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Jobs/VacanciesI Need Someone Very Good With Drupal by phy(op): 10:21pm On Dec 09, 2024
Please I need someone that is very good with Drupal to work on a project. I will need to see sample projects that you have completed. Post your contact email (only) on this thread and I will reach out to you.
PoliticsDominic Adesanya Jumped Over White House Fence by phy(op):
A man jumped over the White House fence on Wednesday night, but this time, the man barely made it onto the lawn before being taken down by two police dogs and quickly detained by Secret Service agents.

"Dog got him," a Secret Service spokesman said.

The Secret Service identified the man as 32-year-old Dominic Adesanya of Bel Air, Maryland, and said charges against him are pending.

The two dogs with the K-9 unit were taken to a vet for injuries they suffered in the incident.

Wednesday's incident is the second time someone has tried to jump the fence at the White House in the last month.

In mid-September, a man, whom authorities identified as Omar Gonzalez, made it into the White House before being detained.

http://www.cnn.com/2014/10/22/politics/white-house-fence-jumper/index.html?hpt=hp_t2
TravelRe: 23 Year Old Woman Caught Trying To Smuggle 1.5 Kilograms Of Cocaine In Dreads by phy(op): 4:38am On Dec 23, 2013
pragmatist_m: Love of moneeeeyy. SMH. Now she will answer for her actions.
People can go to any length for the love of money. Now she may have to pay for it possibly with death especially in a place like Asia.
Travel23 Year Old Woman Caught Trying To Smuggle 1.5 Kilograms Of Cocaine In Dreads by phy(op): 4:08am On Dec 23, 2013
Not sure of where to post this, but since it's travel related I decided to drop it here.

[flash=425,344]
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E5y1vVdNox4 [/flash]
Nairaland GeneralRe: My Experience At Ikoyi Prison With Inmates And Warders by phy: 3:27am On Dec 16, 2013
A great thread. Thanks for sharing!

I will also align with the school of thought that you went there for Yahaya and Sunday. I'm without doubt that this has made you a better person.

We have all seen the state of Naija prisons without getting there and I pray this story will call for some change. That people are convicted or remanded does not call for the kind of hell described by the Op. I pray that some people in some quarters would do something.

Once again, thanks Experimentist - It was more of a series for me.
Education6-year-old Suspended For Kissing Girl, Accused Of intimate Harassment by phy(op):
http://www.cnn.com/2013/12/11/living/6-year-old-suspended-kissing-girl/index.html?hpt=hp_c2

(CNN) -- This is another one of those stories that seems absolutely hard to believe.

A 6-year-old boy near Colorado Springs, Colorado, was suspended from school for kissing a girl on the hand. You read that correctly.

"It was during class," first-grader Hunter Yelton said in an interview with CNN affiliate KRDO. "We were doing reading group, and I leaned over and kissed her on the hand. That's what happened."

Not only did Hunter's peck get him suspended from school, but the school accused him of sexual harassment, KRDO reported.

Hunter's mom, Jennifer Saunders, is outraged.

"This is taking it to an extreme that doesn't need to be met with a 6-year-old," Saunders told KRDO. Now my son's asking questions, 'What is sex, mommy?'"
Stay in touch!
Don't miss out on the conversation we're having at CNN Living. Follow us on Twitter and Facebook for the latest stories and tell us what's influencing your life.

She said Hunter had problems at school before, getting suspended for rough-housing and for kissing the same girl on the cheek. The family has been working with him on "class disruptions" by grounding him and giving him "big restrictions," Saunders said.

Robin Gooldy, the superintendent of Cañon City Schools, told KRDO that Hunter's record will remain within the district and that his behavior fits the school policy description of sexual harassment, which includes unwanted touching.

"Our main interest in this is having the behavior stop because the story is not just about the student that was disciplined, it is also about the student receiving the unwanted advances," Gooldy told HLN. "We have to think about both students in the situation."

Saunders said the girl in question was "fine with it" because Hunter and the girl consider themselves "boyfriend and girlfriend." The girl's parents have not commented publicly on the issue. But Saunders wants her son's record cleared of anything suggesting sexual harassment.

