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CNN STUDENT NEWS For July 19, 2002

Aired July 19, 2002 - 04:00   ET

THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.


THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.
ANNOUNCER: You're watching CNN STUDENT NEWS seen in schools around the world because learning never stops and neither does the news.

SUSAN FREIDMAN, CO-HOST: Our coverage of the world begins in Northern Ireland. "Lead Story" wraps an apology issued by the IRA. Following that, spies come in to "Focus." We travel to the U.S. capital for that. Checking out the back half, we order up edible insects in "Perspectives." And learn the ABC's of organic food in Student Bureau.

Welcome to CNN STUDENT NEWS. I'm Susan Freidman.

This weekend marks the 30th anniversary of what's known as "Bloody Friday." Nine people were killed and more than a hundred were injured on that fateful day in Belfast, Northern Ireland. This week the Irish Republican Army apologized to what they termed "non- combatant victims" of its deadly campaign.

The paramilitary group wants to abolish British rule in Northern Ireland and unify the two Irelands. While Northern Ireland's Catholic minority favors unification with Ireland, the Protestant majority wants to retain its ties with Britain. As a result, decades of fighting.

A cease-fire (INAUDIBLE) 1997, but this is the first time the IRA has issued an apology for its part in the troubles.

Matthew Chance has the response from the people closest to the conflict.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

MATTHEW CHANCE, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): In a province scarred by decades of violence, words few believed they'd ever hear. Some have welcomed the apology as a boost for the peace process. But for the innocent civilians whose lives have been destroyed by IRA attacks, it's too late.

This woman saw her husband killed by Republican gunmen at the height of the troubles here, assassinated after being mistaken, she told me, for a paramilitary leader. Nine years later and she's still too scared to show her face on camera. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: We came home from work and the next thing was the door was kicked open and he was shot dead in front of me. And there's been nobody brought to justice for that and now there never will be because of what Mr. Blair has done for them.

CHANCE (on camera): But the IRA say they're apologizing for the killing of non-combatants, the people...

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: An apology...

CHANCE: ... who weren't members of the (UNINTELLIGIBLE) group.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: An apology doesn't bring him back. It's no good to him. His (UNINTELLIGIBLE). He was only 30.

CHANCE (voice-over): It's a sentiment victims support groups say is shared by hundreds of families who have seen innocent fathers and sons, mothers and daughters killed in generations of violence. Now believing all their deaths were unintentional, as the IRA says, is for many hard to accept.

WILLIAM FRAZER, FAMILIES ACTING FOR INNOCENT RELATIVES: They intended to kill innocent people to make an impact on the conflict at that particular time, you know, so what good is an apology now? Apology to the people who are sitting at home with an empty space at the table, it's not much good to them.

And people say oh we have to move forward, that this is a step forward. This is not a step forward. This is a step backwards because these people are now announcing that they see themselves as soldiers, as combatants, and they talk about the innocent victims as non-combatants. What right have they got to take themselves or call themselves as soldiers? They're terrorists. They're murderers.

CHANCE: The apology issued in a Republican newspaper comes as the 30th anniversary approaches, "Bloody Friday." Then, more than 20 IRA bombs were detonated in Belfast in a single day plunging the city into chaos. Nine people were killed, more than 140 injured, including children.

Innocent civilians have died in the past on both sides in the conflict. But with the peace process now in crisis here amid accusations of continuing IRA activity, there are heightened concerns at whether a permanent end to Northern Ireland's war is still in sight.

(on camera): For the Nationalists in Belfast, the IRA apology is a significant step forward and should not be ignored. It shows the world just how far the organization has come in recent years. But after so many decades of strife and violence in Northern Ireland, so many families having lost loved ones through beatings, through bomb attacks and through shootings, a simple apology is not enough.

Matthew Chance, CNN, Belfast.

(END VIDEOTAPE) FREIDMAN: Move over James Bond and Maxwell Smart, Washington now has the real thing. An International Spy Museum opens today in the nation's capital, showcasing the real inspector's gadgets.

