Tutor required for live in Home School Teaching assignment. Two female students in final year A & AS Cambridge curriculum. Based on farm in Freestate. Must demonstrate competence in Maths, Chemistry and Physics at degree level. It is not essential to be a trained teacher but MUST be capable of and inspired to teach these subjects following the curriculum. English first language speakers preferred. A completion bonus based on final achieved results of students will also be negotiated. Because this is a live in position, interview will also be based on character and compatibility with family and rural living environment. The person will be expected to be involved and integrate into the activities of the family as well. This is suited to a young person graduate wishing to gain experience in teaching at this level. Endurance horse riding is the main sport of the students, therefore anyone interested in riding as well will enjoy this posting. Contract will be from 1st August 2018 to 30th May 2019 Send CV with motivation letter to bruceham99@gmail.com – If you do not receive a reply within two weeks, please assume your application is unsuccessful.
Vacationing means chilling out—and for a lot of us, pigging out. But not for one husband and wife, who lost a combined 135 pounds and decided to maintain their healthfullifestyle during their recent trip away.
On Monday, Shandra Redwine posted before-and-after photos of herself and her husband Gerald. She compared their recent vacation, at the resort town of Onekama on Lake Michigan, to the getaways they went on in their pre–weight loss days.
“Vacation used to be an excuse to eat any and everything I wanted,” she wrote. “It was nothing to follow up a box of Mac N Cheese (to myself) with my mom’s famous zucchini cake and chocolate covered scotcheroos. It also meant wearing a swimsuit in front [of] people and spending a lot of time pondering a way to get from the water to my towel without anyone looking.”
This vacation, however, Redwine said she rocked her swimsuit the entire time and “felt great.” She tells Health she changed her exercise and diet regimen about four and a half years ago, when she weighed 260 pounds. Since then, she’s down 111 pounds, and the couple has collectively lost 135 pounds.
“He started running with me to support and encourage me, which led to him losing about 25 pounds and becoming a marathoner,” she says. “I am currently training for my first half marathon in September, [and Gerald] will be running alongside me.”
Her new routine and half marathon training meant bringing her workout gear on vacation with her and going for morning runs. Instead of loading up on junk food, Redwine says she planned out her meals and packed “healthy, low carb” options. One major swap? Eating Doritos on the beach is out, and taking the kids for a walk or swimming in the lake is in. But that doesn’t mean she’s depriving herself.
“Vacation is still a time for relaxing, indulging a bit, and having fun, but it’s no longer an unhealthy free for all,” she says. “We pick one or two meals or treats and stay on track the rest of the time.”
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Moscow – Brazil eased into the World Cup knockout stages after defeating Serbia 2-0 on Wednesday, with superstar Neymar sparkling in a win which sets up a last 16 clash against Mexico.
Paulinho put Brazil ahead with a superb dinked finish on 36 minutes before Neymar swung in a cross for Thiago Silva to header the Selecao’s second goal with 22 minutes left in Moscow.
Having opened his Russia 2018 account with the second of Brazil’s two late goals in Friday’s 2-0 win over Costa Rica, Neymar was again impressive.
After the tearful emotion of Saint Petersburg, Neymar cut a more joyful figure after this win, blowing kisses to the crowd as the five-time champions celebrated.
As Group E winners, Brazil will now face Mexico in Samara on Monday, with group runners-up Switzerland taking on Sweden in St. Petersburg on Tuesday.
In the pre-match build-up Brazil coach Tite said Neymar alone can not “shoulder the responsibility” for his team’s World Cup hopes.
However, the 26-year-old seemed content to carry Brazil’s attack, motoring through Serbia’s midfield and crashing an early shot just wide of the post.
The match at Moscow’s Spartak Stadium began at a ferocious tempo and Brazil left-back Marcelo was an early casualty, limping off after ten minutes to be replaced by Filipe Luis.
Neymar had the best chance of the opening half hour when he forced Serbia goalkeeper Vladimir Stojkovic to palm his shot away.
