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Education / Re: 2015/2016 OAU Aspirant Thread. by angiography(m): 7:48pm On Jan 16, 2016
HaneefahRN:

Thank u my brother. He is worthy of all praises.
Abi o, hope to see u soon

Please pm me ur no. I'd be glad to have chat with you...as a friend
Education / Re: 2015/2016 OAU Aspirant Thread. by angiography(m): 8:13pm On Jan 14, 2016
HaneefahRN:

Join me in thanking God. I av been admitted

Whao!!!...my dear...

Congrats. Glory to God.

Lolzz..now I have a friend alreadily on campus.
Education / Re: 2015/2016 OAU Aspirant Thread. by angiography(m): 6:01pm On Jan 14, 2016
ridipedia:
Pls wat about medicine dentistry pharmacy lyk dat nt pd oo
Yes they have.


Rimini, up there, was just testifying he was admitted into Medicine
Jokes Etc / Re: FUNNY: Do You Know Your Nigerian States And Capitals? by angiography(m): 11:22am On Jan 14, 2016
grin grin grin

-"What's the capital of FCT"?
-"FCT doesn't have a capital naa. It's the capital of Nigeria. A capital can't have a capital naa..."


That got me laughing like kilode grin grin grin
Education / Re: The medical students and aspirants thread by angiography(m): 9:58am On Jan 14, 2016
Nad95:

pls i av been admited to study physiology. Does the policy implies that I will have to finish the course and probably graduate and go for mbbs for 3 years or should i go on with school and take anoda jamb cos medicine is really my passion.
Someone shud pls explain this policy to me as how it affects we newly admitted basic medical science students.
Thanks

The policy is yet to be adopted by the body regulating medicine practice in Nigeria. As such, it's yet to be implemented.


Now..., my Bro, with all humility, physiology ain't a course worth studying in Nigeria. A hard course, no doubt, but well, pls it's not just marketable in Nigeria. Don't waste 4yrs in university and end up obtaining DE into medicine later on(which ain't evensure).


Albeit, accept the admission now, and read crazily to be admitted into ur course of choice.
I wish you God speed

1 Like 1 Share

Education / Re: 2015/2016 OAU Aspirant Thread. by angiography(m): 9:39am On Jan 14, 2016
drseunzy:
I remember clearly this time last year, though the second list has been released before that time, but I had the confidence that I must be admitted, after 208 in the UTME and 282 in the Post-UTME with an aggregate of 245 for Econs in the next list, or even given a lower course. If not God, the UTME registration was extended, I obtained it on the 30th of January, I wrote the exam March 17th, yet the expected 3rd list wasn't out. It came out March ending but I wasn't still admitted. Thank God for the UTME I wrote that time. What am I trying to say, don't have full hope in OAU oooo, go and obtain the UTME form, who knows if JAMB won't extend their deadline
Some won't still yield and later will be crying'wolves' where there's none.

If you ain't an ex-predite, hmmm., don't put your eggs in one basket o.
I wish all good luck
Politics / Re: Why You Will Never See Groundnut Pyramids In The North by angiography(m): 3:30pm On Jan 12, 2016
Mutuwa:




Nigeria’s economic size is a blessing in disguise. It means the country will have a ready domestic market for its eventual industrial growth. It means it can envisage economies of scale not possible in smaller countries. Even now, Nigeria offers alluring returns for investors. Says Charles Robertson, Global Chief Economist at Renaissance Capital: “We know it’s not risk free, but look around the world and find another economy with 160 million people growing at 7 percent with such potential. It’s a struggle to find them.”
Countries go to war to acquire the kind of real estate that is Nigeria. This makes it all the more ludicrous that there are noises coming out of Southern Nigeria demanding that the country should be divided. The most ethnically jingoistic of these is the insistence that Nigeria would be better off without the North. It would appear that some Southern Nigerians have been intoxicated by oil. Since there is no oil in the North, they conclude that the North is no more than an albatross on the neck of the South and castigate it as a region defined by dependency.

This view is nothing short of idiotic. No serious-minded country relinquishes a region as rich and as resourceful as Northern Nigeria. Without the North, Nigeria’s much-vaunted potentials would vanish. Without the North, Nigeria would be nothing more than yet another balkanized and insignificant African country, or group of countries. Take the North out of the Nigerian equation and there can no longer be any black country in the world that can possibly attain the status of a major power in the world. Without the North, Nigeria and Nigerians would be reduced to nonentities.

