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During his term as editor, Dormer was heavily involved in the controversy which followed the "Koegas atrocities", whereby the liberal media of the Cape attacked the incumbent Attorney General Thomas Upington for racism, and which saw Upington fight back with devastating lawsuits against figures such as Saul Solomon and Dormer which culminated ...
Jonathan Cape is a British publishing firm headquartered in London and founded in 1921 by Herbert Jonathan Cape, who was head of the firm until his death.. Cape and his business partner Wren Howard (1893–1968) set up the publishing house in 1921.
The CAPE-OPEN, European Union funded, project was established in 1997. [1] The project involved participants from a number of companies from the process industries (Bayer, BASF, BP, DuPont, French Institute of Petroleum (IFP), Elf Aquitaine, and Imperial Chemical Industries (ICI)) together with 15 partners including software vendors (Aspen Technology, Hyprotech Ltd, QuantiSci and SimSci]) and ...
He also hosts the Cape Up podcast, in which he talks to newsmakers about race, religion, age, gender, and cultural identity in politics. [19] Capehart began guest hosting the WNYC radio show Midday on WNYC (formerly The Leonard Lopate Show) in 2018. He hosted the premiere episode of The Sunday Show with Jonathan Capehart on MSNBC on December 13 ...
The Cape Times had its origins in the great economic and social boom years that followed the Cape's attainment of "Responsible Government" (local democracy) in 1872. [5] The first edition of the newspaper, a small four-page sheet, was published on 27 March 1876 by then editor Frederick York St Leger.
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Edmund Powell (who had been sub-editor since Dormer took over in 1878) became editor in 1889 and remained so until 1907. In December 1969, the paper was renamed The Argus, however the change was unpopular and the name was reverted to The Cape Argus. True to its roots in Saul Solomon's liberalism, the paper was a prominent voice of opposition ...
The Cape Post was joined in this campaign by Cape Town's other liberal newspaper at the time, Saul Solomon's Cape Argus, with its new editor Francis Dormer. Specifically, McLoughlin and Solomon accused the Attorney General and his colleagues in the Sprigg government of allowing white juries to acquit whites who had killed blacks.