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Remuneration: | Basic salary |
Location: | Tzaneen |
Reference: | #CT001597/MR |
Company: | MPRTC Recruitment |
Assistant store manager required in Tzaneen.
Requirements:
Applicants must reside in Tzaneen or surrounding area.
Please take note: if you have not been contacted within 14 days, please consider your application unsuccessful.
Visit our website to view all of our current vacancies: www.mprtc.co.za
Posted on 20 Dec 08:39
The most essential and important resource any company can possess will undoubtedly be the talent that they employ. This is where MPCT is crucial, in that we specialise in the most diverse and complex resource; we supply people, the right people, for your company.
Remuneration: | Basic salary |
Location: | Gauteng |
Type: | Permanent |
Company: | EOH Recruitment Solutions |
The Global System Administration team are responsible for the overall account management for on-boarding, off-boarding, account modifications and access controls across multiple systems and applications in line with the firm’s Security Access control policies. This includes, but is not limited to, creating, provisioning and maintaining accounts, groups and shared resources within a Microsoft Active Directory and Exchange environment. The team are responsible for regular internal audits and are also subject to external audits such as ISO27001.
Specific activities include but are not limited to:
Skills and Experience
Qualification and Training:
Please apply directly on the link if you fully meet the requirements.
Or feel free to contact Charmain Ferreira at 010 590 4000 for any further information.
Posted on 20 Dec 07:15
EOH Recruitment Solutions is a market leader in the sourcing and selection of top candidates and recruitment services. With a focus on Technology, we specialise in both permanent and contract roles.
A symphony of factors control hunger, fullness, and ultimately our weight, including everything from how well you slept last night to the accounts you follow on Instagram. Also involved in the complex process are hormones, particularly the two that are often referred to as hunger hormones, leptin and ghrelin.
In an ideal world, leptin and ghrelin work together to help keep you at a healthy weight. In the real world, well, 70% of the population ends up overweight or obese. Could out-of-whack hormones be to blame?
To answer that question, you first have to understand how the so-called hunger hormones work.
Leptin is the satiety hormone. Essentially, it tells you when to stop eating. “It makes you feel full, and it blocks appetite,” says James Shoemaker, MD, PhD, associate professor in biochemistry and molecular biology at St. Louis University.
Ghrelin, on the other hand, tells you when you’re hungry and need to eat. Think of it as the gremlin making your stomach grumble. “It’s made in the stomach primarily, and it’s released when you haven’t eaten for a while,” says Michael Schwartz, MD, co-director of the Diabetes Institute at the University of Washington in Seattle. Ghrelin peaks every four hours or so–roughly corresponding to breakfast, lunch, and dinner.
RELATED: How to Reprogram Your Appetite to Crave Healthy Foods
When everything’s running smoothly, the two hormones work in harmony, says Philadelphia-based Marjorie Nolan Cohn, RDN, a spokesperson for the Academy of Nutrition & Dietetics. “As one is rising, the other one is dropping.”
But things can–and do–go wrong.
For starters, leptin levels fluctuate with how much fat you have. When you lose weight, leptin levels drop. With less of that appetite-suppressing hormone, you end up feeling hungrier and eating more, potentially causing you to gain back the weight you had lost. “[Once] you have returned to your baseline weight, leptin will have recovered,” explains Dr. Schwartz.
In fact, a study that looked at 14 former Biggest Loser contestants showed that, indeed, leptin levels declined in those who lost large amounts of weight (they lost an average of almost 130 pounds). That could explain why most of them regained much of the weight over time.
It’s also possible to become desensitized to leptin–called leptin resistance–if you are constantly stuffing yourself with food. “You’d think that if you’re eating a lot you shouldn’t be hungry, but it’s the opposite,” says Cohn, who is also author of The Belly Fat Fix: Taming Ghrelin, Your Hunger Hormone, for Quick, Healthy Weight Loss. “Even though there may be leptin in circulation, it’s not registering,” she says, and you don’t know you’re full.