Nigerians have been blinded by oil. Because of oil, we have become unproductively mono-cultural in our economy. However, oil is hardly the only major resource we have. Although oil revenues have brought us a great deal of financial prosperity, at the same time it stunted the inexorable emergence of agro-based industries in Nigeria.

The backbone of such promissory local industries is in Northern Nigeria.
The North is the breadbasket of Nigeria. A significant proportion of the food we eat down South comes from the North. The North occupies 70% of Nigeria’s land mass, giving it comparative advantage vis-à-vis the South in terms of agriculture, raw materials and livestock. A large chunk of the North is arable and supportive of year-round food production. Thanks largely to the North, there is no tropical agricultural crop known to man that cannot be grown in Nigeria. With a transition from subsistence to mechanized agriculture, Northern Nigeria alone can produce enough food to feed the whole of Africa.

Northern Nigeria is bigger than most African countries. Currently, Nigeria wastes a staggering 1.3 trillion naira on food imports; virtually one-third of the annual budget. But the North can produce all the food we need, thereby liberating valuable resources. Already, it is the North that feeds the South in Nigeria. Virtually all Southern food crops and livestock come from the North. Much of Nigeria’s water resources are also in the North. With the right policy mixes, the North will earn for Nigeria billions of dollars annually from agriculture.
Our Niger-Delta brothers should not get too carried away by their oil. If their oil is a national resource today, so will Northern agriculture and agro-allied industries be national resources tomorrow. Oil is a wasting asset. Short of new discoveries, Nigeria’s oil will expire within the next 50 years. However, Northern agriculture will never expire.

There is something else besides. There can be no doubt that there is oil in the North. It is only a matter of time before it is discovered. The geography and topography of the North and the discovery of oil in surrounding areas is a testament to this eventuality. Since there is oil in Cameroon, Chad and Niger Republic, the chances are pretty good that Northern states like Bauchi, Borno, Sokoto and Niger will one day become oil-producing states.

Moreover, the North is rich in mineral resources; far richer than the South. There is gold in Zamfara; uranium in Taraba; tin-ore in Plateau; columbite in Nassarawa; iron ore in Kogi; gysium in Gombe and limestone in Sokoto among others. Hydroelectricity for the country is provided from Kainji Dam and Shiroro Gorge. There are game reserves in the North including Argungu, which make it a potential money-spinner for tourism, a possible Kenya in the making if we can get rid of the scourge of Boko Haram.

Southern Nigerians should stop underestimating Northern industry. Northerners created the ground-nut pyramids, cotton farms and tanneries of old. With visionary national and regional leadership, these will surely make a comeback. So also will the textile factories of Gusau, Kaduna and Kano. All the Southern bigotry about the North being predominantly Moslem is just nonsense. When you see what economic wonders Moslems are doing in places like Dubai, Oman, Qatar, Abu Dhabi, Saudi Arabia and Turkey, you will realise that Nigeria has a lot to learn from Moslems.
It should not be forgotten that by far the most enterprising Nigerian today is a Northerner from Kano. According to the most recent Forbes Billionaires list of March 2014, Aliko Dangote is now the 23rd richest man in the world with a net worth of $25 billion dollars.

This is an amazing feat for an African and a Nigerian. Dangote is now richer than Alisher Usmanov; the richest man in Russia. He is also richer than Mukesh Ambani; India’s richest man. Dangote is all the more remarkable because he achieved this feat primarily through a route far less travelled by Nigerians: the hard, difficult grind of manufacturing.

This is just a bit.Eschew being myopic and sentimental please.Half knowledge is worse than full illiteracy.A person who does not read has no difference with one who did not go to school.. smiley

I gave you a 'like' Bro. ✔✔


But you also drifted to the bigotry you intended to preach about. Two wrongs doesn't make a right.
Education / Re: 2015/2016 OAU Aspirant Thread. by angiography(m): 6:15pm On Jan 11, 2016
dannyoung007:

I think its the same for pharmacy,nursing,med.rehab and Dentistry.......for 2015/2016 session twas about 75+ or so sha
alright...thanks very much bro
Career / Re: Am About To Resign Because Of My Boss Wickedness,harrassments And Embarassments! by angiography(m): 4:08pm On Jan 11, 2016
dire issue...

except you have guarantee of another job, don't ever make the mistake of leaving now that Nigeria is getting sicker.


worever happens to ur knowledge of human relations.

it happened to me, but I found way of making her my best friend afterward. I had a good letter of recommendation from her for a better job.

