Ndungane: UBUNTU It has been said many times that any meaningful attempt to eradicate poverty must involve the poor themselves. The truth of this was once again brought home to me during the first round of national hearings on poverty, held in four remote villages in the Northern Province last week. Many moving accounts […]

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/ 9 April 1998

How green is our Valley

Keith Henderson Ficksburg and Fouriesburg are two small dorpies a couple of kilometres apart in the Free State. Around Easter, they probaby receive the most traffic they see all year. The local law-enforcement agencies probably get into a relative flap about the large numbers of strange-looking potential dagga-smokers that start appearing and do not approve […]

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/ 9 April 1998

Young bloods join IBA

This week two new councillors took office at the IBA. Ferial Haffajee profiles the new kids on the block The two thirtysomething councillors add to an Independent Broadcasting Authority (IBA) that has grown younger and younger since it was established in 1994. It is led by lawyer Felleng Sekha, herself just on the cusp of […]

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/ 9 April 1998

What can we do about finding boys?

Andy Capostagno Cricket Spare a thought for our national selectors. While the pyjama game goes merrily on its way around the country, attracting full houses from Johannesburg to Paarl, Peter Pollock and his cohorts have to sort out a squad to play proper cricket on a proper cricket tour. To whit, five tests against England […]

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/ 9 April 1998

Drop of a mad hat

Alex Sudheim: On stage in Durban On a boating trip in the English summer of 1862, Charles Lutwidge Dodgson held three children spellbound with the fantastical tales of a young girl in an imaginary land, all the while making hundreds of impromptu illustrations with a pencil. Upon returning home, he wrote down for Alice Liddell […]

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/ 9 April 1998

Suite things

Cape Town appears to be the new crucible of white South African rock. Here we take a look at three top Capetonian bands Janet Smith The point is that none of them would fit in a beige hotel room where the gold paint is peeling off the fake rococo vases. The mini-bar would be cleaned […]

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/ 9 April 1998

Floating to the top

Matthew van der Want: Opinion Just Jinger, who supported U2 in Cape Town, recently spent some time in from Canada and New York, where they showcased their talent to some major label A&R people. South African DJs, journalists and label managers alike brim with national pride as they enthuse over the imminent discovery of a […]

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/ 6 April 1998

SA gun down Lankans

MONDAY, 12.45PM: SOUTH Africa, firing on all cylinders, made a meal of the Sri Lankan batting to beat the tourists by 57 runs in a triangular series match at the Wanderers in Johannesburg on Sunday. South African skipper Hansie Cronje won the toss and elected to bat, sending in Mike Rindel and Gary Kirsten to […]

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/ 3 April 1998

A wee Aids cure?

Mail & Guardian reporter The value of pregnant women’s urine just hit the equivalent of a Wall Street high this week, when scientists published the discovery of a protein that can reportedly wipe out tumours caused by Kaposi’s sarcoma, an Aids-related cancer, and inhibit the reproduction of HIV, the virus that causes Aids. The protein […]

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/ 3 April 1998

Pavement to gutter

Emeka Nwandiko They sell from beneath tarpaulin tents, on top of planks of wood, at street corners and on pavements, at half the price in stores, but street hawkers find that even selling at rock-bottom prices does not attract buyers. “There has been no business this year,” says Hibrahime Theophile from Togo, who sells fresh […]

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/ 3 April 1998

The people who are Midi

Jonathan Proctor is the former head of Bop Broadcasting Corporation. The bte noir of Lucas Mangope, he aired certain programmes well before Aunty-SABC dared. Publicity-shy and independent, this is a broadcaster with a plethora of skills. He will lead e.tv for five years with Richard Magau as his deputy. Magau is an all-rounder from Bop-TV […]

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/ 3 April 1998

Glass is more

Shaun de Waal : CD of the week It is not in order to denigrate him that one argues Philip Glass has found his perfect medium in the film score. His operas -and opera has long been seen as a pinnacle of the Western art-music tradition -are long and boring to listen to; Glass’s minimalist […]

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/ 3 April 1998

SA Internet bookshop launched

Telebook, a recently launched international online bookstore, has established a Cape Town branch. Adatabase of more than 1,2-million books can be searched, by title, author, key word, subject, publisher or ISBN number. At present there are four databases: English, German, Spanish, and Dutch titles, with the addition of Afrikaans and French soon to take place. […]

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/ 3 April 1998

Seremane’s truth crusade hits ANC

Mail & Guardian reporter Chief land claims commissioner Joe Seremane is threatening to take the government and the African National Congress to the International Court of Justice in a desperate attempt to solve the murder of his younger brother, Timothy Seremane, at the infamous ANC Quatro camp in 1982. Seremane’s latest salvo against the ANC […]

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/ 3 April 1998

Cabinet finally ends Mkhwanazi’s reign

Mungo Soggot The downfall of state oil chief Don Mkhwanazi this week came after the Cabinet blocked an earlier attempt by the Minister of Minerals and Energy, Penuell Maduna, to keep him at the helm of the Central Energy Fund (CEF). Maduna tried to persuade the Cabinet that Mkhwanazi, the fund’s chair, and his board […]