ENPNewswire-August 27, 2019--Marenica Energy Limited - Significant Grade Uranium Mineralisation at
KoppiesDippenaar (NCA 81/340); 2[female] Free State,
Koppies, Koppiesdam Nat.
The structure includes standing timber, rivers and gullies, granite boulders and
koppies, and grassy shorelines, with plenty of aquatic weed too.
Five communities were selected from different areas of South Africa: Kwakwatsi, a township in the small Free State town of
Koppies where unemployment is rife and there are few potential employers; Lephephane, a rural area near Tzaneen in Limpopo with a population of about 40.000 people, mainly under the age of 35; uMthwalume, a village on the KwaZulu-Natal coast, marked by political tensions and community divisions; Pefferville, a densely-populated, inner-city neighbourhood in East London in the Eastern Cape, described by participants at the start of the project as a place of gangsterism; and Tjakastad, a sprawling rural town off the beaten track in Mpumalanga that was also grappling with an ingrained culture of crime.
Met die kleurvolle omslag ('n foto van 'n kapusynaap langs 'n stapel
koppies en pierings) en die raaiselagtige titel Die aap in jou koffie wou elke mens wat in die kantoor gekom het egter weet wat vir 'n boek die dan is.
A climb over the
koppies and veld through the bellowing bovine barefoot and delicate sun-expelling headgear.
The fourth largest park in South Africa, Pilanesberg is a melting pot of topographies--which include syenite
koppies, forested ravines, bush veld and rolling grasslands and lightly wooded areas--all contained in the crater of an extinct volcano that covers 55,000 hectares.
Rand and Parker point out features that librarians and teachers would want to know about, such as "Caribbean dialect" (used in Jump Up Time: A Trinidad Carnival Story, by Lynn Joseph, Clarion/Houghton-Mifflin, 1998), positive use of the word nappy (in Happy to be Nappy, a pict ure book by bell hooks, Jump at the Sun/ Hyperion, 1999), and the presence of a glossary with definitions for
koppies, kloff and other Zimbabwean terms found in Where Are You Going, Manyoni?, written and illustrated by Catherine Stock (William Morrow, 1993).
Pa used to tell me that he'd had a hell of a job fetching me -- he'd almost broken a leg running around in the
koppies to catch me, and I howled like a rented wailer at a wake when he chopped off my tail.