Our client based in Cato Ridge is currently looking for an Inbound/ Receiving Manager for their warehouse. The ideal candidate will meet the following requirements: Matric Proficient in MS Office 10 years working experience in a warehouse environment with 5 years in management Warehouse management system experience is essential FMCG exp is advantageous Must be able to work night shift, weekends, extended hours and Public holidays when required
Sales Administrator (cape Town)
- Ad Placed : 09 Apr 2017 03:00:40 Affiliate ad
- Remuneration : Per Month
- Employment Type : Full Time
- Industry :
- Retail
Wholesale - Region : Western Cape
- Company : MPRTC Recruitment
SALES ADMINISTRATOR REQUIRED IN CAPE TOWN Qualification Grade 12/ Mathematics Experience 3 years’ working experience in sales administration, logistics and creditors in a Wholesale/ Retail Environment Product knowledge of tiles Kerridge or ERP computer Knowledge and experience Skills Computer Literate Good verbal and written communication skills Valid driver’s license and own transport Great interpersonal skills Attention to details Ability to work to deadlines Info: Applicants must reside in CAPE TOWN 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
Pirates thump FS Stars to advance to Nedbank Cup quarters
Pirates took the lead through Mpho Makola in the 20 minute with Sifiso Mbhele’s 40-minute equaliser making it 1-1 at the break. A Goodman Dlamini own goal in 48th, Oupa Manyisa finish in the 63 and Thembinkosi Lorch strike in the 94 wrapped up the game for Bucs.
Stars played the final 13 minutes of normal time with 10 men after the dismissal for a second yellow of midfielder Makhehlene Makhaula.
Bucs bounced back from a 3-2 league defeat against Stars at the same venue last Saturday.
Pirates attacked off a far more solid, organised platform than a week ago, where an all-at-sea had defence disintegrated in the early stages.
Pirates took the lead when Makola was teed up by a Happy Jele pass 10 metres outside the area, turned and drove powerfully into the top-left corner.
On a Bucs counter-attack in the 38th, Makola’s chip from the left edge found right-back Thabo Matlaba all alone at the far post, who could not get up high enough to get over the header.
After doing all the hard work earning an advantage, Bucs coach Kjell Jonevret would have been disappointed at Bucs for conceding, as from a short corner Nhlanhla Vilakazi’s delivery was nodded home by Mbhele.
There was an element of luck as Bucs took the lead again minutes into the second half. From Makola’s attempted cross from the left Dlamini had to make a motion backwards for a difficult defensive header, which he only managed to deflect past stranded goalkeeper Christoffer Mafoumbi into his own goal.
There was no luck involved though as Bucs, and Manyisa, engineered their third.
Pirates’ midfield fulcrum won the ball near the halfway line, which was touched forward by Issa Sarr to Tendai Ndoro, who in turn played the through-pass into the path of Manyisa again, who simply lifted a chipped finish past Mafoumbi.
In the 77th Makhaula was dismissed for a second bookable offence for a challenge from behind on Makola.
Makola was involved in Bucs’ fourth deep in injury time too, feeding Lorch with a free-kick passed across the outside of Stars’ box, the winger side-footing a shot past Mafoumbi.
– TMG Digital/TMG Sport
News24.com | Wits renews Habib’s contract
Cape Town – University of Witwatersrand vice-chancellor and principal Prof Adam Habib as been reappointed for a second term.
His contract has been renewed for five more years, starting 2018, the university said on Saturday.
Dr Randall Carolissen, chairperson of the council of the university, said in the past few years, Habib had enhanced the university’s research and innovation standing.
“Professor Habib is a dynamic leader with immense experience in managing higher education institutions within South Africa’s complex political and socio-economic context,” he said in a statement issued on Saturday.
He said the university had recorded tremendous achievements in the last few years, despite the challenges faced in recent months.
“Despite the student protests pertaining to funding issues, the University made incredible strides,” he said.
The university said that under Habib’s leadership, Wits’ global reputation had been enhanced and the quality of teaching and support offered to students had improved.
“These are just some of the examples that reflect the significant contribution that Professor Habib and his team have made to Wits in recent years,” Carolissen said.
“In addition to subsidy from the state, he has ensured that Wits continues to secure additional resources from donors for teaching and research. Student funding is a priority and Professor Habib and his team are working to maximise income through creating an endowment for student funding from the possible development and/or sale of land owned by the University.”
The university was stronger than it had been in 2013, he said.
Given Habib’s performance, they had agreed to review his contract for a second term.
