Slimdiggi's Posts
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700 billion? How much will cost us to fix our refineries self? |
Deal with the issues in the Upstream- NCP |
KOWA rambling on Oil issues, are you related to GEJ? |
Issue on Oil next |
Corruption universally demotivates - NCP |
iam not impressed about your ideas on tackling insurgency Mrs KOWA |
Crass irresponsibility Isho! See the way GEJ dey look the man |
Danjuma and co to manage money ![]() |
what are the specific plans PDP has for victims of insurgency in the north, kidnapping, chibok girls? |
To tackle corruption it has to start from the top |
Our collective hopelessness Na wa o |
GEJ for 3mins you were just rambling! |
EroticAngelina:of which church? ![]() |
When it comes to happiness, Latin America must be onto something. Gallup surveyed people in 143 countries to rank the happiest nations, and found that the entire top 10 are in Latin America. Paraguay scored the top spot, and Colombia, Ecuador, and Guatemala tied for second. Meanwhile, the least happy nations were all found to be in the Middle East and North Africa. (See below for the top 10 and bottom 10 countries in the ranking.) For the survey, Gallup developed a “happiness score” for each country based on responses from survey participants, who were asked if they had five positive experiences the day before the survey. Gallup tallied the “yes” responses to five questions from roughly 1,000 people in each country surveyed. The questions included: Did you feel well-rested yesterday? Were you treated with respect all day yesterday? Did you smile or laugh a lot yesterday? Did you learn or do something interesting yesterday? Did you experience the following feelings during a lot of the day yesterday? How about enjoyment? From these responses, Gallup was able to create a Positive Experience Index score for each country — which, strangely enough, is pretty steady every year. The worldwide score usually falls around 70. In 2014, that was no different. The global mean was 71 — which is good news, meaning most people reported feeling pretty happy. Most men and women said they feel a lot of enjoyment, smile or laugh a lot, feel well-rested, and are treated with respect. People are staying mentally stimulated, too: According to the poll, more than 50 percent of people worldwide reported doing something interesting the day prior to the interview. It’s worth noting that a failure to report a ton of positive vibes doesn’t automatically spell doom and gloom. For instance, people in the former Soviet Union are pretty even-keeled. While they don’t report a lot of positive emotions, they don’t report a lot of negative emotions either, according to past Gallup research. Check out the countries that scored highest and lowest in the Gallup happiness ranking: Top 10 Paraguay : 89 Columbia: 84 Ecuador: 84 Guatemala: 84 Honduras: 82 Panama: 82 Venezuela: 82 Costa Rica: 81 El Salvador: 81 Nicaragua: 81 Bottom 10 Sudan: 47 Tunisia: 52 Bangladesh: 54 Serbia: 54 Turkey: 54 Bosnia and Herzegovina: 55 Georgia: 55 Lithuania: 55 Nepal: 55 Afghanistan: 55 https://www.yahoo.com/health/the-country-with-the-happiest-people-is-114046026727.html |
[quote author=kastonkastrol post=31793435][b]seconded[/b]thirded |
Enoquin:its so delightful and refreshing Tandy Guarana! And a new fruity flavour Tandy Guarana If you want have some fun Tandy Guarana Tandy Guarana 2x |
Iyawo Tu Mama seven, u need a stylist asap! |
Hello house, please does Unilorin accept SLT (OND) for direct entry into microbiology or chemistry? |
www.creativefancies..com since 2010 Please review and comment. Thanks |
Plain wicked |
The 57th Annual Grammy Awards’ telecast doesn’t air tonight until 8 p.m. East Coast time, but the celebration kicked off early at Los Angeles’s Nokia Theater. Starting at 12:30 p.m. Pacific time, trophies in approximately 70 non-televised categories were handed out Sunday afternoon, during the Grammys’ Premiere Ceremony streamed live on Grammy.com and CBS.com. RECORD OF THE YEAR - Sam Smith, "Stay With Me" SONG OF THE YEAR - Sam Smith, "Stay With Me (Darkchild Version)" ALBUM OF THE YEAR - Beck, Morning Phase BEST COUNTRY ALBUM - Miranda Lambert, Platinum BEST R&B PERFORMANCE - Beyoncé, “Drunk In Love” BEST ROCK ALBUM - Beck, Morning Phase BEST POP VOCAL ALBUM - Sam Smith, In The Lonely