RELATED: 11 Foods That Make You Hungrier
Hunger-stimulating ghrelin levels also vary with weight loss. After dieting, ghrelin production increases, potentially causing people to eat more and gain weight. “The cravings can be so hard to control,” says Cohn. “Once you’re out of whack, it’s really hard to get back into balance.”
Understandably, human beings are designed to fight starvation. Part of the body’s response to dieting is a drive to revert to whatever weight we were previously. “As you gain weight, the brain thinks that the new weight is the one that’s supposed to be regulated,” says Dr. Schwartz. “That’s why it’s so hard to lose weight and keep it off.”
That response typically kicks in after you’ve lost around 5% to 7% of your bodyweight, he says. “Once you lose more than 5% of your bodyweight, on average, you’re going to engage these responses that counter-regulate against the weight loss. Whether you do it quickly or slowly, it doesn’t matter very much.”
Interestingly, people who undergo bariatric surgery seem to have lower levels of hunger-promoting ghrelin than people who take pounds off through plain old diet and exercise. This may be why weight loss after gastric bypass surgery tends to last for longer periods of time.
Barring surgery, is there any way you can control these hormones to your advantage? Luckily, yes.
If you can, stick to a more moderate weight loss of just around 5% of your bodyweight so you don’t trigger that debilitating drop in leptin. Then, readjust mealtime: “Eat on the clock,” says Cohn. That means every two hours if you like to eat smaller portions or every four hours if you eat larger meals. This draws down stomach-grumbling ghrelin levels.
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It’s also important to eat a balance of foods at each meal, particularly protein and complex carbs. “Protein is a major player in suppressing ghrelin,” Cohn says. “It takes more work to digest and keeps you full longer.” Fiber also slows digestion and helps keep you full, she adds. Look for complex carbs like whole grains, veggies, and fruit, especially those containing a type of fiber known as “resistant starch,” like not-quite-ripe bananas.
Exercise may also help control your hunger hormones so you can shed pounds for good. One study found that losing weight on a treadmill resulted in lower ghrelin levels than slimming down by simply eating less.
Education: BSc Computer Science Degree
Experience: 5 years
Reference:
Job Description: Leading Media Company is seeking the expertise of a Lead Architect to join their dynamic team.
Candidate will be responsible for consulting with business stakeholders to elaborate requirements & developer architecture frameworks for the delivery of new software solutions. An IT degree and minimum 7 years experience in an IT Technical role is a prerequisite. Candidate must have skills in Object Orientation, UML, Agile Software, expert capabilities in a broad range of technologies and .Net Skills. Digital TV, VOD and IP-TV experience is advantageous. Salary based on Qualification, skills and experience.
Should you meet the requirements for this position, please email your CV to it.careers@goldmantech.co.za or fax to 086 668 8041. You can also contact us 021 555 0952.
Correspondence will only be conducted with short listed candidates. Should you not hear from us within 3 days, please consider your application unsuccessful.
Johannesburg – A steering committee of the ANC is currently in negotiations with senior members of the party about 60 odd votes that were not reckoned into the final tally for the party’s top six positions.
This comes after Senzo Mchunu from KwaZulu-Natal, who lost the election for the position of ANC secretary general by 24 votes to Free State premier Ace Magashule, challenged the final outcome based on information that emerged that the votes in question had not been counted.
While the ANC has not made an official statement regarding the impasse, what is known is that 63 or 68 delegates (still unconfirmed) went to the voting booth with their IDs and accreditation tags to vote for the top six, but their names didn’t appear on the voter’s roll.
The voter’s roll had the names of all the legitimate delegates that were allowed to vote at the conference. It excluded the names of all the people who were prevented from voting by the various court cases.
The 63 or 68 delegates were allowed to vote, but their ballots were then kept separately so that the EleXion Agency, who is administrating the election, could check later why their names weren’t on the voter’s roll.
These ballots were ultimately excluded from the final tally of votes when the results were announced, which means that somewhere a decision was made not to include them.
Mchunu, having lost by such a small margin, then queried this decision with the EleXion Agency and the ANC’s electoral commission and a steering committee was appointed to investigate and manage the situation.
