The Thandulwazi Intern-Teacher Training Programme


Are you interested in a career as a teacher of Mathematicsl Physical Science/ECD (Early Childhood Development)? The Thandulwazi Intern-Teacher Training Programme, part of the St Stithians Foundation educational outreach programme, is offering prospective teachers the opportunity to study towards a part-time 4-year Bachelor of Education (BEd) or 2-year postgraduate Certificate in Education (PGCE), through UNISA.

You will also be gaining workplace experience at St Stithians College. These positions will be appointed from January 2015.

Preference will be given to aspiring teachers who are:

Passionate about exploring a career in teaching Mathematics, Physical Science or Early Childhood Development/Foundation Phase.

Students already registered in one of the above courses with UNISA.

Grade 12 learners eager to explore a career in teaching who display strong academic results especially in Maths and/or Science.

South African citizens residing in Johannesburg.

From previously disadvantaged groups and/or students in need of financial assistance (Students who wish to gain on-the-job experience, but who don’t need financial assistance may also apply.)

Benefits you will receive:

Mentoring by an experienced educator

Valuable professional training and workplace experience within an IEB school environment.

In addition, you may qualify for one or more of the following benefits, depending on your financial needs analysis:

Payment of tuition fees and a textbook allowance’ Daily meal allowance during term time

Workshop Conference allowance

A monthly stipend.

How to apply

If you would like to apply for this wonderful opportunity, please click here to apply online.

Closing date for applications: 12 May 2014.

Your can also visit http://www.stithian.com or http://www.thandulwazi.com

Man United sack David Moyes


London – David Moyes left Manchester United on Tuesday after a hugely disappointing season as manager since replacing Alex Ferguson last July.

Announcing the departure in a brief statement, shortly after staff arrived for work at the Carrington training ground, United thanked the Scot for “the hard work, honesty and integrity he brought to the role”.

Newspapers had earlier reported the game was up for Moyes, trumpeting the ‘End of an Error’ after the American owners, the Glazer family, lost patience.

Moyes, who turns 51 on Friday, was appointed on the recommendation of fellow-Scot Ferguson, who retired at the end of last season after 26 years in the job.

Ferguson had steered United to the title last season for the 13th time last season and 20th overall.

Moyes’s sudden departure evokes memories of the traumatic spell the Old Trafford club suffered between 1969 and 1971 when Matt Busby retired after 24 years as boss.

His hand-picked successor Wilf McGuinness only lasted 18 months before Busby took over the reins again.

It is highly improbable Ferguson will swap his lucrative career as an after-dinner speaker and business consultant for the dugout.

According to media reports, United have courted Dutchman Louis van Gaal, who will quit as coach of the Netherlands after the World Cup in Brazil in June and July.

Veteran midfielder Ryan Giggs, 40, who has been working as one of Moyes’s coaching assistants, could be put in charge for the final four games of the season.

Moyes, who was previously in charge of Everton for 11 seasons without winning a trophy, was given a six-year contract by United but they have lurched from one crisis to another.

A shockingly lame performance in a 2-0 defeat at Everton on Sunday was the final straw for the Glazers, with seventh-placed United failing to qualify for the Champions League for the first time since 1995-96.

Reuters

Krejcir, co-accused return to court


Johannesburg – Czech fugitive Radovan Krejcir and six others are expected to appear in the Alexandra Magistrate’s Court in Johannesburg on Tuesday for conspiring to commit murder.

The case was postponed during the last court proceedings for further investigations.

A seventh person linked to Krejcir’s criminal investigation was arrested two weeks before their court appearance.

Makgale said at the time that 33-year-old Welcome Nkanyiso Mafunda was charged with conspiracy.

The group is alleged to have been part of a group that conspired to kill police Colonel Ximba and investigator Paul O’Sullivan earlier this year.

Ximba and O’Sullivan had been investigating Krejcir.

The first four suspects, Sboniso Miya, Zoduma Biyela, Jacob Nare and Owen Serero, were arrested on 9 January.

Krejcir was charged with conspiracy to commit murder in March.

Subsequent to that, female police Sergeant Nandi Nkosi and Krejcir were arrested.

Kidnapping case

One of the men was also linked to the kidnapping and attempted murder case which Krejcir faces in the Palm Ridge Magistrate’s Court.

The kidnapping case allegedly involves Krejcir, Sandton businessman Desai Luphondo, and two members of the Hawks – Warrant Officers Samuel Modise Maropeng and George Jeff Nthoroane.

They were arrested in November.

In June, they allegedly kidnapped and assaulted a man whose brother, known only as “Doctor”, disappeared with a 25kg shipment of tik he had been recruited to help smuggle through OR Tambo International Airport.

They allegedly kept the man at Krejcir’s Money Point business premises in Bedfordview, Johannesburg, for four days, and assaulted him.