Hour BEST POP SOLO PERFORMANCE - Pharrell Williams, “Happy” (Watch the video here) BEST NEW ARTIST - Sam Smith BEST R&B SONG - Shawn Carter, Rasool Diaz, Noel Fisher, Jerome Harmon, Beyoncé Knowles, Timothy Mosely, Andre Eric Proctor & Brian Soko, songwriters (Beyoncé Featuring Jay Z), “Drunk In Love” BEST R&B ALBUM - Toni Braxton & Babyface, Love, Marriage & Divorce BEST URBAN CONTEMPORARY ALBUM - Pharrell Williams, G I R L BEST ROCK PERFORMANCE - Jack White, “Lazaretto” BEST ROCK SONG - Hayley Williams & Taylor York, songwriters (Paramore), “Ain’t It Fun” (Watch the video here) BEST ALTERNATIVE MUSIC ALBUM - St. Vincent, St. Vincent BEST METAL PERFORMANCE - Tenacious D, “The Last In Line” BEST POP DUO/GROUP PERFORMANCE - A Great Big World With Christina Aguilera, “Say Something” BEST TRADITIONAL POP VOCAL ALBUM - Tony Bennett & Lady Gaga, Cheek To Cheek BEST COUNTRY SOLO PERFORMANCE - Carrie Underwood, “Something In The Water” BEST COUNTRY DUO/GROUP PERFORMANCE - The Band Perry, “Gentle On My Mind” BEST COUNTRY SONG - Glen Campbell & Julian Raymond, songwriters (Glen Campbell), “I’m Not Gonna Miss You” (Watch the video here) BEST RAP PERFORMANCE - Kendrick Lamar, “I” BEST RAP ALBUM - Eminem, The Marshall Mathers LP2 BEST TRADITIONAL R&B PERFORMANCE - Robert Glasper Experiment Featuring Lalah Hathaway & Malcolm-Jamal Warner, “Jesus Children” BEST COMEDY ALBUM - “Weird Al” Yankovic, Mandatory Fun BEST BLUES ALBUM - Johnny Winter, Step Back BEST BLUEGRASS ALBUM - The Earls Of Leicester, The Earls Of Leicester BEST MUSIC VIDEO - Pharrell Williams, “Happy” BEST MUSIC FILM - Darlene Love, Merry Clayton, Lisa Fischer & Judith Hill, 20 Feet From Stardom BEST DANCE RECORDING - Clean Bandit Featuring Jess Glynne, “Rather Be” BEST DANCE/ELECTRONIC ALBUM - Aphex Twin, Syro BEST SPOKEN WORD ALBUM (INCLUDES POETRY, AUDIO BOOKS & STORYTELLING) - Joan Rivers, Diary Of A Mad Diva BEST AMERICAN ROOTS PERFORMANCE - Rosanne Cash, “A Feather’s Not A Bird” BEST AMERICAN ROOTS SONG - Rosanne Cash, “A Feather’s Not A Bird” BEST AMERICANA ALBUM - Rosanne Cash, The River & The Thread BEST FOLK ALBUM - Old Crow Medicine Show, The Remedy BEST REGIONAL ROOTS MUSIC ALBUM - Jo-El Sonnier, The Legacy BEST REGGAE ALBUM - Ziggy Marley, Fly Rasta BEST CONTEMPORARY INSTRUMENTAL ALBUM - Chris Thile & Edgar Meyer, Bass & Mandolin BEST IMPROVISED JAZZ SOLO - Chick Corea, soloist, “Fingerprints” BEST JAZZ VOCAL ALBUM - Dianne Reeves, Beautiful Life BEST JAZZ INSTRUMENTAL ALBUM - Chick Corea Trio, Trilogy BEST LARGE JAZZ ENSEMBLE ALBUM - Gordon Goodwin’s Big Phat Band, Life In The Bubble BEST LATIN JAZZ ALBUM - Arturo O’Farrill & The Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra, The Offense Of The Drum BEST LATIN POP ALBUM - Rubén Blades, Tangos BEST LATIN ROCK, URBAN OR ALTERNATIVE ALBUM - Calle 13, Multiviral BEST REGIONAL MEXICAN MUSIC ALBUM (INCLUDING TEJANO) - Vicente Fernández, Mano A Mano - Tangos A La Manera De Vicente Fernández BEST TROPICAL LATIN ALBUM - Carlos Vives, Más + Corazón Profundo BEST GOSPEL PERFORMANCE/SONG - Smokie Norful, “No Greater Love” BEST CONTEMPORARY CHRISTIAN MUSIC PERFORMANCE/SONG - Lecrae Featuring For King & Country, “Messengers” BEST GOSPEL ALBUM - Erica Campbell, Help BEST CONTEMPORARY CHRISTIAN MUSIC ALBUM - For King & Country, Run Wild. Live Free. Love Strong. BEST ROOTS GOSPEL ALBUM - Mike Farris, Shine For All The People BEST NEW AGE ALBUM - Ricky Kej & Wouter Kellerman, Winds Of Samsara BEST WORLD MUSIC ALBUM - Angelique Kidjo, Eve BEST MUSICAL THEATER ALBUM - Jessie Mueller, principal soloist; Jason Howland, Steve Sidwell & Billy Jay Stein, producers (Carole King, composer & lyricist) (Original Broadway Cast), Beautiful: The Carole King Musical PRODUCER OF THE YEAR, NON-CLASSICAL - Max Martin PRODUCER OF THE YEAR, CLASSICAL - Judith Sherman BEST COMPILATION SOUNDTRACK FOR VISUAL MEDIA - Kristen Anderson-Lopez, Robert Lopez, Tom MacDougall & Chris Montan, compilation producers, Frozen BEST SCORE SOUNDTRACK FOR VISUAL MEDIA - Alexandre Desplat, composer, The Grand Budapest Hotel BEST SONG WRITTEN FOR VISUAL MEDIA - Kristen Anderson-Lopez & Robert Lopez, songwriters (Idina Menzel), “Let It Go” BEST CHILDREN’S ALBUM - Neela Vaswani, I Am Malala: How One Girl Stood Up For Education And Changed The World (Malala Yousafzai) BEST SURROUND SOUND ALBUM - Elliot