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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 (of 158 pages)
Thick babes are fun to be with my nigga ![]() |
ikemesit4477:Ikole ekiti |
sharpwriter: ![]() |
Edonarians |
Pvin:Nope.... Ikole Ekiti |
sharpwriter:Ikole ekiti bro |
elgramz:Get sense na ![]() |
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For a very vibrant young Bamidele Adekunle, who laid down his life for his beloved country. He was grusomely murdered by the insurgents in the course of keeping peace in the troublesome part of the nation. He fought gallantlly and his friends are pouring out their tributes to this young chap. Rest in peace brother, till we meet to part no more Cc: lalasticlala
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Xmen149:Lol u served/ or serving in ekiti? |
Twrecks:I just look at them and smile, cos I have younger sisters too. I can't stand and watch someone do such to them too |
I won't do what will tarnish my image just cos of 10months service year. The stupid girls here in Ekiti too am serving don tear eyes. Dem go dey go house from school dey tell me, corper I just dropped to say hi. Me go tell them, thank you "your mum should be expecting you home now" ![]() |
Gangster1ms:That gal too pretty |
FrenchWay:U need checkup |
freakcin:Law faculty had 21 first class too (first of its kind in UI)..... Out of the 21, 18 were females |
freakcin:Playing bet9ja.... Lol ![]() Those girls are just too good.... We entered UI the same year (2013). Met most of them at those 100L tutorials for fresh students. |
Dumb people everywhere.... Just to catch fun tho cos I know he's joking But he needs serious lashing Me self wan study lawyer ![]() |
Adelakun Adenike, in her early 20s, emerged as the best graduating student of the Faculty of Pharmacy University of Ibadan in the 2016/2017 academic session with 6.8 CGPA out of the maximum 7.0. In this interview with Adebisi Yusuff Adebayo she speaks about her tortuous journey to academic excellence. Interviewer: Tell us about yourself Adenike: The first of four children, a fashion designer in my spare time. I am from Osun state, Atakumosa West Local Government. I had my senior secondary school years at Oladipo Alayande, School of Science, Oke-Bola, Ibadan while my Junior Secondary School was at Queens School, Apata, Ibadan. Interviewer: Why did you choose pharmacy? Adenike: For me, it was simply my love for chemistry, so I searched for professions that fit in with this, pharmacy stood out for me. The plus to this was it had other areas in it with the aim of providing care. On a light note, I had always jokingly said as a kid that I wanted to discover a drug. Interviewer: What were the things you found interesting about pharmacy? Adenike: There is this awesome feeling when you discover a potential drug-drug interaction on a prescription, inappropriate or unnecessary medications. How we could do so much regardless of unfavourable circumstances, pharmacy school is a toughening ground. The blend of subjects from nuclear magnetic resonance to pharmacy laws to trichomes. It was hardcore but it literally gave the super power feeling. I usually tell myself ‘with all I have done in pharmacy school, I have the strength for the tasks ahead’. Pharmaceutics extemporaneous preparation labs were interesting, you could make an elegant preparation and still get zero because of a wrong label. Our lecturer always say ‘a wrong label mean a poison, and you just killed someone’ literarily. Though, the intricate details in pharmacy school stood out for me, the interesting stories in pharmacy school includes my classmates, the stalwarts, we have been through a lot and we had the laughs too. Interviewer: is pharmacy really hard? Adenike: Is pharmacy hard? Yes. Is pharmacy really hard? No. Pharmacy stretches you within your elastic limit, it seemed tough at first but we grew strong. Interviewer: What CGPA did you graduate with and what were your GPs in each levels for the five years? Adenike: I graduated with a CGPA of 6.8 out of the max. 7.0 100 level: 6.9/7.0 200 level: 6.8/7.0 300 level: 6.9/7.0 400 level: 6.8/7.0 Interviewer: Given the volume of work, what was your reading pattern like? Adenike: There is no clear cut reading pattern. I have this sense of responsibility to know and so most times I would write notes alongside my lecture notes or slides, in addition to those ones, I utilized notes I got from Google and also videos on YouTube. Everything is literarily on the