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/ 21 October 2004

New warning on Taj Mahal

India’s largest state has launched an investigation into whether the Taj Mahal, one of the wonders of the world, is sinking into the earth after experts warned about the drying out of a nearby river. Experts say the river water was an integral part of the Taj’s design, used to stabilise the marble domes and minarets.

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/ 21 October 2004

New SA tourism chief appointed

Moeketsi Mosola has been appointed the new chief executive officer for South African Tourism from November, Environmental Affairs and Tourism minister Marthinus van Schalkwyk said on Wednesday. SA Tourism’s outgoing CEO Cheryl Carolus will take over as chairperson of the Board of the South African National Parks (SANParks), said Van Schalkwyk.

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/ 21 October 2004

Clinton will rise from sickbed to join campaign

Bill Clinton, once known on the campaign trail as Elvis for his superstar, crowd-pleasing charms, will rise from his sick bed next week to come to John Kerry’s aid, six weeks after a quadruple bypass operation. Clinton’s last-ditch intervention, starting on Monday in Philadelphia in a joint appearance with Kerry, comes in the face of resistance from his wife.

  • Kerry pounds Bush over Iraq
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    / 21 October 2004

    ‘Don’t shoot, it’s a little girl’

    The undisputed facts are these: it was broad daylight, 13-year-old Iman al-Hams was wearing her school uniform, and when she walked into the Israeli army’s ”forbidden zone” at the bottom of her street she was carrying her satchel. A few minutes later the short, slight child was pumped with bullets. Doctors counted at least 17 wounds and said much of her head was destroyed.

  • Unions protest visit by ‘hate-monger’
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    / 21 October 2004

    JSE bounces into the black

    After taking a pounding in recent days, the JSE Securities Exchange bounced into the black at the opening on Thursday on the back of a rebound in European markets. Expectations that the rand’s recent rally had come to an end and continued strength in gold added to the positive picture.

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    / 21 October 2004

    Vocational studies for the future

    Change is not something those of us who work in education like very much, whether it’s the curriculum, assessment methods, or the brand of staffroom coffee. So it has been sobering to take a trip around colleges in three Baltic states where the extent and speed of change is extraordinary, writes Chris Dyke.

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    / 21 October 2004

    Nor any drop to drink

    Water is essential to life on this planet. The human body can survive a mere three days without water. Besides needing water to stay alive, human societies need water for many activities, from simple household uses for cooking or washing to the electricity that powers the computer this article is being written on. And South Africa has already lost about half of its wetlands. Can we afford to lose any more?

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    / 21 October 2004

    A partnership with Mother Nature

    Looking for a job in nature was the last thing Leandra Brandt (22) thought of. Now her future looks a lot rosier with serious prospects of employment since she has joined a nature conservation youth service programme in the Vrolijkheid Nature Reserve in the Western Cape in February this year.