Scheiner, surround mix engineer; Bob Ludwig, surround mastering engineer; Beyoncé Knowles, surround producer (Beyoncé), Beyoncé BEST REMIXED RECORDING, NON-CLASSICAL - Tijs Michiel Verwest, remixer (John Legend), “All Of Me (Tiesto’s Birthday Treatment Remix)” BEST INSTRUMENTAL COMPOSITION - John Williams, composer, The Book Thief BEST ARRANGEMENT, INSTRUMENTAL OR A CAPPELLA - Ben Bram, Mitch Grassi, Scott Hoying, Avi Kaplan, Kirstin Maldonado & Kevin Olusola, arrangers (Pentatonix), ”Daft Punk” BEST ARRANGEMENT, INSTRUMENTS AND VOCALS - Billy Childs, arranger (Billy Childs Featuring Renée Fleming & Yo-Yo Ma), “New York Tendaberry” BEST RECORDING PACKAGE - Jeff Ament, Don Pendleton, Joe Spix & Jerome Turner, art directors (Pearl Jam), Lightning Bolt BEST ALBUM NOTES - Ashley Kahn, album notes writer (John Coltrane), Offering: Live At Temple University BEST HISTORICAL ALBUM - Colin Escott & Cheryl Pawelski, compilation producers; Michael Graves, mastering engineer (Hank Williams), The Garden Spot Programs, 1950 BEST ENGINEERED ALBUM, NON-CLASSICAL - Tom Elmhirst, David Greenbaum, Florian Lagatta, Cole Marsden Greif-Neill, Robbie Nelson, Darrell Thorp, Cassidy Turbin & Joe Visciano, engineers; Bob Ludwig, mastering engineer (Beck), Morning Phase BEST ENGINEERED ALBUM, CLASSICAL - Michael Bishop, engineer; Michael Bishop, mastering engineer (Robert Spano, Norman Mackenzie, Atlanta Symphony Orchestra & Chorus), Vaughan Williams: Dona Nobis Pacem; Symphony No. 4; The Lark Ascending BEST OPERA RECORDING - Paul O’Dette & Stephen Stubbs, conductors; Aaron Sheehan; Renate Wolter-Seevers, producer (Boston Early Music Festival Chamber Ensemble; Boston Early Music Festival Vocal Ensemble), “Charpentier: La Descente D’Orphée Aux Enfers” BEST ORCHESTRAL PERFORMANCE - David Robertson, conductor (St. Louis Symphony), “Adams, John: City Noir” BEST CHORAL PERFORMANCE - Craig Hella Johnson, conductor (Conspirare), “The Sacred Spirit Of Russia” BEST CHAMBER MUSIC/SMALL ENSEMBLE PERFORMANCE - Hilary Hahn & Cory Smythe, “In 27 Pieces - The Hilary Hahn Encores” BEST CLASSICAL INSTRUMENTAL SOLO - Jason Vieaux, “Play” BEST CLASSICAL SOLO VOCAL ALBUM - Anne Sofie Von Otter; Bengt Forsberg, accompanist (Carl Bagge, Margareta Bengston, Mats Bergström, Per Ekdahl, Bengan Janson, Olle Linder & Antoine Tamestit), Douce France BEST CLASSICAL COMPENDIUM - Partch; John Schneider, producer, Partch: Plectra & Percussion Dances BEST CONTEMPORARY CLASSICAL COMPOSITION - John Luther Adams, composer (Ludovic Morlot & Seattle Symphony), “Adams, John Luther: Become Ocean” |
Someone's grandfather chai |
The 'Fro' is all the rage right but you should know that this timeless hairstyle takes patience, understanding and hardwork to maintain. Growing an afro and its care is completely different from dealing with chemically processed hair. Taming these curls require specifics do's and don't's: Do care watch you eat. Apart from taking care of the hair on the outside, watch your diet when growing a fro. B complex vitamins, fish, nuts are essentials for growing a healthy hair. Drink lots of water also. Don't use mineral oils, petroleum jelly, gels as these would clog and prevent scalp hair follicles from growing. It can also prevent moisture from getting in. Alchohol based products is also no-no! Do deep conditioning twice a week to keep moisture balance and prevent breakage. Don't comb hair dry. Please stop combing your hair dry! Your hair is at its most fragile point at this stage and when not handled properly will lead to snapping, breaking and tearing. Comb your hair when it is saturated with conditioner and use a wider tooth comb. Do trim your hair. Yes, yes I know you've worked so hard to get it to that length but cutting away split ends will prevent breakage and makes your hair look fuller and bouncier. Don't bother your growing hair with weaves all the time. If you are going to wear something protective, try wigs, half wigs, satin scarves. Avoid anything cotton (pillow, shirts). Protective styles help your hair when it is too hard to manage in the growing out trasitioning phase. When braiding, not too tight please! Do moisturize. Not with petroleum jelly! As funny as it sounds, keep it wet...with water. Put water in a spray bottle and apply from about 1 to 2 inches from hair roots all the way to the end. Don't heat too much (No yoruba pun intended). Heat curlers and blow dryers can damage your hair. Trying air drying. Do use a lot of natural oils like jojoba, emu, coconut. And don't forget to read ingredient labels of any hair product because it is equally as important as as that of a youghout bottle! http://creativefancies..com/2015/01/trendy-thursday-how-to-grow-and.html?m=1