Some sources say that Mchunu has threatened with court action, but that a political solution is being sought to allow the voting for the national executive commission (NEC) to go ahead and to avoid a total collapse of the conference. They are currently negotiating, while voting for the NEC is going ahead.
The position of secretary general is crucial as this is the person who effectively manages Luthuli House and the ANC. Magashule, who is a known ally of President Jacob Zuma, won this election with 2360 votes against Mchunu’s 2336, the latter having been on Cyril Ramaphosa’s slate.
Cape Town – Day zero can be expected as soon as April 29, 2018, after high water usage by Cape Town residents over the past week, the City of Cape Town said on Tuesday.
According to the City, day zero is when almost all of the taps in the city will be turned off and residents would have to queue for water at approximately 200 sites across the peninsula.
Some essential services would stay connected, but almost all residential suburbs would be cut off.
The City said in a statement that total water storage had decreased by 1.1%.
Dam levels were standing at 33%, while the city’s overall water usage had risen to 641 million litres per day.
Only 34% of residents were saving water and agricultural users had consumed water at a similar rate to the city, the City said.
Director of Water and Sanitation Peter Flower described it as a “terrifying prospect”.
“If water consumption continues to rise, together with the very hot windy conditions which increase evaporation losses, we can expect day zero to happen [sooner].”
Flower said residential customers remained the largest portion of water users.
He added that, if residents brought consumption down to 500 million litres per day, day zero could be avoided.
Teams were hard at work to ensure that the average response time to leaks or burst pipes would be under two hours, he said.
Flight bookings up 7%
An additional 40 000 water management devices from would be enrolled to high consumption households that ignored water restrictions from January onwards.
The City has installed more than 21 000 water management devices on the properties of high users to date. This is expected to continue through December.
Level 6 water restrictions were expected to come into effect from January 1, 2018.
Households who use more than 10,5 kilolitres per month, would have a water management device fitted.
Chief Marketing Officer at Wesgro, the official tourism, trade & investment promotion agency for Cape Town and the Western Cape, Judy Lain said the number of tourists travelling to Cape Town for the festive season could not be confirmed yet.
Lain said domestic tourists were increasingly making last-minute bookings, which made them difficult to track.
Lain said between January and March 2017, the Western Cape had attracted a total of 1 000 156 international and domestic visitors.
“Of these 472 156 were foreign tourist arrivals, a six percent increase from the same period last year. If this rate is replicated, we should see a similar increase over the summer peak season.”
Between October and December 2016, there were approximately 450 000 foreign tourists in the Western Cape.
According to Forward Keys Bookings, flight bookings for Cape Town for December 2017 was up seven percent compared to December 2016.
Paarl – Zimbabwe cricket coach Heath Streak said on Tuesday he wanted his players to play “winning cricket” when they meet South Africa in a one-off day-night Test next week.
“We’d rather lose trying to play a winning brand of cricket than just compete,” said Streak of a Test South Africa are expected to win comfortably.
“The main thing is belief and shaking off that underdog mentality we had,” he said in Paarl, where Zimbabwe begin a three-day warm-up match against a South African Invitation team on Wednesday.
Zimbabwe have played just ten Tests since they last met South Africa in Harare in August 2014, losing nine and drawing one.
“It’s well documented how little Test cricket we play,” said Streak. “I think for us it’s less about the type of cricket than about playing at international level.
“Whether it’s playing Tests or one-day internationals, it’s the gaps in between that are the biggest challenge for us.”
The contest with South Africa will be Zimbabwe’s first day-night Test and captain Graeme Cremer admitted: “We haven’t played with a pink ball and we haven’t played a lot under lights.”
Cremer said this week’s day-night match at Boland Park was a crucial part of his team’s preparation for the Test.
“We’ve had two sessions under lights to see how it (the pink ball) reacts,” said Cremer.
“At twilight, when it’s starting to get dark a little more seems to happen off the wicket.
“This warm-up game will give us a good idea of what to expect and there will be lots of discussion before the Test.”
Both Streak and Cremer are looking forward to playing in the first scheduled four-day Test in more than four decades.
