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/ 7 December 2004
Eight United States soldiers serving in Iraq launched a legal challenge on Monday to stop their tours of duty from being extended. The lawsuit is the first of its kind by a group of US soldiers on active service in the country. The soldiers, seven of whom will remain anonymous out of fear of official retribution, are fighting against being forced to stay in their units after their period of enlistment has ended.
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/ 7 December 2004
The first act of the United States’s war on terrorism in 2001 was a blockbuster victory. As the twin towers still smouldered, US bombers and Afghan rebels drove the Taliban from power. Afghans emerged from the rubble to hear enthusiastic pledges of a phoenix-like resurrection for their wrecked country. Children would go to school, parents would have jobs, peace would prevail.
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/ 7 December 2004
The community of the western region in North West province initiated a Devil’s Claw project with the assistance of the provincial Department of Agriculture, Conservation, Environment and Tourism in 1999. The aim of the project is to improve the production yield by domesticating and propagating Devil’s Claw tubers from the veld.
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/ 7 December 2004
The hype about the sensational Hollywood movie <i>The Day After Tomorrow </i>has died down, but reality is proving to be just as dramatic. The southwestern United States is in the grip of a five-year drought — the worst in 500 years. Desertification threatens China. The snows of Kilimanjaro are melting. Even the forests of Alaska are burning.
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/ 7 December 2004
If a solution to enable humans and baboons to live in harmony is not found soon, the Cape Peninsula’s chacma population could share the fate of the indigenous Khoina hunter-gatherers with whom they once shared foraging ground.
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/ 7 December 2004
<i>Africa Aids Education Series for Secondary Schools</i> is an integrated series of books aimed at giving the full picture of the HIV/Aids scenario and some of the questions related to it. The series is very attractive, with clear text and illustrations, and useful "Word Help" and "More Info" information bits.
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/ 7 December 2004
It’s a fact that while many teachers are uncertain on how to deal with the subject of HIV/Aids in the classrooms, some learning materials on the subject are a real turn-off. The <i>Red Ribbon</i> series, aimed at foundation- and intermediate-phase learners and their teachers, marks an important breakthrough in the way HIV/Aids awareness can be approached in the classroom.
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/ 7 December 2004
I was told that the GDE would process and authorise the claims of ABET educators at the end of every month and that payment would be effected as soon as possible after the end of every month. This has not been the case, writes Craig van der Merwe.
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/ 7 December 2004
With holiday fever infecting most of us as the year draws to a close, topics like the best beaches on which to relax and 10 things to do without getting out of bed will undoubtedly be of far more interest to teachers than still more appalling facts about youth and HIV/Aids.
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/ 7 December 2004
Stellenbosch University rector Chris Brink and intellectual Jakes Gerwel have welcomed the debate about the posthumous award of an honorary doctorate to the late Bram Fischer as an illustration of the "broadness and liveliness of the discussion" in Afrikaans. Unfortunately, not all those who support the award have exhibited the same attitude. What was the Fischer debate really about?