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Tshwane University of Technology predominantly provides vocational qualifications in the form of three-year diplomas. Additional options exist in the form of advanced diplomas, postgraduate and masters and doctoral degrees. Students can track the TUT application status. These qualifications are offered through the following faculties:
The Tshwane University of Technology Women's F.C., also knowns as TUT Ladies F.C. or TUT Matsatsantsa, is the football club representing the Tshwane University of Technology based in Pretoria, Gauteng. The senior team competes in the SAFA Women's League, the top tier women's football league in South Africa.
TUT FM 96.2 is a South African university campus radio station based in Soshanguve, Gauteng. [1] It broadcasts from the Soshanguve Campus of the Tshwane University of Technology . [ 1 ]
TUT (disambiguation) Dental click, a sound used to express disapproval in English, often spelled as "tut" or "tsk" Tut, a Spike miniseries about Tutankhamun; Tut or Thout, the first month of the ancient Egyptian and Coptic calendars; Truncated tetrahedron, a polyhedron
As part of the South African government's restructuring of tertiary education for the new millennium it was promoted to university of technology status. It is currently part of the BRICS Universities League , a consortium of leading research universities from Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa.
The University of Pretoria (Afrikaans: Universiteit van Pretoria, Northern Sotho: Yunibesithi ya Pretoria) is a multi-campus public research university [11] [12] in Pretoria, the administrative and de facto capital of South Africa. [13]
Tutankhamun was the 13th pharaoh of the 18th Dynasty of the New Kingdom and ruled for about a decade c. 1355–1346 BCE. A majority of his reign was devoted to restoring Egyptian culture, including religious and political policies; his predecessor and father Akhenaten had altered many Egyptian cultural aspects during his reign, and one of Tutankhamun's many restoration policies included ...
By the 1980s, Tutu was an icon for many black South Africans, a status rivalled only by Mandela. [178] In August 1983, he became a patron of the new anti-apartheid United Democratic Front (UDF). [179] Tutu angered much of South Africa's press and white minority, [180] especially apartheid supporters. [180]