Changes to exchange controls at last make it a cost-effective vehicle for married couples, writes <b>Gareth Stokes</b>.
Despite an impressive run, some investors are
still advising caution, writes <b>Gareth Stokes</b>.
Conditions are ideal to put part of your savings overseas and secure real returns, writes <b>Gareth Stokes</b>.
They were chosen to open the World Cup and are the South African music industry’s sexiest export, writes <b>Lloyd Gedye</b>.
Promising results of Thai trial could breathe new life into South African research.
A Muslim journalist’s take on Zapiro and the subsequent uproar.
UJ considers cutting ties with Israel’s Ben-Gurion University in protest against Ben Gurion’s alleged association with Palestinian rights abuses.
A treasure trove of contemporary Cuban art has been unearthed in London, the property of a South African collector.
Mining Minister Susan Shabangu said on Friday she was "very concerned" about recent mine deaths.
The Johannesburg Art Gallery breaks 2010 ranks to stage a show about race and identity, writes <b>Anthea Buys</b>.
The Council of Muslim Theologians on Thursday night tried to prevent the <i>M&G</i> from publishing a Zapiro cartoon featuring the Prophet Muhammad.
Ten new directors general were recently installed in President Jacob Zuma’s administration. The <i>M&G</i>’s political staff assess them.
Maker, a design shop in Johannesburg, recently invited six designers including architects and artists to create work in response to the word unshape.
<b>Percy Zvomuya</b> speaks to the pre-eminent sculptor about his upcoming show and his ecological approach to creation.
Archbishop Desmond Tutu applauded the decision to move a Super 14 rugby semifinal to Soweto, local media reported on Friday.
<em>Remotewords</em> aims to "disseminate literary statements" around the world through satellite mapping programmes.
We need to understand why we have failed the
intellectual, ethical challenge, writes <b>Lis Lange</b>.
The Gauteng health department has confirmed the deaths of 11 babies, several of them unborn, at the Natalspruit Hospital in Katlehong.
Senior Telkom staffers and security companies allegedly involved in copper-cable racket.
Ryan McLaren kept his nerve to help South Africa to a one-run victory over West Indies, and sweep their two-match Twenty20 series on Thursday.
Sicelo Shiceka’s girlfriend drives a government car, he doesn’t have a master’s degree and he apparently threw a party for his mother at our expense.
Train commuters will have to wait until Monday for Metrorail trains as one of the transport unions had not signed a deal with Parsa by Thursday night.
No terror threats against the World Cup have been uncovered by any intelligence agency working with Fifa, despite claims of an al-Qaeda plot in Iraq.
Western Cape Premier Helen Zille tells <b>Niren Tolsi</b> about how she should have taken her balls back from Fifa and her feelings for Didier Drogba.
<b>Niren Tolsi</b> talks to Professor Tim Noakes, the pre-eminent sports doctor in South Africa about his expectations for the Soccer World Cup
AMERICAN MOVIE OF THE WEEK: Shaun de Waal reviews <em>Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time</em>, starring Jake Gyllenhaal.
Business school director wants to shed the conservative image, writes <b>Lionel Faull</b>.
They have found a way to produce electronic ink from tiny silicon particles — nanoparticles, to be precise (one thousand millionth of a metre).
A group of Cope leaders from seven provinces, the youth movement and the women’s movement have confirmed reports that a faction is planning to split.
Tensions are running high in Cape Town over the city’s apparent relocation of poor and homeless people to Blikkiesdorp on the Cape Flats.
Former crime intelligence boss Mulangi Mphego is key to top-secret leaks that that scuttled President Jacob Zuma’s corruption trial.
Holding matches at the stadium in Green Point will leave "no legacy whatsoever for communities where football is played. We can’t afford to go there"