Word: johannesburgers
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...toast and lathered in a thick sauce. It's yours for $21.50 Dallas Worshipped by locals and snooty New Yorkers alike, Bob's Steak & Chop House is a clubby, wood-paneled retreat best known for its strip steaks from choice tenderloins; 450 g goes for $43.95 Johannesburg In the land of the braaivleis (barbecue), the Butcher Shop & Grille offers 550 g of prime rib-eye cuts, aged up to 21 days, with a choice of starches for the side - all for a welcome $11.50 Tokyo Mon Cher Ton Ton will do you a superlative Kobe beef supertop sirloin that...
...said HIV doesn't cause AIDS, and the medicine could kill you. He also had a legitimate issue: South Africa had given out anti-TB medicine without a proper protocol and they wound up spawning some more virulent, drug-resistant strains." But by the time Clinton was in Johannesburg in July for Nelson Mandela's 85th birthday, Mbeki had come around. "He said, 'You'll promise me these drugs will be administered with the same high quality that the [National Institutes of Health] would use in America?' I said, 'I give you my word.' He said...
When did you know he was going to agree? I went [to Johannesburg] for President Mandela's 85th birthday party [last July]. Mbeki said to me, "Now, if I do this, you'll promise me that these drugs will be administered with the same high quality that the [National Institutes of Health] would use in America?" I said, "I give you my word." He said, "O.K., I'll do it." I give him all the credit. He was always trying to get back there . . . Now we're just waiting for the South African government to approve their final plan...
...NAME: Johannesburg NEW NAME: Egoli The Zulu name is already used informally...
South Africa's public companies will soon be sharing more than just balance sheets and business plans in their annual reports. Come September, the Johannesburg Securities Exchange (J.S.E.), the world's 14th-largest stock market, will require every listed company to disclose its AIDS-management policies. Reason: the country's adult HIV rate is 20%, among the world's highest, so infection in workers can affect a firm's performance. South African firms don't know how many of their workers have AIDS; privacy laws prevent mandatory testing by employers. And many companies are loath to disclose any stats: imagine...