CNN's David Ensor takes us for a tour of the museum and shows us some of the tools of the espionage trade.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

DAVID ENSOR, CNN NATIONAL SECURITY CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): Most people when they think of spies, think of the Hollywood version. James Bond, and that Aston Martin, the one with the tire shredder and the dangerous lights.

DENNIS BARRIE, PRESIDENT, INTERNATIONAL SPY MUSEUM: People know two spies in history: one is James Bond who wasn't a spy, who was fiction, and the other is Matahari who wasn't much of a spy, who -- but certainly had a great life.

ENSOR: Museum president Dennis Barrie separates fact from fiction on a press tour of Washington's newest tourist attraction, even as the last exhibits are being installed. The museum lets you try your skills as a spy.

BARRIE: In this interactive, you have to find the four signals in this -- in this photograph. What is a spy signal alerting to some kind of message or dead drop?

ENSOR: Historian Keith Melton collected many of the most interesting items, like this shoe designed by Czech intelligence to bug American diplomats.

KEITH MELTON, ESPIONAGE HISTORIAN: And essentially the person that was wearing them became a walking radio station.

ENSOR: Here's another charming item, created by Stalin's secret police. It looks like lipstick, but it's loaded.

MELTON: At close range, next to the person behind the head, it would be devastatingly accurate and would cause a lethal wound if it was correctly pointed at the head. And it's the type of example that the KGB used.

A car like that will be on show, but the real stars of the new Spy Museum under construction in Washington will be the real spies.

Why Washington? Thanks to Aldridge Ames and Robert Hanssen, this city has become the undisputed world capitol of espionage.

PETER EARNEST, DIRECTOR, SPY MUSEUM: I would say that as you and I stand here talking at 9th and F, there is espionage going on around us. Somebody is developing somebody for recruitment. Someone's putting down a dead drop as we speak.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I just learned a secret, (UNINTELLIGIBLE), but the enemy is listening, so I'll never let it slip.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

ENSOR: With wartime cartoons, interactive exhibits and artifacts, the museum will shine new light into a shadowy world.

BARRIE: The Soviets were the best at spying. I mean we can talk about the CIA and the MI6, but nobody did it better.

ENSOR: Want to know more? As part of the tour, you will get to chat with real live ex-intelligence officers.

CARLA SCOPOLITUS (ph), EX-CIA INTELLIGENCE OFFICER: I'm Carla Scopolitus, 33 years with the CIA.

ENSOR: The Spy Museum turned to this legendary couple, CIA veterans Tony and Jona (ph) Mendez, now retired, for advice on how spies use disguises. In 1980, during the Iran hostage crisis, Tony spirited six American diplomats out of Tehran, using false identities.

TONY MENDEZ, FORMER CIA CHIEF OF DISGUISE: I've turned a lot of people into older people and turned a few into younger people and turned a few into different genders and different races, you know.

ENSOR: Whatever it takes?

MENDEZ: Whatever it takes.

ENSOR: An, as the Spy Museum will show, Mendez still has a few tricks up his sleeve.

MENDEZ: This is what we call a dental facade, and this just pops in over your regular teeth.

ENSOR (on camera): The art of physical, visual disguises has always been part of the world of espionage and it still is. During the Cold War, the CIA used disguises to spirit its agents out of danger in Eastern Europe, and in the post September 11 world, you can rest assured the same techniques will be used in the War on Terrorism. Things are not always as they seem.

David Ensor, CNN, Knoxville, Maryland.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

FREIDMAN: Space is the place for "Chronicle" today. What better place to capture the attention of young people while at the same time showcasing the benefits of science.

Our Jeanne Moos has the liftoff on learning.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: We have ignition.

JEANNE MOOS, CNN CORRESPONDENT: Being an astronaut is a grave occupation, but the lack of gravity tends to bring out the silly putty.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Show you some kinds of behavior that we might expect to see.

MOOS: Over the years, we've seen astronauts toying around with everything from jacks to boomerangs, but what goes around doesn't necessarily come around in space.