“These achievements are not the sole consequence of the vice-chancellor but that of the entire university community. However, under his leadership, he has created the conditions to enable these accomplishments,” Carolissen.
News24.com | Sassa debacle: Dlamini knew all along, says Magwaza
Cape Town – South African Social Security Agency (Sassa) CEO Thokozani Magwaza has trashed claims by Minister of Social Development Bathabile Dlamini that she was unaware of problems with the handover of the social grants payment system to Sassa until October last year.
In an affidavit to the Constitutional Court filed on Friday, Magwaza denies several of the assertions made by Dlamini in her own affidavit to the court the previous week.
Dlamini was responding to an order by the court to show why she should not be personally joined in the application brought by the Black Sash and others over the failed takeover of the social grant payment system from Cash Paymaster Services (CPS), and why she should not pay the legal costs from her own pocket.
In her affidavit she expressed her “personal contrition and regret” for the anxiety caused to social grant recipients following Sassa’s failure to take over the social grant payment system as planned on March 31, in line with previous court orders.
But she mostly blamed Sassa officials for the failure, insisting that she had not wilfully intended to put the payment system at risk, or to disregard any court order.
She said that although Sassa officials had known by April 2016 that Sassa would not be able to take over the payment system, she had not been informed until “after October 2016”.
She said Sassa officials had not provided her with legal advice that they had received from four advocates, “and I was therefore not aware of the extent of the difficulties that Sassa was in, in the face of the looming 31 March 2017 deadline”.
Magwaza, a former acting director-general of the Department of Social Development who took over as Sassa CEO on November 1, 2016, applied to the court for permission to offer his own version of events and has now filed his affidavit.
He says that the process of taking over the payment system by Sassa was “derailed” by the minister, who chose to appoint “work streams” which reported directly to her.
He attaches a July 2015 letter from Dlamini to then-CEO of Sassa Virginia Petersen, in which Dlamini announces the leaders of the work streams – Andile Nyonyha, Tim Sukazi, Tankiso Parkies, Sizwe Shezi and Patrick Monyeki. The panel, to be appointed for three years, was to report directly to her, Dlamini told Petersen.
Magwaza says that from before his appointment until today the work streams “take instructions from and report to the minister directly”.
“I need to make the point that since July 2015 the minister understood the issues, was in control of the process and knew or ought to have known of all developments in this important process and matter,” he says.
It was Sassa officials
He denies that the minister “engaged with Sassa” over possible options as she claimed.
“I wish to clarify that there is no record of the minister engaging with Sassa to consider available options and solutions to ensure that social grants were paid subsequent to the termination of the contract with CPS.”
It was Sassa officials, and officials of the National Treasury and the Department of Social Development, who explored alternative options, Magwaza says.
But Dlamini “was determined that an internal solution will not be found” and she was against the use of local banks and the SA Post Office, in spite of indications by the National Treasury and the SA Reserve Bank that this would work.
Instead she was “adamant” that CPS should continue to pay the grants after its contract with Sassa expired on March 31.
“To date I have difficulty understanding why the minister was adamant that CPS be used,” Magwaza says.
He says he has approached Zane Dangor, former director-general in the Department of Social Development, and “prevailed upon him” to file an affidavit countering Dlamini’s claims. Dangor has undertaken to file documents by Monday evening, Magwaza says.
Sport24.co.za | Vunipola: Lions tour is all I think about
Cape Town – England number eight Billy Vunipola admits that being selected for the British and Irish Lions tour to New Zealand would be a dream come true.
Four years ago, Vunipola suffered the heartache of missing out on the tour to Australia while his brother Mako and cousin Taulupe Faletau were included.
This time around, however, he is the leading contender to front up at the back of the scrum for Warren Gatland’s side.
And with Gatland’s announcement due on the April 19, the 24-year-old says the outcome of the selection is constantly occupying his mind.
“Everyone says ‘I’m not thinking about the Lions’ – they are all lying,” Vunipola told the Daily Mirror.
“I think about it all the time. It’s a dream I’ve been chasing ever since my England debut. I dream of what would it be like not to be picked, or to be picked, and it’s scary. It helps motivate me.
“You don’t want to be the one to miss out.
“The way I look at it, it’s like being on a night out with the boys. Even if you get a fight with your missus for it, you still want to be there.”
Vunipola will play for Saracens against Harlequins at Wembley in front of a bumper 70 000 crowd – on a weekend set to smash the English Premiership’s single round attendance record of 156 000.