On Wednesday, Saunders told CNN that the boy's school principal would ask the superintendent to reconsider removing the term sexual harassment from Hunter's record. The superintendent did not return a phone call from CNN.

"Remove it from his record," Saunders told KRDO. "I need to stand up and fight for him. I can't just let that happen because it's not the case. It's not what happened at all."

Hunter for his part said he feels "sorry" for doing something wrong and tries to be good in school.

"But I just have a lot of energy. Six-year-olds, they have a lot of energy," Hunter said.

They sure do, and as a parent of a 6-year-old and a 7-year-old, an innocent peck on the cheek or on the hand seems as natural for kids this age as declarations of who they plan to marry.

They don't know anything about sex or sexual harassment. So how on earth can they be accused of such behavior?

Reaction online to Hunter's story has been swift, with the majority of commenters expressing pure outrage.

"The school probably traumatized the kid for life with that stupid move," wrote Brenda Esselman on the Facebook page for "New Day."

"Poor child, he's (too) young to even know what sexual harassment is," Ortencia Solis also wrote on Facebook.

"Another example of how we are now overreacting to something as simple as a childhood crush," Benny Barboza wrote.

Eric Vetch, also on Facebook, said he kissed a girl when he was 6. His punishment? "I remember writing on the chalkboard 'I will not kiss girls at school,' and it was a private Christian school ... go figure."

On the other side, there are a small number of people voicing some support for the school's actions.

"The kid shouldn't go around kissing someone's child. Because if it was my daughter, the parents and I would be talking. Let's keep it real," Russell M. Walker wrote on Facebook.

We clearly need to hear more from the school and the school's district because this might turn out to be another case where the pressure to follow set school rules gets in the way of common sense.

We saw this recently with two other stories: the Long Island school heavily criticized for banning most ball playing and even requiring supervision of games of tag while the school yard was under construction, and in Boston, where a student who allegedly went to a party to drive a friend home who was drunk was suspended from playing on her school's volleyball team.

What do you think about this latest case of a school taking a controversial stand? Do you think a 6-year-old should be suspended and accused of sexual harassment for kissing a girl on the hand? Let us know in the comments below.
Nairaland GeneralRe: My Experience At Ikoyi Prison With Inmates And Warders by phy: 9:56pm On Dec 10, 2013
babseg: Op if ur story na true I can confirm to you that u be real bad boy.

How can you stay in the prison for days without your family coming to help.
Didn't you read that he was arrested on Friday and how do you expect him to settle the unexpected bail terms in a day. Pls let's desist from being judgmental.

Op ride on, I've been following ur posts since Sunday.
TravelRe: Two Female Immigration Officers Collapse On Parade Ground by phy: 7:27pm On Nov 29, 2013
kolawaxxy: These women are nothing but decorations! I always have a good laugh whenever I see women in the military.
Ndus4real: There's no war yet ordinary training,dem don dey colapse, chai!! I pity ladies involving dier serves in military oo!!
It is more unfortunate that both of you could be this gender-biased without knowing the difference between a military and paramilitary organization.
EducationRe: UNILORIN Engineers Invent Biometric Machine by phy: 5:23am On Oct 08, 2013
It's saddening to know that a national newspaper does not know the difference between an invention and modification/re-design. Is this a brand new idea or what? Journalism in this country is ridiculous and this must have passed through at least an editor. I hope the professors did not participate in this misleading headline as this is a form of plagiarism or piracy if tagged an invention.
PoliticsRe: TRANSCRIPT Of President Jonathan's Speech At The UN General Assembly by phy: 3:10am On Sep 26, 2013
This is really a good and impressive speech.
TravelRe: General U.s.a (student) Visa Enquiries-part4 by phy: 7:12pm On Sep 16, 2013
seunolumonday: Pls am in deep poo i tôt my uncle told me oct7 lagos,Now he just sent me my appointment letter is now i just saw oct3rd 7:30am Abuja,and i stay in lagos pls Hw will i get dere,which hotel is nearer to d embassy,how many days will i use after i get d visa,dont know anywhere,dont no any cheap flight to take dere a day b4,D way i hear of us embassy in abuja am so scared.pls help me out all dose of u dat had ur interview in abj and u live in Lag
Just calm down, either Lagos or Abj is good for you. Make sure you get to Abuja 2 days before your interview at least to prevent any form of delay. If you have any friend/family in Abj you can stay with them or better still check into a hotel. You obviously will need a cab to the place and just try to be there at least 30-45mins before the time to work on your composure. All the best!