UNIDENTIFIED CHILD: What happens when you try to jump rope in space?

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: He has modified the way he jumps rope.

MOOS: Kids at New York's Museum of Natural History and Houston's Museum of Natural Science took turns questioning the astronauts in the International Space Station live via satellite.

UNIDENTIFIED CHILD: I was kind of nervous.

MOOS: It is part of the Toys in Space program. The kids play with various toys on earth, while the astronauts play with the same toys 250 miles up. It's not easy getting the ball in the cup without gravity to keep it there.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: So no, it doesn't always stick. We even put a little tape on one side.

DR. NEIL TYSON, DIRECTOR, HAYDEN PLANETARIUM: I can't do this in any gravity.

MOOS: But astrophysicist Dr. Neil Tyson can walk the dog with a yo-yo.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: You have to understand that none of us can walk the dog on earth, let alone here in outer space.

MOOS: The kids had their own suggestions for games the astronauts should play.

UNIDENTIFIED CHILD: Kick ball, dodge ball.

UNIDENTIFIED CHILD: Hot Wheels.

MOOS: Been there, done something like that on a shuttle mission in 1985.

(on camera): Do you guys want to be astronauts?

UNIDENTIFIED CHILD: Yes.

UNIDENTIFIED CHILD: Yes.

UNIDENTIFIED CHILD: Yes.

MOOS: Yes, but you are stuck up there for months. Do you think that would be fun?

UNIDENTIFIED CHILD: Yes.

UNIDENTIFIED CHILD: Yes.

MOOS: The most famous space game was played with a 6-iron, three decades ago on the moon. Alan Shepherd's first swing was a near miss.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Got more dirt than ball. Here we go again.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: That looked like a slice to me, Al.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Here we go.

MOOS: Since the moon's gravity is one sixth that of Earth's, the ball goes six times as far. The kids wanted to know if the astrophysicist could moonwalk. Commendable, though not quite as spacey as Michael Jackson's. Despite the allure of toys in space, the kids had a more down to earth question.

UNIDENTIFIED CHILD: Hey, how do they use the bathroom? That's what I wanted to know. Do they have a bathroom in space?

UNIDENTIFIED CHILD: And how do -- and do they empty it?

TYSON: It goes in packets and pouches and things.

MOOS: Bodily functions aside, there's something charming about seeing astronauts acting like kids in the high tech atmosphere of space travel. And if they run out of toys, there's always fruit.

Jeanne Moos, CNN, New York.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

FREIDMAN: From toys in space to a teen idol on his way. You know him as one-fifth of the band 'N Sync, but in late October, Lance Bass will be a cosmonaut aboard an International Space Station. There are strings attached, multi-millions in fact; but an agreement this week has the star proclaiming, in the words of one hit, "it's going to be me."

Miles O'Brien gives us the preflight checklist on Lance and the deal of a galaxy.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

MILES O'BRIEN, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): So, could this be the right stuff? Apparently so. Bye, bye, bye, Chuck Yeager. Meet Lance Bass, a teen heartthrob in the boy band 'N Sync, and now apparently a cosmonaut-in-training with a ticket to ride to the space station at the end of October.

DAVID KRIEFF, DESTINY PRODUCTIONS: We have signed a deal with the Russian space agencies. And we're very excited about it.

O'BRIEN: Excited after leaving a crucial meeting at the Beverly Hills offices of the powerhouse William Morris Agency. It was an unlikely place to find a Russian space commissar, as he readily admitted.

ALEXANDER DERECHIN, RSC ENERGIA: My reaction: It is an absolutely stupid idea. It is impossible. It cannot be done. It's not for us, etcetera. But after I met with him, I changed the mind.

O'BRIEN: The Russians are charging somewhere between $15 and $20 million for a ride on their Soyuz rocket and a visit at the station. And so the deal hinged on luring a galaxy of sponsors and a TV network deal. It should come as no surprise that an outfit with a healthy teenage girl demographic and a moon-walker logo no less, MTV, has signed on.

