Do degrees really matter?
Zachary Aldwin
I DUNKED a biscuit in my coffee yesterday, an act that may seem trivial but it is the reason for the act that matters rather than the actual earth-shattering news that I placed the end of a cookie into a piping hot beverage.‘Lack of direct flights killing tourism’
Lack of direct flights from source markets is stifling the country’s potential to reap maximum benefits from tourist arrivals, an expert said on Monday.Most airlines flying into Zimbabwe do not have direct flights into the country. Major source markets include Europe, the United States and Asia.
Handball stakeholders meet in Bulawayo
Collin Matiza Sports EditorAMON Madzvamuse, the president of the Zimbabwe Handball Federation, will tomorrow pay a “special visit” to Bulawayo where he will meet all the stakeholders of handball in his fight to promote the sport
Appeal rejected
LAUSANNE. — The Court of Arbitration for Sport yesterday said it had rejected an appeal by Japanese hammer-thrower Koji Murofushi against his exclusion as a candidate for election to theRTG poised for major upgrade
Business ReporterRainbow Tourism Group has embarked on a major refurbishment drive that is set to bring a refreshing look to the facilities run by the leisure group, chief executive Mr Tendai Madzivanyika has said.
Burdett to captain Zim
Mbachi Mutukula-Maregere Sports ReporterASHLEY Burdett has been appointed as the stand-in captain of the Zimbabwe women’s cricket team ahead of their matches against South Africa starting today at the Country Club in Harare. The two
Exorcising Wafa-Wafa demon
Noah Pito Features Correspondent
The stretch of the road has taken many lives. People have died and property lost in this part of the road that has both sides boarded by steep slopes. Wafa-Wafa, one of Zimbabwe’s most dreadful
The law versus survival in the city
Simbarashe Mudhokwani Features CorrespondentEvery few weeks or months, the city council decides the city needs to be restored to sanity and so the municipal police descend on the vendors.
Horror tales from the war
Fortious NhamburaA VISIBLY disturbed 66-year-old Rangadza Machiha narrates the “worst” years of his life. It is a period that he rarely wants to talk about. For him it was a time of trouble. A time spent burying





