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/ 14 November 2007
Professor Chabani Manganyi has been appointed chairperson of the Council on Higher Education (CHE) for a five-year term by Education Minister Naledi Pandor. Manganyi takes over from Saki Macozoma whose term of office ended in August. The CHE is an independent, statutory body that advises the minister on matters relating to higher education policy.
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/ 14 November 2007
The book <i>Academic Mothers</i> is about women who are middle class, who have some form of access to child care, who live in a democracy and who have legal rights and protections. More specifically it is about academics who are mothers. It is about the freedoms that we have not yet achieved, writes Venitha Pillay.
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/ 14 November 2007
”Woza sisi, wozobona [Come sister, come and see],” say the braiders on the corner of Kerk and Eloff streets in downtown Johannesburg. Hundreds of women congregate here every day to provide a vital service to the city’s women: braiding. Thembelihle Tshabalala meets some of Johannesburg’s braiders.
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/ 14 November 2007
Hugo Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez demanded on Tuesday Spain’s king apologise for telling him to shut up, warning that Spanish investments could suffer in its former colony because of the spat. Chávez, who railed against imperialism and capitalism, named banks Santander and BBVA as possible targets.
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/ 14 November 2007
Higher education legislation, along with the statutes and regulations of institutions, give students a say in governance and advisory bodies such as the council, senate, faculty boards and institutional forums. But there is a shocking dislocation between the rationale and historical contexts for such participation and the earnestness with which students view this co-responsibility, writes Chris de Beer.
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/ 13 November 2007
South African consumers are expected to spend 12% more this holiday season, while Europeans might spend less to absorb food and energy price increases, the annual Deloitte year-end holiday survey said on Tuesday. Spokesperson Rodger George SA consumers still remained more optimistic about their economy than all the other countries surveyed.
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/ 13 November 2007
An apartheid-era Cabinet minister and a former ambassador to the United States, Piet Koornhof, died in his home town of Stellenbosch on Monday afternoon. He was 82. Koornhof’s son Johan said on Tuesday afternoon that his father had been a ”passionate” man who had a ”great gusto for life”.
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/ 13 November 2007
Thousands of refugees poured out of camps in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo’s violent North Kivu province on Tuesday after the army said Tutsi-dominated insurgents attacked its positions. Army troops repelled the dawn raid on their positions near Mugunga camp, killing 27 fighters loyal to renegade General Laurent Nkunda.
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/ 13 November 2007
Researchers unveiled a 10-million-year-old jaw bone on Tuesday they believe belonged to a new species of great ape that could be the last common ancestor of gorillas, chimpanzees and humans. The Kenyan and Japanese team found the fragment, dating back to between 9,8-and 9,88-million years, in 2005 along with 11 teeth.
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/ 13 November 2007
Pretoria High Court Judge Nkola Motata was given another chance on Tuesday to try and block a lower court from hearing recordings of his alleged drunken diatribe after a car accident. This was after Nkola’s drunken-driving trial was postponed in the Johannesburg Magistrate’s court until July 2 2008.