JIM MCDONALD, RADIO SHACK: What we're talking about here, really, is the first candidate that can engage tens of millions of viewers and youth in particular.

O'BRIEN: The cable music outlet will air an eight-part series called "Lance in Space." They will follow him through his training, which began six weeks ago, offer live coverage of the launch and mission, and air a welcome-home extravaganza, 'N Sync concert included.

KRIEFF: It is fantastic television. I think it's brilliant television. It's as interesting, certainly, as "The Osbournes" or anything else on TV in reality. It is the ultimate reality show.

LANCE BASS, 'N SYNC: That was crazy.

O'BRIEN: If he flies, the 23-year-old teen idol would be the youngest spacefarer ever. Even though NASA and the other agencies that run the station aren't complaining publicly about all this, there is some private grumbling. But they know the Russians own the rocket and need the cash.

DERECHIN: A very simple issue: This will bring some money to program. We need.

O'BRIEN: Miles O'Brien, CNN.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

UNIDENTIFIED CNN CORRESPONDENT: A CNN viewer wants to know: Are there other elements on the moon or Mars which do not exist on Earth?

MILES O'BRIEN, CNN SPACE CORRESPONDENT: We're not sure about Mars, but I can tell you this: On the moon there is an element that is very, very scarce here on Earth that is actually relatively plentiful. It's called helium three. It's an unusual icetope of helium which many scientists, many physicists believe could be used to create an efficient form of nuclear fusion. Nuclear fusion is the type of nuclear power generation that is sort of been the holy grail for nuclear scientists for many years because it doesn't generate any waste and creates a self-sustaining reaction.

There's a lot of people who would tell you it's worthwhile going to the moon, if nothing else, to gather up and mine helium three and bring it back so that it would be possible to create these efficient fusion reactors.

So maybe there's one good case for going back to the moon.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

ANNOUNCER: Exploring our world, here now is CNN STUDENT NEWS "Perspectives."

FREIDMAN: All week long we've been looking at food and its culture around the world. Well we have more on the menu today. British food is known for being boring, but the U.K. government has come up with a new recipe to market the country's food and it involves things that creep and crawl.

CNN's Andrew Brown explains.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

ANDREW BROWN, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): The U.K. isn't the kind of place you'd expect to find scorpions. It's wet and rainy and there's not much in the way of desert. Undaunted, British officials are supporting this promotion which features some of the United Kingdom's most delicious foods, including...

NICK REITMEIER, GREAT FOOD HALL: Insects and anything you can basically eat.

BROWN: The promotion at an upscale supermarket in Hong Kong is testing global reaction to exotic bugs that are packed and wrapped in the U.K., although they don't all originate there. British exporters are trying to overcome health scars, like the one involving mad cow disease, which damaged the U.K.'s reputation as a purveyor of fine food.

REITMEIER: Outside Britain, they had some problems.

BROWN: They may still have some problems. Scorpions and worms coated in sugar and alcohol and made into lollypops are an acquired taste.

REITMEIER: If you are in a bar anywhere and you really suck on them and somebody asks you what are you doing, you have already an entry point.

BROWN (on camera): Excuse me, madam, do you like lollypops? You don't like lollypops? But these are special. These are -- these have got -- these have got insects in it.

(voice-over): The insects are produced by a company called Edible, which sells chocolate covered ants as well as the worms and scorpions.

REITMEIER: Let's wind grandmother up and give her some ants.

BROWN (on camera): This is a very special lollypop. It's got insects inside it.

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: No thanks. No thanks.

BROWN: You don't like insects?

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: No. I'm a vegetarian, actually.

BROWN: But there's not much meat on them.

(voice-over): The government funded Food from Britain agency did slightly play down the insects.

MICHAEL COLLESS, FOOD FROM BRITAIN: I think it's not just the one product, it's just showing that the U.K. products do have a new and -- a new and innovative feel for all their products.

BROWN: So will these bugs catch on?

(on camera): What are your feelings about insects? Do you...

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I don't know. I'm willing to try them.