6 Likes

Education / Re: 2015/2016 OAU Aspirant Thread. by angiography(m): 11:57am On Jan 11, 2016
please, I want to ask how much was the tuition for MBBS students last session??

please
Romance / Re: After Two Weeks Of No Intimacy See The Story She Came Up With by angiography(m): 12:22am On Jan 11, 2016
I've actually seen a 14 years old girl raped b4 in her house.

so, had an abortion.


but op, you too dey ask 'mumu' question faa.

obviously, ur relationship is having ricket already

3 Likes 2 Shares

Education / Re: Agbo Odeh-Hillary Of BSU Breaks Academic Record After 17 Carryovers by angiography(m): 4:38pm On Jan 09, 2016
Vision4God:
17 unit carryover & graduated wt 1st class?
I kinda doubt ds story.
How many years did he spend in d uni? And are der no pre-requisite courses??

Anyway congrats to him
You're too lazy to read the post yet too eager to post a comment.

Spits
Romance / Re: Are Some Nigerian Girls This Boring? (pic) by angiography(m): 5:38pm On Jan 08, 2016
Estharfabian:
Rather than replying This way...I'd just spare You the torture by not replying You...grin that's way better than that hogwash I saw up there...shocked


Maybe it's a super power Buh I'm really very gifted at bringing Up gists whilst Chatting! even to the most Boring of Males!undecided



Sweet...then

Care I ask your number?? wink wink wink
Education / Re: Is FUNAAB, Abeokuta The Most Beautiful Public University Campus In Nigeria? by angiography(m): 3:23pm On Jan 08, 2016
Whao...apparently beautiful.

I'm not into rating Nigeria universities tho...
Wth, none is even amongst the best 800 in the world. Smh
Politics / Re: Buhari's Economic Policies disproportionately affecting Igbos? - Cramjones by angiography(m): 12:50pm On Jan 08, 2016
PedroJP:






My friend u put things in place first to make things easy 4 ur subjects b4 u make such policies and not to act like an almighty in order to punish ur perceived enemy u can never get at.



At least u start ur no importation from oil sector which will help locals both in availability of petroleum products, favourable cost and energy boost. Then u can talk about restricting importation of on other sectors. No need to tell u more as u are not d dullllard and can't say his intentions though he has non other than wickedness.

So how was this aimed at the bringing the igbos down.??


You guys should get a life

6 Likes

Politics / Re: Buhari's Economic Policies disproportionately affecting Igbos? - Cramjones by angiography(m): 12:48pm On Jan 08, 2016
Bigprozzie:


Take your bare faced lies and shove it where the sun dont shine.

Do you think you are conversing with the illiterates that have fallen for your self absorbed and low self esteem induced threads.

You are inconsequential, an attention seeker and 90% of the time, you make no sense.

@ Topic

No decent Nigerian cares if any set of people are disproportionately affected.

1. The customs must be sanitized, Nigeria loses billions of dollars because of the corruption in the body. Importation of goods should not be the mainstay of the economy. Those brilliant igbos should start manufacturing the products they are currently importing

2. Ambode ordered the destruction of the shop at Oshodi and that is the right decision. The market is an eyesore and is used by hoodlums and criminals to victimise Lagosians. Besides, the LASG gave the traders enough notice to vacate the market.

The OP is just playing the devils advocate and he impresses no one.
Thank you Bro


I never knew that cramjones is that stupiid to put on the most ethnic biased write-up I've seen this year.

Funny boy claimed he sat with Buhari in drawing up policies...perhaps he thinks we all are sets of ignorant dudes.

Smh at the moderator that push this to the front page

5 Likes

Politics / Re: Buhari's Economic Policies disproportionately affecting Igbos? - Cramjones by angiography(m): 12:42pm On Jan 08, 2016
cramjones:


Talking down the points I have raised without raising any counter factual points, just makes you look stupiid. I have been in the APC. I have sat with Buhari a number of times, I am an ardent supporter of Buhari, but when someone is toeing a wrong line, you must call it out. I am not even Igbo, so please don't sound like an idiot.

-CramJones
You're really stupid for thinking you have an iota of wisdom

2 Likes

Politics / Re: What I Saw In Oshodi This Morning(pictures) by angiography(m): 3:39pm On Jan 06, 2016
Lovexme:
They must have been pre-informed before the demolitions.