Wishing all prospective and current students the best in their academics.
TravelRe: Life In The Usa As A Student. by phy: 5:27am On Sep 16, 2013
simpleE: Good day.... i want advise on this. I have admission to a US school for masters this fall session and i have my F-1 visa too. I am now in the US and genuinely intend to study but i'm having difficulties with finances. I was to buy some goods for some clients and send them to Nigeria and my profit from it was what i intended using for tuition fees. But unfortunately my clients backed out and asked for a refund which i have returned to them. Now i don't have any means of paying my tuition. I'l like to seek advise from the house on what to do. What advise would you have for me in-order not to fall out of status? I do want to study but funding isn't possible now. I've been to the US twice on visits and never breached any laws..... Which Websites can i search on to see if i can get scholarships if possible or if it isn't late for this sessions
If you have a relative or friend that is a citizen or Green card holder and they trust you, you can take a student loan and ask them to cosign for you. In most cases, you can not get a scholarship in your first semester. You can get a scholarship either with your admission (prior to starting your program) or after the first semester when you have a GPA.
PoliticsRe: Political Engagement: A New Approach By Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, Mni by phy(op): 7:12pm On Jun 08, 2013
last part


Approaching the Modern Democracy
Traditional political engagements were, until the coming of the internet revolutions, carried out largely by the civil societies and opposition political groups. But the internet has introduced a medium not only for instant dissemination of information and broader based interaction, but one that has also offered us a new space for the gestation of political ideologies, mobilisations and revolts.

The trigger of this internet-based political revolution is, perhaps, the suicide of Tunisia’s Mohamed Bouazizi, a young vendor whose singular act to protest repeated harassment by the local police punctured the overstayed dictatorship of that North African country. Bouazizi’s death would not have been noticed without the internet, and social networking sites from where cell phone photograph of the dead vendor stirred up the anger of fellow citizens. The defeat of Ben Ali by the protestors sent a message to other similarly oppressed people, a message that went beyond the North Africa territories.

What has this got to do with Nigeria, you ask? The Bouazizi Effect is not only an instigator of Arab Spring, it taught disgruntled citizens worldwide a way to take their anger beyond cyberspace. It taught the loudest way to condemn anti-people policies. It taught Bahrainis to demand for a freer political clime… It taught the Egyptians to demand for a new president… It taught the Libyans to take up arms against their president whom they not only overthrew but killed… It taught the Yemenis to oust their president. And, welcome back home, it inspired Nigerians to take to the street in their revolt against the removal of fuel subsidy in January 2012.

While the decision to challenge unpopular policies is laudable, absolute orderliness is not expected from angry young men on the streets. This is where we must rub minds, like family, to find a way out of this mess; how do we end this reign of corruptions and insensitivity to the plights of the common man without subjecting any of us to the bullets of those asked to send us back to our houses in which we find miseries and hopelessness? How do we tell our political leaders that a thing is missing without getting shot? I use “we” because I’m just as passionate and concerned as you and YOU! I use “we” because if we allow ourselves to be divided into “Us” and “Them”, the possibility of winning this war is null. The exclusionists who invented “them” to stop us from forming a formidable political “we” are the people we must fight, and there is just one way to achieve this: Citizen Engagement!

The Meaning of Political Engagement
My commonsense understanding of engagement in a democratic polity is the realisation of one’s rights, having studied and understood the deficiencies inherent in a system from which expectations of satisfaction have been unsatisfied. Political engagement is inspired or justified by one’s decision to discharge his or her constitutional responsibilities in an attempt to either react to an unpopular reform or policy or merely embark on a personal quest to contribute one’s quota to a government found wanting.