Tempers frayed when Serbia midfielder Adem Ljajic scythed down Neymar, in full flight on the left flank, to earn a booking on 33 minutes.
Brazil conjured the opener from nothing when a beautifully lofted pass from Philippe Coutinho found Paulinho, who flicked the ball over Stojkovic’s reach on 36 minutes to make it 1-0 at the break.
Serbia repeatedly struggled to contain Brazil’s fleet-footed attack.
Manchester United midfielder Nemanja Matic was the next Serbian midfielder to be booked when he fouled Manchester City star Gabriel Jesus on 48 minutes.
Serbia’s brightest spell came with half an hour left, only to be let down by poor finishing.
Ljajic stumbled to take a return pass after a charging run into Brazil’s box and then fired over shortly after.
Then with his defence beaten, Brazil goalkeeper Alisson palmed a save straight at Aleksandar Mitrovic, but the Serbia forward could only head the ball back into the grateful arms of the Brazilian shotstopper.
To cap Serbia’s frustrations, Sergej Milinkovic-Savic fired wide, then Mitrovic guided a powerful header straight at Alisson from a corner.
However, Brazil made sure of the win when Neymar swung in a free-kick and his Paris Saint-Germain team-mate Thiago crashed home his header, unmarked at the near post, on 68 minutes.
With one eye on the last 16, Tite took off Countinho with ten minutes left while Neymar twice went close to scoring the Selecao’s third late on, but the Brazil coach can be happy with his star forward.
Land occupiers in the Old Brakpan township were awoken by rubber bullets hitting the doors of their newly built shacks on Tuesday morning as metro police evicted the occupiers and demolished 300 shacks, GroundUp reports.
According to metro police, only occupants who had lived in the informal settlement for more than a year could stay because their case was still pending in court.
“All the new occupants who had come to the land three weeks ago under EFF registrations had to leave,” said Ekurhuleni Metro Police Department spokesperson Wilfred Kgasago.
Infuriated EFF members and occupiers said they would not leave the piece of land, “no matter what”.
Sleeping in her new shack with her 3-month-old baby, Nosipho Khumalo said she had woken up thinking someone was knocking on the door. She opened the door to find metro police officers who demanded that she leave the shack immediately.
Standing outside holding her baby, she watched as her shack was demolished and all the building material was taken away.
Claims that live bullets used
“l spent every last cent l had building my shack. Now i’m left with nothing,” said Khumalo.
Nguthuki Sibanda, 19, says he was waiting to help his mother build their shack when rubber bullets hit him. Bleeding spots were visible on his legs, body and arms as he screamed in pain.
“l do not understand why l was shot. l was only standing. l did not do anything wrong,” he said. He said the building material he had been waiting to work with was taken away by metro police. He was later taken to Far East Rand Hospital for treatment.
EFF members claimed that metro police had also come on Monday and fired both rubber and live bullets at the land occupiers.
“We only fired rubber bullets in an attempt to get them off that land because they are occupying it unlawfully,” said Kgasago.
“We are only enforcing the law working with the municipality to remove them. We managed to remove 300 shacks in total.”
‘The land is ours’
Mmouluki Matsemela said he was born in Old Brakpan in 1965 after which they were removed. He said the metro police’s actions made him feel like he was being removed from his home for the second time.
“They chased us away from here between 1980-81. They never compensated us. They should let us take our land back,” he says.
Matsemela says he still remembers his Old Brakpan address.
“It was 1485 Raskwala Street.”
Sesi Ndlovu, EFF chairperson for Ward 97 in Brakpan, said it was unconstitutional for the metro police to remove the new land occupiers.
“Our Constitution states that everyone has a right to a place to live. All these people here have no place to live. They have come back to the land of their ancestors and metro police are shooting them. The government is failing us.”
EFF members in charge told everyone not to leave because they had everything under control.
“We have already taken this land back. It is ours,” said Ndlovu.