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Heheh
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What sort of Jazz is that naa? |
Oyelowo was born in Oxford, England, to Nigerian parents of Yoruba extraction. His mother worked for British Rail, and his father, Stephen, worked for then nationalised airline British Airways. He first attended a youth theatre after being invited by a girl on whom he had a crush. He then studied theatre studies for A levels at City and Islington College, where his teacher suggested that he become an actor. After A levels Oyelowo enrolled for a year in an art foundation course, subsequently winning a place, and a scholarship at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art (LAMDA). He finished his three-year training in 1998. In 2012 Oyelowo appeared in Middle of Nowhere. Writer-director Ava DuVernay had been a fan of his work and had considered asking him to take the role, however before she could Oyelowo received the script coincidentally from a friend of DuVernay's who happened to be sitting next to him on the plane and was considering investing in the project. The film premiered at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival to critical raves. That same year Oyelowo appeared in Lee Daniels′ The Paperboy, which competed for the Palme d'Or at the 2012 Cannes Film Festival. Oyelowo reunited with Daniels the following year in The Butler. In 2014 he reunited with his Middle of Nowhere director Ava DuVernay for Selma, playing civil rights activist Martin Luther King, Jr. The film, based on the 1965 Selma to Montgomery voting rights marches, had originally been set to be directed by Lee Daniels, but the project was dropped by Daniels so he could focus on The Butler. Oyelowo is also slated to star with Lupita Nyong'o in Americanah, a film to be adapted from the Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie novel. The story follows a pair of young Nigerian immigrants who face a lifetime of struggle while their relationship endures. He has starred in award winning movies like The Last King of Scotland, The Best Man, Rise of the Planet of Apes among others. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Oyelowo
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Very heavy at this period |
christaddicted:
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Hehe
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Get a good lawyer to tell you what your options are. Don't play with your life. Npf is involved. |
I love quizzes! Here is one i culled from First Aid in English. Feel free to provide your answers or just do them for fun...enjoy 1. A boy who frightens weaker boys 2. A number of soldiers 3. The men and women who work in a ship 4. Children in a school 5. A man who protects sheep 6. The low ground between two hills 7. A place where pupils are educated 8. A ship which travels below the surface of the sea 9. A place for storing a car 10. A small leaf 11. A mamma that can fly 12. A field in which fruit trees grow 13. An instrument for measuring time 14. From what do we make butter? 15. A man who pretends to be good 16. A fertile place in the desert 17. A person who is always boasting 18. A stream which flows into a river 19. A hundred years 20. Name an instrument for telling direction 21. What are the steps of a ladder called 22. Name two spotted animals 23. A doctor who performs operations 24. What is the front part of a ship called 25. Headgear worn by some inhabitants of India 26. A place where beer is made 27. What is daybreak sometimes termed 28. A man who draws and paints 29. Fish with the bones taken out 30. A shallow crossing in a river 31. Two creatures which see well in the dark 32. What is the meaning of plume 33. Name any American money 34. Girl or woman who serves at a table 35. A person who by desire lives alone 36. What do we call the breaking of a bone http://creativefancies..com/ |
Isho! See the way GEJ dey look the man