In our response to the dynamism of present politics, the traditional engagement that tasked the civil societies and opposition parties with engaging incumbent governments and their reforms or policies, we must pander to the non-violent form of citizenship mobilisation popularised by Bouazizi Effect. Mind you, I do not mean setting oneself ablaze to register a grievance. I mean exploring the power of our numbers, from the internet to the physical landscape, to investigate and challenge a political injustice; I mean defying attempts by exclusionists to tear us apart in our campaign for an ideal candidate; I mean understanding that for achieving impact, an engagement in cyberspace is not enough until it is propounded and taken to the actual world. Here again, we have a task before us: Citizenship Mobilisation.

Nigeria: Engaging the Modern Politics
In 1999, we welcomed a democracy with a hope of building a civilian government in which every citizen is an active participant. A decade later, our democracy was led into chaos where the “Who” and the “What” of our identifications are colourfully worn to pronounce our differences and divides. This is a masterfully orchestrated bang that opened the Pandora box we have tightly secured since the unfortunate events of the Nigerian Civil War—in fact, since before then! We have existed as a nation struggling to forgive itself of the mistakes of yesterdays, but while we struggled with this, our democracy has become modelled into an avenue where sentiments are highlighted by pro-exclusion politicians to corner the votes of their kinsmen because they cannot do so on grounds of their individual reputation or records. This careless stratagem is a pathway to self-destruction begging for our collective, and very immediate, effort at snatching our future from the hands of those who ride on such ethnic and religious and regional sentiments towards self-enrichment.

The challenge ahead is enormous. The challenge is for us to form networks that will engage and destroy the evil missions of the exclusionists and agents of anarchy among us. In a time of anarchy, everybody is a politician. This is a time of anarchy. In a time like this, we should have no identities other than ordinary Citizen. We are citizens of a world challenged, a people confused and abused, a nation whose resources is misused by leaders whose major worry is the amount of dollars in their bank accounts. The situation is one of psychological abuse, existential abuse. My antidote for this monstrous reality is also psychological:

First, while it has become really difficult to set aside our ethnic identities in discharging our civic responsibilities, we must know that in a democratic space, our only identity especially when we gather around ballot boxes and in the service of the nation is our citizenship: “Nigerian”. We must be conscious of this identity, it defines a patriot.

Second, always have in mind that politics is not magic. And that people are responsible for the governments that happen to them. If the electorates wear their patriotism to vote in a popular candidate, the electoral officers too must know that their manipulation of figures is a betrayal of trust and their fellows awaiting them at home. No candidate can rig an election without complicity of the people.

Third, offline and online political engagements are compulsory ventures of every citizen of a troubled country. Though, I have always maintained that Nigeria is a Third World country and, for this, we must not be carried away on the social media. A percentage of Nigerians who have no internet access is important. In every decision, and agenda, we aspire to pursue, they must be in the know.

Fourth, membership of social and political groups and networks including community volunteerism is the surest way of fixing our weakened bonds and salving our rivalries. The more we meet to discuss personal and public issues without pandering to the designs of the exclusionists, the more we understand and forestall propagandas fashioned against us. The new Nigerian, irrespective of his origin, must be a part of any network that analyses and tries to influence public policies or government.

Lastly, let us have in mind that we are now in a sinking ship in which we alone understand, and can reestablish, the hydraulics of our statecraft. Let us have in mind that we are all politicians in this storm.

Conclusion
The reality of modern Nigeria is one that challenges us to drop any other identity aside from that of Citizen in our effort to rescue the ship of state from this stormy sea of chaos. All the destructions in the guise of inter-ethnic, inter-religious and inter-regional clash are traced to politics and this supports my earlier declarations that every citizen of a troubled country must become a politician. A politician is a conscious citizen of a country, a politician is first known by his citizenship, a politician is young and old, a politician is poor and rich, a politician is a thinker and volunteer, a politician is employed and jobless, a politician is a humanist and patriot, a politician is a teacher and student, a politician is you and I.