I always wonder what goes on in the mind of people who decide to cross an express road while standing under the pedestrian bridge. That's madness.
I used to walk a km to reach a pedestrian bridge here in wuse, shoo, I've learnt how to cross the 10 lane road. grin grin grin grin

The day my phone fell of my pocket while crossing thotho sad sad , I just didn't bother to look back. cry cry
Education / Re: 2015/2016 Direct Entry Admission Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-ife by angiography(m): 11:04am On Jan 06, 2016
bencharlie001:
what abt pharmacy?
can I Use two olevel sittings too?
Oau Accepts two sittings for all courses
Education / Re: 2015/2016 Direct Entry Admission Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-ife by angiography(m): 11:02am On Jan 06, 2016
JOOHEL:


Yeah,. I dnt knw the mr bayo can u help me ask if 5 points can get me admitted in any Nigerian school?
I'll give u Mr Bayo's no. Send a pm
Education / Re: The medical students and aspirants thread by angiography(m): 10:03pm On Jan 05, 2016
Education / Re: The Only Sentence In English Language That Contains All The Alpabeths by angiography(m): 9:32pm On Jan 05, 2016
Alphabet'S'...

English language has only one alphabet kwa.

We only have 26 letters.
Jobs/Vacancies / Re: Urgent Vacancies In A Hospital In Lagos!!! by angiography(m): 1:02pm On Jan 04, 2016
medlinelocum:
We are seeking for the employment of the following in a hospital:

1. Pharmacy Assistants
2. Female Nurses (Single and Double qualified)
3. Science Laboratory Technicians
4. gynecologist (Locum and Permanent)

interested candidates should forward their cv to info@medlinelocum.com
you can also visit www.medlinelocum.com
Female nurses...owkayy
Education / Re: 2015/2016 OAU Aspirant Thread. by angiography(m): 12:48pm On Jan 04, 2016
cheesy grin grin grin grin

Education / Re: 2015/2016 OAU Aspirant Thread. by angiography(m): 12:47pm On Jan 04, 2016
angry grin grin
angry angry
Education / Re: 2015/2016 OAU Aspirant Thread. by angiography(m): 12:47pm On Jan 04, 2016
angry
Double post
Education / Re: 2015/2016 Direct Entry Admission Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-ife by angiography(m): 11:58am On Jan 04, 2016
JOOHEL:

Pls with 5 point in jupeb can I get admitted in OAU
Well, to be honest... That's rather low- at least for an 'highly sought after course'.
5 points is almost as like having 'C', 'E', 'E'.


Well, I can't say...this' the first set of Jupeb into oau. All what the admission officer said then was that anyone applying into medicine, nursing, law et al must have at least 12points. I don't know about other courses tho.


Mr Bayo may be helpful than you thinkthink wink
Education / Re: 2015/2016 OAU Aspirant Thread. by angiography(m): 4:03pm On Dec 31, 2015
dharmmy007:


What are you saying.... Telling us that is it that we don't know oau is slow before choosing it .. I would take that as a rhetorical question which you should answer yourself.you talk as if u av not experienced what it means for your fellow colleagues to resume n ur school's admission list is still pending...if you can't help with the issue on ground, at least try not to add salt to the exposed injury..._Another point u raised was concerning the students protest, stating a reason for them to keep protesting until their wishes are granted... It's nothing but foolishness to keep using the same method and yet expecting a different result.. Itz high time the SU went to the drawing board and restrategize, cos their current method is not yielding a positive result...... #correctmeifI'mwrong#
Reasonable I'd say
Politics / Re: Glaring Difference Between Igbo And Biafra by angiography(m): 8:48am On Dec 29, 2015
hmmm.

Biafra or otherwise... They should ask Kosovo

1 Like

Literature / Re: Five Books You Must Have Read As A Nigerian by angiography(m): 11:20am On Dec 26, 2015
Ghost01:
Ola Rotimi is the author of "Our Husband Has Gone Mad Again", not Wole Soyinka.
oh..yea...
and also, 'The gods are not to blame'

1 Like

Literature / Re: Five Books You Must Have Read As A Nigerian by angiography(m): 2:37pm On Dec 24, 2015
mytym:


very interesting books on your list

6. The Children of Anansewa

7. The Beautyful ones are not yet born ...Ghanaian author Ayi kwei arma

8. African Child by Camara Late

9. Ralia the Sugar girl

Add yours
I read all

1 Like

Literature / Re: Five Books You Must Have Read As A Nigerian by angiography(m): 2:36pm On Dec 24, 2015
"Our husband has gone mad again"

Suffice to say the title of the book was too captivating to neglect....

Soyinka is really madtmad :Dt cheesy

Lol...the play is brilliant tho...

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