“The so-called bigger teams will probably have to score a bit quicker and give the lesser teams more opportunities to take wickets. The game will move a lot quicker, I think,” said Cremer.
Streak said that with 98 overs a day instead of the usual 90, there would be plenty of time to achieve results.
“With 98 overs a day, it makes it a four-and-a-half day Test and the twilight conditions will be more challenging for batters,” he said.
Cremer said Zimbabwe needed to play consistently well throughout a Test match and avoid the off periods that have cost them previous series.
“We tend to lose Test matches in a certain period, say in an afternoon or in one day of the Test match.
“But we’ve played a lot of good cricket. It’s usually been the first innings with the batting that we have struggled so we’re hoping to change that.”
SA Invitation XI squad:
Dominic Hendricks (Highveld Lions, captain), Temba Bavuma (Cape Cobras), Tladi Bokako (Warriors), Michael Cohen (Cape Cobras), Isaac Dikgale (NW), Leus du Plooy (Knights), Dayyaan Galiem (Western Province), Zubayr Hamza (Cape Cobras), Kagiso Rapulana (NW), Kelly Smuts (Warriors), Dale Steyn (Titans), Ricardo Vasconcelos (Boland), Shaun von Berg (Titans), Lizaad Williams (Cape Cobras)
Zimbabwe Test squad:
Graeme Cremer (captain), Hamilton Masakadza, Craig Ervine, Brendan Taylor, Chamunorwa Chibhabha, Regis Chakabva, Sikandar Raza, Ryan Burl, Tendai Chatara, Blessing Muzarabani, Tendai Chisoro, Peter Moor, Solomon Mire, Kyle Jarvis, Chris Mpofu
FOR AM
JOHANNESBURG – Convicted arms smuggler Guus Kouwenhoven has to report to police every two hours as part of his bail conditions.
He was granted bail of R1-million in the Cape Town Magistrate’s Court today.
Kouwenhoven was Liberian warlord Charles Taylor‘s confidante and built his timber empire through arms deals made with Taylor.
“One million rand in cash and a very intense reporting requirement at Sea Point police station, on a daily basis. There’s a curfew in place,” his advocate Gary Eisenberg said.
“An additional bail condition is that Kouwenhoven remain under house arrest at his R90-million Bantry Bay home at weekends.”
Magistrate Vusi Mhlanga said there is a concern that the multi-millionaire has both the means and the motive to flee the country.
The state says Kouwenhoven has been a fugitive of justice by not handing himself over when a Dutch court sentenced him to 19 years in jail for selling arms and aiding war crime.
State Advocate Dave Damerell says DIRCO has received a new extradition request, matter postponed until 12 January 2018 to work through these documents #Kouwenhoven #DutchFugitive #eNCA
— Pheladi Sethusa (@pheladi_s) December 19, 2017
Eisenberg said the Department of International Relations had received the extradition bundle by the diplomatic route.
“I’m not so sure at this stage whether it has been examined for compliance purposes. We’ve learnt from the prosecution that an extradition bundle was received some time ago but was non-compliant.”
The matter was postponed until 12 January.
eNCA
JOHANNESBURG – Limpopo ANC chairperson Stan Mathabatha says he is confident a solution will be found for more than 60 “missing” votes in the election of the top party officials.
“I have written a letter personally to the steering commission but a solution must be found because people cannot come here without appearing on the voters’ roll. One [of them] is leader of the veterans’ league [the uMkhonto weSizwe Military Veterans’ Association] in a province.”
READ: ANC meets amid concerns over vote counting and allocation of top six positions
According to reports, between 63 and 68 delegates who were registered to vote at the conference had discovered that their names were not on the voters’ roll. Their votes were not included in the final tallies for the top six executives. This would most affect the narrow margin of just 24 votes that made Ace Magashule the ANC secretary-general ahead of Senzo Mchunu.
An unscheduled meeting of the steering committee was called on Tuesday to discuss the matter.
“Knowing the ANC, I know there’ll be a solution to this problem,” Mathabatha said.
Voting for additional national executive members was delayed but got under way on Tuesday evening.
eNCA