Thank you very much.
Mallam Nuhu Ribadu
PoliticsPolitical Engagement: A New Approach By Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, Mni by phy(op): 7:11pm On Jun 08, 2013
Please find time to read this

BEING AN ADDRESS DELIVERED AT A PUBLIC LECTURE ORGANISED BY THE STUDENTS REPRESENTATIVE COUNCIL (SRC), AHMADU BELLO UNIVERSITY (ABU) ZARIA WITH THE THEME “YOUTH: THE FULCRUM OF EVERY SOCIETY” ON SATURDAY JUNE 8, 2013

Protocols…

I confess to feeling inspired with every visit to this institution that shaped my perception of life and grounded my entire intellectual development. This intellectual development is not only a debt I owe to my teachers who have formed me but a challenge to me to go out there and influence society for the benefit of those to come. For this, I must say thank you! I thank my teachers, of the academic, the moral and even the political, who showed me the virtues of honesty and commitment to serving humanity. And for the students who consider me a model worthy of their time and regard today, my gratitude to you is as large as our great institution. We are gathered under this shade today because somebody found the wisdom to lay the foundation for this institution. Ahmadu Bello University is an institution with a weight of history that challenges us to do justice to whatever comes our way. We learn, from this, that at any time in history, someone has to make a sacrifice for successive generations. Our diversity in this prestigious institution, across ethnicities, religions and regions, stimulated by remainders of the legacies of Sir Ahmadu Bello, the Sardauna of Sokoto, after whom our institution is named, instills an all-inclusive spirit in us such that we end up as tolerant and understanding wherever we find ourselves in private and public engagements. You must consider yourselves lucky for being a part of these distinguished Nigerians as among you I see future political leaders, advocates of change, captains of industry and technocrats—the hope of our country!

As philosophers teach, everything changes. So we don’t need a political philosopher to spell out that there is dynamism in our politics. Our politics is an interpretation of who we are, what we are and the things we stand for. The presently unclear phase of our political disharmony is the issue we must reflect on today—and that we must do together. The dynamism of modern politics is one further excited by the reality of the internet and a consequent increased participation of the youth in political and civic matters. But the place of the youth in our democratic space is jeopardised when the elite in our State decide to model our government after a gerontocracy—a government by the old and for the elderly. Ours is a system in which new and modern ideas are denied a chance to grow and mature. The tragedy of our democracy is that it is one in which the yearnings of the youth are stamped down in order to perpetuate a tyranny of interests. Tyranny it is when a certain slim range of people impose their private interests on the majority; tyranny it is when the agents of change are left on the cliffs of unemployment, poverty, insecurity, substandard education and, worse still, policies destroyed by our heritage of corruptions.

It is, however, understandable that our youth have lost hope in the leadership of this nation; a sane society is known by the opportunities it provides for the youth. But I must offer that the youth should not allow themselves to be drawn into any campaign that attempts to colour the internal borders of our country. We are doomed as a nation the moment the youth get hoodwinked by the bickering of bitter politicians who ride to relevance on sentiments that only inspire distrust among citizens. My experience so far in politics has taught me that age does not guarantee maturity to responsibly play the role of a patriot in an atmosphere of tensed political antagonisms. Thankfully, this is the Age of the Internet; borderless interactions in and out of cyberspace have opened a new door of social and political influences for the youth and the oppressed. This age of information has revealed that no people can ever be entirely wrong at the same time; the evil among us are so because of certain disorders in their superficial orientations, education or even mental state. That Boko Haram insurgency was launched in the north does not incriminate the entire northerners or Muslims; neither is kidnapping and the previously ill-famed militancy in the south crimes of the entire people of Niger-Delta. Similarly, the recent massacre of our security officers by certain elements of the largely good-natured Eggon people of Nasarawa state must not be adopted in interpreting the ethnic identities of these people. There is no man on this earth who smiles at the injuries on his body. And these militants, kidnappers, extremists and other agents of exclusions among us are injuries on the collective body of the nation. These events only call out loudly for careful and people-centered leadership. This is our call, and we must be fair to our history.