BROWN (voice-over): Wait until he hears about the cobra promotion.

(on camera): Do you like lollypops?

(voice-over): Andrew Brown, CNN, Hong Kong.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

FREIDMAN: Fast food pop quiz, where can you find dozens of McDonald's serving McVeggie burgers and Maharaja Macs? If you answered India, you get an A.

Let's head there now for some exotic fare.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

RON ROMGLUPA (ph), CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): A late night spread in the crowded bilenes (ph) of a New Delhi bazaar. Diners feast on spicy funduri (ph) chicken and the traditional Indian bread roti (ph).

Savoring a tradition of dining out that goes back centuries and trying to find space in this melo (ph), fast food giants, many of them American, selling burgers, fries and colas to a population of a billion plus people.

But if you're coming in with bland (UNINTELLIGIBLE), don't bother. These restaurants are finding that in India spice sells. McDonald's has tweaked its menu to offer Indianized options, including the Maharaja Mac, a chicken patty based offering, and the old vegetarian veggie burger. Of course there's no beef or pork, which could be offensive to Hindus and Muslims respectively. Ad Pizza Hut is pushing its range of Masala pizzas, a suped-up version of what you might find in the West.

In this advertisement campaign, an uptight pizza (UNINTELLIGIBLE) discovers the appeal of the Indianized pie before devouring it in one shot.

Pankaj Batra is director of marketing for Pizza Hut's parent company.

PANKAJ BATRA, TRICON RESTAURANTS INTERNATIONAL: We are not here to change the Indian customer's taste buds. We are here to give him a top quality product with a taste and a texture that appeals to him.

ROMGLUPA: This group of students here for lunch are like many Indians, vegetarians. They are not trying the spicy fare but say they do like their pizzas with a bit of kick in them.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: This is quite bland like cheese pizza, and I -- so I put chili flakes on it to make it a bit spicier.

ROMGLUPA: But as another American company found, cultural and culinary obstacles can be difficult to overcome. After an ambitious start in the late 1990s, KFC scaled back its expansion plans after protests against what some here call cultural imperialism. It now has just one restaurant in India.

Some food critics say the spicy combinations don't work.

JIGGS KALRA, FOOD HISTORIAN: What's the big deal? What are you trying to con us into? The only thing that's working for them is deep pockets. The Indian version of the fast food is far more successful than any public joint in India.

ROMGLUPA: But it may yet be early days in the experiments in cross-culinary fusion. The chefs from the West are still hoping to make it in the land of funduri and curry.

Ron Romglupa, CNN, New Delhi.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

FREIDMAN: Our week in review looks back at a rocky week on Wall Street. Thursday, the Dow Jones industrial average fell nearly 133 points to 8,409. That's its lowest close since September. It's just the latest round of bad news from the stock market.

And as our Joel Hochmuth reports, Washington is paying close attention to what's happening in New York and doing what it can to turn things around.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

JOEL HOCHMUTH, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): It's one of those weeks on Wall Street that makes investors nervous. The Dow Jones industrial average closed down again Thursday for the eighth time in nine sessions. Over that period, the key index of stock prices has fallen nearly 1,000 points.

RAJEEV DHAWAN, ECONOMIC FORECASTER, GEORGIA STATE UNIVERSITY: Until this crisis of confidence is resolved in the market, you are not going to have the investors come back and buy the stock; and justifiably so. Why would you want to buy the stock in companies when you're worried about their accounting and their integrity?

HOCHMUTH: Hopes were high that words from President Bush and Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan would help restore investor confidence, confidence shaken both by the terrorist attack September 11 and the accounting scandals at companies like Enron, WorldCom and others. Both men tried to stress the positive.

GEORGE W. BUSH, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: In spite of the fact that we've been in a slump for a while, and in spite of the fact that the terrorists attacked us and affected our economic outlook, American business and workers are resilient and resolved, and this economy is coming back. That's the fact.

ALAN GREENSPAN, FEDERAL RESERVE CHAIRMAN: The effects of the recent difficulties will linger for a bit longer. But as they wear off, and absent significant further adverse shocks, the U.S. economy is poised to resume a pattern of sustainable growth.