SAPA

Guesthouse killings ‘senseless’


Jonathan Erasmus, The Witness
Durban – A weekend of birthday celebrations at an idyllic Free State farm resort ended in horror for a Durban couple when they were murdered as they slept.

Malvern residents Brian and Tilly Pope, aged 61 and 46, were shot and killed, and Brian’s son Warren was stabbed with a garden fork in the chest and throat. His wife Marlene was severely beaten.
For more http://www.news24.com

Fewer and fewer people are voting


Fewer and fewer people are voting during the elections every four years!
According to the data provided by the IEC, voter turnout dropped by almost 11% percent between 1999 and 2004.
For more http://www.news24.com

EFF ad also banned by SABC


Cape Town – The Economic Freedom Fighters said they’re very unhappy after their one minute ad campaign for TV got banned by the SABC.

On Sunday the party’s Facebook and Twitter accounts had links to the advert, saying the SABC has touched them (the EFF) “on the wrong side”.

“We’re going for them. They do not realize that we are not called fighters for nothing.”

“The SABC said it is inciteful, because we want to physically remove the e-toll system.”

There are some similarities in this advert to that of the DA’s – it features content of the Marikana bloodbath and of the recent protests at Bekkersdal.

A press conference will be held by the party later today.
For more http://www.news24.com

Amcu, miners to discuss new wage offer


Johannesburg – Labour union Amcu and platinum producers are expected to meet on Tuesday following a new wage offer for striking mineworkers.
The offer, which was tabled on Friday, would see entry level underground employees’ minimum cash remuneration – comprising basic wages and holiday, living out and other allowances – rise to R12 500 per month, or R150 000 per annum by July 2017.

Cash remuneration excluded medical and retirement benefits, and any bonuses.

Anglo American Platinum, Impala Platinum (Implats) and Lonmin were seeking to end a three-month-long strike in the platinum sector.
Implats spokesperson Johan Theron said it had not received any formal feedback since the new offer was tabled.

The strike had so far resulted in R6.047m in employees’ lost earnings and R13.607m in companies’ revenue lost, according to the Chamber of Mines’ website.

Members from the Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union downed tools on January 23 to push for a basic monthly salary of R12 500. The union previously rejected a wage increase of up to 9%.
SAPA

Death count in ferry sinking tops 100


Jindo – One by one, coast guard officers carried the newly arrived bodies covered in white sheets from a boat to a tent, the first step in identifying a sharply rising number of corpses from a South Korean ferry that sank nearly a week ago.

Dozens of police officers in neon green jackets formed a cordon around the dock as the bodies arrived on Tuesday. Since divers found a way over the weekend to enter the submerged ferry, the death count has shot up.

Officials said on Tuesday that confirmed fatalities had reached 104, with nearly 200 people still missing.

If a body lacks identification, details such as height, hair length and clothing are posted on a white signboard for families waiting on Jindo Island for news.

The bodies are then driven in ambulances to two tents: one for men and boys, the other for women and girls. Families listen quietly outside as an official briefs them, then line up and file in. Only relatives are allowed inside.

For a brief moment there is silence. Then the anguished cries, the wailing, the howling. They have not known for nearly a week whether they should grieve or not, and now they sound like they’re being torn apart.

“How do I live without you? How will your mother live without you?” a woman cries out.

She is with a woman who emerges from a tent crying and falls into a chair where relatives try to comfort her. One stands above her and cradles her head in her hands, stroking her face.

“Bring back my daughter!” the woman cries, calling out her child’s name in agony. A man rushes over, lifts her on his back and carries her away.

‘Murderous behaviour’

This heartbreak still awaits many families of those still missing from the submerged ferry Sewol, or at least those whose relatives’ bodies are ultimately recovered.

Families who once dreamed of miraculous rescues now simply hope their loved ones’ remains are recovered soon, before the ocean does much more damage.

“At first, I was just very sad, but now it’s like an endless wait,” said Woo Dong-suk, a construction worker and uncle of one of the students. “It’s been too long already. The bodies must be decayed. The parents’ only wish right now is to find the bodies before they are badly decomposed.”

About 250 of the more than 300 missing or dead are students from a single high school, in Ansan near Seoul, who were on their way to the southern tourist island of Jeju.

Bodies are being identified visually, but family members have been providing DNA samples in case decomposition makes that impossible.

The families, and South Koreans more broadly, have at times responded with fury. The captain initially told passengers to stay in their rooms and waited more than half an hour to issue an evacuation order as the Sewol sank. By then, the ship had tilted so much it is believed that many passengers were trapped inside.

At a Cabinet briefing on Monday, President Park Geun-hye said, “What the captain and part of the crew did is unfathomable from the viewpoint of common sense. Unforgivable, murderous behaviour”. The comments were posted online by the presidential Blue House.