Who we are… in Democracy
The biggest illusion we have lived in as a people is believing the cry heard from various corners that Nigeria is an unnatural entity coerced together—a sort of Frankenstein state. I have no doubt that this is a very, very inaccurate judgment. The truth is far simpler—there is not a single region in what is now Nigeria that was home to just a single ethnic group living all by themselves before the coming of the colonialists. Exclusive ethnic identities are inventions of our political advocacies and relevancies. Nigeria was a stretch of land hosting many city-states and cosmopolites, where in the south-west the Ijebu and the Egba people didn’t consider themselves as one, talk less of as Yoruba. In the south-east, it was a taboo to infer that the people of, say, Arochukwu and Onitsha were one—none accepted identification as Igbo. The Hausaland too was not monotonous as today’s Hausamen from Kano and Katsina would rather identify with their city-states than with any corporate ethnicity. But while they each had their distinct identities, they also welcomed anyone who could come and contribute to the city or state, they welcomed anyone who desired to be a citizen. So why these unnatural and suddenly insurmountable walls of ethnic exclusivities? We live in the saddest form of self-deceit, that this or that region of Nigeria favoured by someone or the other would remain one if we allowed the secessionists and ethnic irredentists get their cartographers working against our country’s map.

There is no country in this world whose borders simply surrounded a people of the same identities, wishes and desires. Our ability, in spite of the divides, to come to a consensus or sacrifice a cause or compromise a stance, is what makes us a nation. But we have chosen to play the politics of exclusion where the trust of the people is first for their kinsmen or religion before alignment with the nation. This dangerous departure from patriotism, which saw to rise in ethnic advocacy, nepotism, bigotry and militancy, has been used by enemies of change to subdue and destroy any quest for the Nigeria of our dreams—a Nigeria where we abandon our bloodline in our service to the nation.

Who we are in a democracy is not ambiguous; it is a single identity vested with the same rights for all, rights of equal citizenship! We are citizens, just citizens, not Hausa-Fulani, not Igbo, not Yoruba, not Jukun, not Ijaw, not northerners, not southerners, and no matter our protests, no matter our influence and affluence, we all must have just a single vote in a participatory democracy.

What we are… in Democracy
What are we? We are Change! We are the scattered, and mostly unfamiliar and unrelated citizens, in who lie the same purpose, in who lie the hunger for a functional society, in who lie the dream of a new Nigeria. Change, in this time of political anarchy, is the wisdom to see through the propagandas designed to destabilise the country. Change, in this trying time, is the strength to stand together despite the blowups of bombs-per-meter-square in our land. Change, in this time of distrust, is the maturity to disregard the theories of stereotype artists who heap the failure of a nation to a particular region or people, to an “other”, a “someone else” who is not “one of us”. Change, in this era of internet evolution and revolution, is the maximisation of the privileges offered by the internet in which every man with a laptop or tablet or mobile phone has a valid voice that must be heard.

The debate has always been that online representations of Nigeria in cyberspace do not capture our social realities in the actual world. While I agree that cyber-Nigeria is not our absolute portrait since our non-literate fellow countrymen in their teeming millions have been left out of its political exchanges and interactions, we must recognise the power and influence of the internet users on the psyche and struggle of the nation. Globalisation is not just a word, and as slow as it is in Third World Nigeria, it has interposed unimagined twists of events we have only been reading in foreign tabloids in Nigeria. Globalisation is a teacher of the good and the bad, and today the influences are no longer passed just through the privileged bourgeoisie. The increase in internet access enhances the speed of dispersion of ideas. It happened in Tunisia. It happened in Egypt. It’s happening here… But, we must be devout apostles of change to realise our dream of Change!