Things got so tense between EFF commander-in-chief Julius Malema and Cope leader Mosiuoa Lekota at Limpopo’s first public hearing into the amendment of section 25 of the Constitution on Wednesday that Lekota, who was seated next to Malema, got up and moved to another seat.
Following claims by Lekota that the process was staged, the two got into a heated exchange that resulted in sections of the crowd in the jam-packed Marble Hall town hall repeatedly chanting “Juju”, as Malema’s followers sometimes refer to him.
After the public hearings ended, Malema told News24 that Lekota believed the entire process was staged because Malema had pointed out people that chairperson Vincent Smith should recognise to make submissions to the Constitutional Review Committee.
“I said to him as a member of Parliament you are allowed to chair, if you think it’s staged, take a mic and choose people yourself because I also do the same thing. When I see people, I say ‘chair, recognise that person’,” Malema said.
“Then he becomes emotional and says ‘don’t talk to me’, then I said ‘no, you are being unreasonable now’. That’s what we were fighting about.”
Malema said Smith was a democratic chairperson who told the committee members that if they saw someone who they felt very strongly must be recognised, then they should bring it to his attention.
‘He’s crying tears’
“There is no one that has staged this process. Everyone has spoken, black and white, male, female, young and old.”
Malema added that Lekota was losing the debate on the land question and had become emotional as a result.
“The people on the ground are saying something different. It’s not our problem if Lekota’s views do not find expression. He must not create his own imagination.”
“He’s crying, he’s crying tears, the people want the section amended, Cope does not have people. Terror (Lekota) is the membership of cope, he is the leader of Cope,” Malema said.
Telling his side of the story, Lekota said that he was unhappy that Malema was telling the chairperson which people to recognise and that those people were given extra time to speak, so he confronted Malema during the sitting.
“He must not be telling the chairperson who to point at and, secondly, how long he can talk. He was specifically urging the chairperson to not stop a man who had already gone over his time because he wanted that man to talk,” Lekota said.
Lekota and Malema just got into a heated argument during the public hearings. It’s unsure what it was about, Lekota left his seat and has now moved. The crowd started were also enticed and started chanting “Juju” this video is the tail end of the scene #SAonLand@TeamNews24pic.twitter.com/MIFouZrliJ
“Then he started being rude to me, so I decided to move away from him because it’s of no use to me to engage him there.”
Lekota also took issue with the fact that the public hearing continued past 16:00 when that was the time at which it was agreed to end each hearing.
He added that he would be addressing this issue in Parliament and that he would make the point that the committee could not make up the rules as it goes along because committee members did not have that authority.
During the public hearing, an overwhelming majority of people called for the amendment of the Constitution so that land can be expropriated without compensation.
They felt the proposed amendment was the only recourse left for the country when it came to the land issue.
Vasco Mabunda of the Nkuzi Development Association in Limpopo told the committee that land reform had failed because there was a lack of will on the part of the government to expedite the transfer of land from the minority to the majority.
Farmers not willing sellers
He added that land claims and the “willing buyer, willing seller” format of reform had not been successful. Claims dating back 20 years had still not been finalised.
Mabunda said farmers were also stubborn and not willing sellers in negotiations, which had slowed down the pace of land reform.
“They don’t come to the party,” said Mabunda.
While he was for the amendment of section 25 of the Constitution, he said an independent body should be established to deal with land transfers.
Another unnamed participant told the committee that previous land claims had been unsuccessful in returning the land to its rightful owners.
“Until land ownership is amended, there cannot be peace in this country,” he said.
Property is everything
Those who spoke against the amendment were heckled as they gave their opinions.
Johan Mills of the Bela-Bela Taxpayers’ Forum said amending section 25 was not a good idea because it related to property. He said this meant all types of property and not just land.
He added that he was against this because property was the foundation of everything and that, if money was needed, one could borrow against it.
“If we don’t have an asset, we cannot borrow as it will no longer belong to you. It will belong to the government,” said Mills.