HOCHMUTH: Meantime, there was hope legislation brewing on Capitol Hill would restore confidence as well. The Senate unanimously passed a broad overhaul of corporate and security laws designed to curb the accounting abuses that have rocked Wall Street. That bill must be reconciled with a competing bill sponsored by House Republicans.

TOM DASCHLE, SENATE MAJORITY LEADER: The House should take it up this -- as quickly as possible and send it on to the president. As broad a base of support as this bill enjoys, I can think of no finer way to ensure that we can build on tonight's victory and ensure that our country can be confident that the reforms in this bill will become law soon.

TRENT LOTT, SENATE MINORITY LEADER: I think it's a good bill, one deserved to move on to conference and get a conference report and send it to the president as soon as possible.

HOCHMUTH: President Bush has hinted he will sign any version that emerges from Congress. But is any legislation enough to reinsure investors and will things on Wall Street get worse before they get better? Those are questions to be answered in the days and weeks ahead.

Joel Hochmuth, CNN STUDENT NEWS.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

FREIDMAN: A few months ago, we told you about the increasing popularity of organically grown foods. More and more farms are growing organic crops and you've probably seen an increase of foods labeled organic at the grocery store. But do you really know what the term means?

Kelley Jelinski from our Student Bureau explains.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

KELLEY JELINSKI, CNN STUDENT BUREAU: Organic foods often look just like traditional foods. There's produce, grains, drinks, even cheese. It's really only the label that may look different.

Janet Weinstein says there is a difference. She sells organic food at the East Lancing Food Co-op.

JANET WEINSTEIN, EAST LANCING FOOD CO-OP: It means it's grown without synthetic herbicides, pesticides, fungicides, things like that.

JELINSKI: Organic food enthusiast Annette Murphy says she only buys organic foods for herself and her family. The family dog even goes organic.

ANNETTE MURPHY, CONSUMER: I don't have to worry about exposure to chemicals, pesticides, steroids, hormones, that's a scary one.

JELINSKI: Murphy has been eating organically for years. She says in addition to being the natural choice, organic foods help her feel better.

MURPHY: And we feel better, to be quite honest with you, we feel a lot better since we started eating this way.

JELINSKI: Eating an organic diet is easier to do these days, there's a wealth of different products out there. You can even buy in bulk.

WEINSTEIN: It's surprising how many things are available these days that are organically produced and it isn't just fresh fruit (UNINTELLIGIBLE) certainly there's plenty of produce that's available.

JELINSKI: At Michigan State, the agricultural university, there's ample interest in organic food.

(on camera): The university is involved in several different organic research projects. Some of them are off campus on large farms and some of them are right here on campus in the greenhouses.

(voice-over): Dr. John Biernbaum and his students are heading up a study growing organic salad greens. They don't use chemicals while growing, they use an all natural compost complete with (UNINTELLIGIBLE) manure.

JOHN BIERNBAUM, HORTICULTURE PROFESSOR: We started a project at the horticulture farm this past year to work on organic production of salad greens in unheated greenhouses. So we've been learning just how to do it so we can develop recommendations for the farmers to help them because it would be something they could produce in the wintertime.

JELINSKI: It's Biernbaum's goal to help farmers learn how to grow foods with fewer chemicals.

Kelley Jelinski, CNN Student Bureau, East Lancing, Michigan.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

"Where in the World" composed of 26 districts, population predominately Protestant, slightly larger than Connecticut? Can you name this country? Northern Ireland.

FREIDMAN: Yesterday we told you about the design proposals for the World Trade Center site. For another look at those designs, click on to CNNSTUDENTNEWS.com. While there, cast your vote on which plan you like.

Then get your traveling shoes out, we're taking a trip to Africa next week. Join us as we explore everything African. Art, animals and ecotourism, they are just a few of the topics we'll cover. Don't miss out, and be sure to have a great weekend. I'll see you back here next week.

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