What we stand for… in Democracy
Democracy loses its allure when it is perceived as a forte of the rich—through oligarchic eyes. With such a mindset, the people themselves make democracy expensive and destroy it. The moment you task your candidates with paying to earn your votes, you lose your moral right to question his excesses. I agree with the Australian political theorist, Professor John Dryzek, when he explains the essence of democracy, thus: “Democratization… is not the spread of liberal democracy to ever more corners of the world, but rather extensions along any one of three dimensions… The first is franchise, expansion of the number of people capable of participating effectively in collective decision. The second is scope, bringing more issues and areas of life potentially under democratic control… The third is the authenticity of the control…: to be real rather than symbolic, involving the effective participation of autonomous and competent actors”.

To democratise Nigeria, we must understand the powers we refuse to explore. The “tyrants” in democracy are actually individuals from amongst the people, but when they become agents of electoral malpractices and political dishonesty, the dice turns up against the people from which they have come. When I say “people”, I don’t mean just the voters. The electoral officers who comply to rig a fair election abuse their chance at creating a saner nation while damaging the trust and hopes of an oppressed people of whom they are members. Politics is not magic; it’s a calculation of the good and the wrongs we do in the quest of power.

Here is where we need to come together to make our democracy work; let us drop any form of identity that introduces us as something other than “citizens”, and let us drop any citizenship that asks for anything other than “Change” for the better. Let us destroy any institution that preaches divisions and exclusions. Unless we put our patriotism away from greed and any undemocratic advocacy, our collective struggle to install a popular government will remain a mission impossible.

to be continued
BusinessRe: Access Bank Stealing Money From Customers' Accounts by phy: 4:56am On May 01, 2013
You guys simply go and bombard their facebook page https://www.facebook.com/myaccess.
TravelRe: US Embassy's Conditions For Baby Delivery In America by phy:
deleted
ComputersRe: Youtube Video On Nairaland by phy: 9:10am On Feb 12, 2013
Music/RadioRate Dbanj's AFCON Closing Ceremony Performance by phy(op):
Rate this performance

[flash=425,400]http://www.youtube.com/embed/oDOqiHSgKlI[/flash]
SportsRe: Ivory Coast Vs Nigeria - AFCON 2013 - (1 - 2) - On 3rd February 2013 by phy: 6:26pm On Feb 03, 2013
Here is the goal that sealed it all.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IiZOptEKagQ
PoliticsRe: How Will You Rate Jonathan's Interview With Amanpour? by phy: 2:06am On Jan 24, 2013
As for me, he did well in this interview. I think we should be more contructive and open minded in our criticisms.
SportsRe: AFCON: Nigeria Vs Burkina Faso (1 - 1) On 21st January 2013 by phy: 7:06pm On Jan 21, 2013
pls can someone drop a website. Thanks
EducationRe: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by phy: 6:06pm On Jan 08, 2013
arbitrage: Do you know what it means to claim a solution you cut/posted (snipped) straight from a textbook page as your personal solution in a public forum? Be careful!
Let me tell you, I don't cut and paste solutions. I went the extra mile to use equation editor to type all the solutions I give because I want people to understand the solutions. I have made up my mind to help any Nigerian students to any length I can. If I can type it out, I will rather not post in here. If you have a prove of plagiarism, pls bring it forward. I am a professional and I am in an environment where plagiarism will never be supported.

Pls next time if you're inquisitive about how people do their stuffs ask questions rather than rushing to conclusions. If you approached me physically with this accusation in my terrain, I would have sued you for this. Pls always ask questions. I guess I should be using pidgin English in my solutions for you to know I went the extra mile to type it for clarity.
EducationRe: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by phy: 8:26am On Jan 08, 2013
Goodboy2012: 1.Solve d simultaneous equationz usin the system of Matrix Inversion ....
10x1+3x2+6x3=76
4x1 + 5x3y=41
5x1+2x2 + 2x3 =5

Make una solve dis nw,,,.....or u mean say d question tough?
I took an effort to solve this the way I feel the eqns should be. Always try to get the right eqns across for prompt help

EducationRe: Nairaland Mathematics Clinic by phy:
sam2323: make t subject of the formula in the third equation of motion. S=UT + 1/2AT^2
The equation should be S= UT + (1/2)AT^2 or S= UT + (AT^2)/2 for clarity. Pls find my solution below:

NB: Remember that t = time, it can not be negative, so you can play with the eqn.