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eNCA | Why was state security minister not consulted on intelligence report?: Heitman
Johannesburg: Military expert Helmoed Heitman said it was worrying that Minister of State Security David Mahlobo had not seen the intelligence report which was instrumental in President Zuma firing finance minister Pravin Gordhan.
Heitman said, “If the minister in charge of intelligence services has not seen a report which resulted in destructive actions, then either he’s not doing his job or the report did not come from intelligence services.
If it didn’t come from intelligent services, where did it come from .”
* View the attached video for more on this story
eNCA | Arrows strike true to knock ‘Downs out of Nedbank Cup
PRETORIA – Mamelodi Sundowns’ 2017 Nedbank Cup hopes were ended abruptly with a 1-0 last 16 defeat to Golden Arrows at the Lucas Moripe Stadium on Saturday afternoon.
It proved to be a tight game with little to separate the two sides, apart from Nduduzo Sibiya’s fine finish midway through the second half which earned Clinton Larsen and his men the victory against a Masandawana side which never really fired on all cylinders on the day.
Sundowns’ best opportunity arrived after only seven minutes when Thapelo Morena’s first touch in the Arrows box brilliantly took him in on goal, but his second touch resulted in a wild shot being blazed over the bar when a low strike into the far post would have done the job.
Arrows were guilty of a similarly bad miss on the half hour mark when following a superb cross from Nkosinathi Mthiyane, midfielder Sibusiso Sibeko badly miscued his volley from six yards out.
Other than that Abafana bes’Thende keeper Nkosingiphile Gumede did well to ensure Khama Billiat was unable to squeeze a shot in at the near post, while Sundowns goalie Kennedy Mweene was not overly tested by Lionel Mutizwa’s low drive in first half added time.
#NedbankCup
RT to piss off a Sundowns supporters
—————————- pic.twitter.com/nkz6PGocWG— Ob (@ObD_Skwaks) April 8, 2017
Although the Tshwane club had more possession in the first half, both teams were able to manage a couple of efforts on goal in the opening stanza.
#Arrows take a lead through #MduduziSibiya against #Sundowns #NedbankCup, 1-0 @ANN7tv
— @Zakes (@KEKANAEZEKIEL) April 8, 2017
The Brazilians were the ones creating scoring opportunities after the restart, but Tebogo Langerman fired straight at Gumede, who also made a good block to keep out Percy Tau, while Hlompho Kekana dragged his finish wide of the far post when a goal looked on.
But it was at the other end of the field that the deadlock was finally broken, on 65 minutes, Sibiya underlying his great promise after he cleverly went past his man, ran in on goal and then beat Mweene with a cool and composed effort in at the far post.
Billiat had late chances to force the game to extra time, but headed wide at the back post and had another effort blocked as Arrows defended valiantly to book their spot in the next round.
African News Agency
Bride Who Lost 113 Lbs. on Instagram Before Her Wedding: ‘I Don’t Want to Sugarcoat My Journey’
This article originally appeared on People.com.
After trying countless diets, Haley Smith finally found the motivation to stick to a plan when her boyfriend proposed in July 2015. Smith got serious about weight loss and decided to slim down before their wedding.
“I really knew if I wanted to change, I needed to make realistic goals,” she tells PEOPLE’s Collector’s Edition Half Their Size: The Ultimate Get-Fit Guide
At the beginning, Smith — who married now-husband Matt in October 2016 — started logging her food and incrementally increased the difficulty of her exercise routine, from following the popular “Couch to 5K” running program to hitting the gym almost every day.
But the thing that kept her most accountable was posting her progress photos on Instagram. After 19 months she has lost 113 lbs. and now has more than 90,000 followers. Some days, knowing she has an audience rooting for her is the push she needs.
“If I want to sleep in, I remember something a follower might have said, and it gets me up,” says Smith, 24. “But on days that I do sleep in or struggle with a workout, I always try to be honest about it. I don’t post every time, but I don’t want to sugarcoat that my journey has been some magic, easy process. It’s not at all.”
“I really think my group of followers knows we are on this journey together and that positivity helps feed success way more than any negativity. I’m super thankful for that,” she says.
Aiming to take off another 15 to 20 lbs., Smith, who hopes to start a website to expand her online community, says, “I will keep posting for as long as I have the chance to encourage someone. My profile started as a way to help myself, but now I get to help others. I don’t see myself stopping anytime soon.”
Half Their Size: The Ultimate Get-Fit Guide is available in stores now, and can be purchased here on Amazon.