The captain, Lee Joon-seok, and two crew members have been arrested on suspicion of negligence and abandoning people in need, and prosecutors said on Monday that four other crew members have been detained.

Divers

On Monday night, prosecutors requested a court to issue a warrant to formally arrest these four people, a prosecution office said in a release late on Monday.

A transcript of ship-to-shore communications released on Sunday revealed a ship that was crippled with indecision. A crew member asked repeatedly whether passengers would be rescued after abandoning ship even as the ferry tilted so sharply that it became impossible to escape.

Lee, aged 68, has said he waited to issue an evacuation order because the current was strong, the water was cold and passengers could have drifted away before help arrived.

But maritime experts said he could have ordered passengers to the deck – where they would have had a greater chance of survival – without telling them to abandon ship.

Emergency task force spokesperson Koh Myung-seok said bodies have mostly been found on the third and fourth floor of the ferries, where many passengers seemed to have gathered. Many students were also housed in cabins on the fourth floor, near the stern of the ship, Koh said.

The cause of the disaster is not yet known, and only became murkier on Tuesday, when a South Korean official said the ferry had not taken an unusually sharp turn shortly before the sinking as had been initially believed.

Data from the Sewol’s automatic identification system, an on-board transponder used for tracking, shows that the ship made a J-shaped turn before listing heavily and ultimately sinking.

A ministry of ocean and fisheries official had said on Friday that the vessel had taken a sharp turn. But on Tuesday a ministry official said in a phone interview that the AIS data had been incomplete. He says the true path of the ship became clear when the data was fully restored.

The official declined to elaborate or give his name, but provided a map that showed both the hard 115-degree turn originally estimate and the more gradual path the restored data describes.

It remains unclear why the ship turned around shortly before it sank. The third mate, who has been arrested, was steering at the time of the accident, in a challenging area where she had not steered before, and the captain said he was not on the bridge at the time.

Authorities have not identified the third mate, though a colleague identified her as Park Han-gyeol. Senior prosecutor Ahn Song-don said on Monday the third mate has told investigators why she made the turn, but he would not reveal her answer, and more investigation is needed to determine whether the answer is accurate.

Most of the bodies found have been recovered since the weekend, when divers, frustrated for days by strong currents, bad weather and poor visibility, were finally able to enter the ferry. But conditions remain challenging.

“I cannot see anything in front … and the current underwater is too fast,” said Choi Jin-ho, a professional diver who searched the ferry Monday. “Then breathing gets faster and panic comes.”
AP

Over 1m ‘born frees’ not registered to vote


Johannesburg – More than a million “born-frees” have not registered to vote for the 7 May general election, The Star reported on Tuesday.

Only a third [33.6%] of those born after 1994 have registered to cast their votes. This meant that 646 313 out of a possible 1.9 million “born-frees” were ready to vote next month.
For more http://www.news24.com

MEC: Lebotloane clinic to operate 24 hours


As part of the re-engineering strategy of primary care in the province, MEC Dr Magome Masike will on Tuesday, 22 April 2014 declare Lebotloane Clinic which falls under Moretele Sub-District a 24 hour station of quality health care services.  

Moretele Health sub-district, is one of the five sub district within the Bojanala and the most rural sub- district comprising of 22 health facilities out of which 6 facilities render 24 hour services.

 

Lebotloane clinic is one of the clinics currently rendering seven days 12 hour health services within Kutlwanong cluster, which exclude maternity  with a population of 12 267 supporting areas of Mmukubyane, Little Lebotloane and Tlholwe.

 

The department’s decision of extending working hours at Lebotloane Clinic will afford poor communities of  Mmukubyane, Little Lebotloane and Tlholwe with 24 hour access to health care services, accommodate those who couldn’t attend the clinic between 7am to 4pm because of their jobs and  assist in eliminating the long queues that are often found in some of the health facilities.

“It is our wish as a department to convert all remaining seven days 12 hour clinics in our province to render 24 hour of health care service. But with financial constraints we are facing, that will surely not happen overnight. However, I can assure the North West residents that we will not rest until that goal has been realised,” said MEC Masike

 

The department has appointed at least four additional professional nurses at the said Clinic through absorption of community service nurses and two Nursing Assistants

 

The clinic will provide comprehensive primary health care in the form of the following services: a Ante Natal care, Post Natal Care, child health, reproductive health, ART Services TB, HIV & AIDS testing and councelling, Mental Health. Dental health services, health promotion and occupational health, as well as communicable and non-communicable diseases such as hypertension, diabetes.

 

MEC Masike will also take some time to listen to suggestions and concerns from members of the community at the meeting scheduled to take place at Lebotloane Clinic at 15h00.-TDN
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