[img][/img]

TravelRe: General U.s.a (student) Visa Enquiries-part3 by phy: 2:56am On Dec 31, 2012
@successgrace, how're doing? send me an email via my contact.
TravelRe: Life In The Usa As A Student. by phy: 1:52am On Dec 10, 2012
kpolli: HAAAA! You need oooo
Well I didn't take any and all the people I have asked didn't take any from naija till they got to the US. Who will trust the yellow card that you can get for N50 at MMIA - not even SA.
TravelRe: Life In The Usa As A Student. by phy: 9:47pm On Dec 01, 2012
Jongrac: Well-done guys, you all are doing a great job here @ this forum.
Please I need info on the necessary medicals to run here in Nigeria before leaving for the US, read a post in this forum that advises one to do it here before departure cos its a lot cheaper when compared to US.
Will be leaving for Spring 2013 Semester for graduate studies.
Thanks.
I dont think you need any medicals. When you get to the US you'll just need to get flu shots and it's free at public health centers.
Nairaland GeneralRe: Popular Lagos-based Thrift Collector, Pa Alphaeus Olunaike, Recently Died At The by phy: 7:48am On Oct 27, 2012
I saw this piece in the punch newspaper and had to checkout comments on NL but none. I knew this man while growing up at Ilupeju part of Lagos. The story says it all.
SportsRe: Nigeria Vs Liberia (6 - 1): AFCON 2013 Qualifier On Saturday October-13-2012 by phy: 4:22pm On Oct 13, 2012
pls any video link. the online commentator is a rookie and cause hypertension
TravelRe: General U.s.a (student) Visa Enquiries-part3 by phy: 10:38pm On Sep 18, 2012
Yankeeboi1: My fellow Nairalanders, I cant explain all I am facing here in the US as a student coz I'm finding it somehow uneasy. First, when I got here this fall I have a problem with my accommodation and where I eventually move to is too far from my school. I have to walk for about 20-30mins to the bus stop before I can get a free shuttle bus to the school. To be candid my pple, I'm not coping in classes coz since we start lectures, the lecturers always talked about one article or the other and also presentations whereby I didnt have a computer with me here I believe in myself to be a good student but it is becoming the other way round in this country and I feel alot depressed anytime we have classes. huh Is this how I will continue or Is there anybody in the house who has or is in my shoe? I tried to look for job in other to sustain myself but all prove abortive as I was told I have to have a work study before I could get one presently. I even went to the cafetaria yesterday and I was told to file up an application which I dont know when it will be review. Pls I need to know the way out of this b4 it get out of hand. I am just trying to manage the little money with me here. Kindly let me know what to do coz I'm thinking of leaving this school to another state where I get some pple but im afraid of falling out of status. I believe I can transfer but I dont believe I can stay here till next fall or even spring.Any advice pls?
First, take this semester serious and give it all it takes so that you dont lose on both side. In the mean time, try to look for a friend close to the campus that can allow you a night or more per week at his place. If you have a Nigerian or an Indian friend or a religious organization that may work. If transferring to other school is your option, you may start applying now (I'll advise you apply to a school where you have at least one person that you know). Also, if you're a grad student you can discuss with any of your responsible faculty about your situation and ask if they have a research they're working on where you could assist to make some change. If you still prefer the school, you can start looking for apartments close to school before the next semester. You may also post the name of your school here and you may be surprise to see someone that could be of help or link you up. PLS DON'T GIVE UP - IT IS WORTH IT.
TravelRe: General U.s.a (student) Visa Enquiries-part3 by phy: 5:53am On Sep 06, 2012
Theyjih: the question is hw long wld it take nipost to deliver?
All my mails took less than two weeks. I sent docs both to schools on the east and west. I think they have something like priority or special mail (I cant remember the exact word). It was far cheaper than others.

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