internet. The course determines how I read. I start reading early before the tests rush. These things are not cast in stones; the course determines the reading style. The utmost thing was I prayerfully read. It was not about the length of the reading but about the quality of what was read. Watching a video on a subject could reduce the time it takes to understand a course material, it might look stressful but it is worth it, it also widens my knowledge on the subject matter. Interviewer: Having 6.8 CGPA couldn’t have come easy, how did you do it? Adenike: I did not do it alone. God walked through the journey with me. You might think this is cliché but it is the truth. There was my place of hard work, consistency, prioritizing my schedules, taking the extra mile, talking with people who push you. God amplified all these and we all see the result now. Interviewer: Were you in a relationship? Adenike: Yes. Interviewer: What advice do you have for pharmacy students? Adenike: Choose to stay tough regardless of what life throws at you. Choose to love your profession, you can only make sacrifice for something you love. Checkout how pharmacy is practiced in other countries, I do that a lot, pharmacy is unique and dynamic. Talk to God about your daily pharmacy hurdles, they say a problem shared is a problem half solved, now imagine when you share the problem with God. It is worthy of note that 14 other graduands also clinched first class namely: OKORO Maureen Chibuzor OWOLOWO Funmilayo Mosadijeofa OYETUNDE Yemisi Mary ODUNSANYA Anuoluwapo Esther AUDU Rukayat Ohunene ADEWUSI Shukuralilai Abidemi OMO-SOWHO Uvie Blaise SANUSI Dolapo Asisat AKIKUOWO Abosede BABALOLA Tolulope Stephen ALADE Jeremiah Adewuyi AGBEBI Emmanuel Ayodeji OMOTUYI Adeola Tunmike OYETUNDE Yemisi Mary https://rxhealthinfo./2018/03/23/meet-ms-adelakun-adenike-the-overall-best-graduating-student-faculty-of-pharmacy-university-of-ibadan-2016-2017-session/
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We understand that you've got nothing to offer us than that bushy pvssy of yours ![]() |
Oiling her engine don do for me, if she can ask me for that help . ![]() |
I will buy this for my mum first before any other person |
profmsboi:Too much, the letter should be address to Pogba then for financial assistance |
Weah made this possible |
Such a nagging fellow. I don't pray for her type for my enemy sef. |
Pained artist |
We are team Wizkid |
ucheuzor1:Cos na mu.mu naim u be |
SuperSuave:are you that hungry. Sorry |
conductor123:And e no go soft again ![]() |
Is it that I don't watch movie ni, I don't know these people Nairaland do call nollywood actresses |
ATM debited one baba in front of me without dispensing cash to him. The baba grabbed me and shouted "you are my witness oooo" Wetin be my own for there ![]() |
by Haleem OlatunjiCampus Beat THE Vice Chancellor of Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, Professor Eyitope Ogunbodede, hasdisclosed that students of the institution pay as low as N90 for accommodation and an additional N2,500 as charges for maintenance,making it a total of N2,590 per annum as accommodation fee.Professor Ogunbodede disclosed this while delivering his speech at the International Campus Journalism Conference, hosted by the Association of Campus Journalists, Obafemi Awolowo University.He mentioned that no university will be happy to see students suffering on the grounds of poor accommodation. For this reason, headded that the University has identified the problems related to the problem and has started makingmoves to tackle them.“What students pay on campus per annum is N90 plus N2,500 for maintenance fees making a total of N2,590 for a whole year and they enjoy free light and free water,” he said.He further said that “less than 25 million naira is made from the halls of residence per year. The monthly electricity bill when students are in session is about 60 million, and when they are not in session, it is between 35-40 million”.The Vice Chancellor admitted that although the fees paid for accommodation by students appears to be very small, it does notaffect the economic standing of the University.Professor Ogunbodede, who also was a member of ACJ OAU in 1977, said that his administration will continue to work towards ensuring the comfort of students in the halls of residence. http://www.tribuneonlineng.com/oau-students-pay-n90-for-accommodation-per-year-%e2%80%95vice-chancellor/ Cc lalasticlala
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