If Supersport United and Wits University played all night they probably would had failed to find the back of the net. As a result the disappointing opening Castle Premiership match for both these so-called top sides resulted in a damp squib with neither side scoring in a boring 0-0 draw.
The world’s top-quality MBAs would probably not be accredited by the Council on Higher Education (CHE). If Stanford University, for example, wanted to establish a campus in South Africa to offer its prestigious MBA, it would fail to meet several CHE criteria. Stanford offers an international MBA. This would not satisfy CHE’s requirements that all MBAs be ”localised”. The CHE’s review of MBAs was ”seriously flawed”.
”’You thought it was about seeking the truth?’ an amused ex-academic asked me recently. Yes, I did think that was what a PhD was about, and I still do firmly believe it. But the university today is the last place a truth-seeker can feel at home.” How, oes a dedicated young student resist the pressures of today’s pseudo-academia?
Coaches Bob Cervanka, Nico van Heerden and Ian Harries, normally responsible for the physical shape and form of their athletes, are carrying heavy emotional loads for athletes Jacques Freitag, Llewellyn Herbert and Mbulaeni Mulaudzi, who are among South Africa’s top medal hopes at the Olympic Games in Athens.
South Africa’s top woman cyclist Anriette Schoeman feels like a total loner in the build-up to the women’s 118km road race in the city centre of Athens on Sunday. Don’t get her wrong. Schoeman has made many friends and feels quite at home in the South African Olympic team.
Special Report: Olympics 2004
The recent Council on Higher Education review to re-accredit MBA programmes across the higher education system – public and private – has been welcomed as ensuring the quality of a qualification so critical to high skills development in South Africa. And a large number of private institutions are making a significant contribution to developing skills at the intermediate level.
Ironically, the New National Party may have thrown in the towel too soon. Some officials in the African National Congress argue that the NNP should have waited until after next year’s local government elections before joining the ANC, in the hope that they would be able to bring some supporters with them. Operation Nat Attack, it seems, was a long-running plan to weaken and ultimately kill the NNP.
At the heart of the travel scam lies the average South African politician’s penchant for the high life. Tony Yengeni moonlighted as a model for Fabiani, the upmarket clothing store in Cape Town, in return for free suits. His political career came to a premature end when he took a huge discount on a 4×4. Now Parliament is being further besmirched by expensive tastes that stretch way beyond the whippery.
Manning Rangers collected maximum points in their first game of the Premier Soccer League 2004/05 season when they beat neighbours Lamontville Golden Arrows by 1-0 at Chatsworth Stadium on Wednesday night. The only goal of the entertaining derby match was scored by Linos Chalwe in the 41st minute.
Manchester United overcame a host of absentees, a bomb scare and an early own goal to beat Dynamo Bucharest 2-1 in Bucharest on Wednesday to make themselves the firm favourites to reach the Champions League group stages. An own goal by Angelo Alistar in the second half proved the winner.