Showing posts with label Article. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Article. Show all posts

Saturday, 24 October 2015

"I PREFER TO STAY NAKED" - Mr. Friendite


The CEO of one of the Largest Social media company in Africa MR EMMANUEL EMEKA OKEKE is one of the youngest entrepreneurs we have in Nigeria. He is the founder, FRIENDITE GLOBAL LIMITED an ICT and Social Media Networking Company that virtually does everything you can probably think of ranging from

Thursday, 8 October 2015

Is it wrong to drink alcohol while pregnant?

 The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence urges women to avoid alcohol in the first three months of pregnancy
The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence urges women to avoid alcohol in the first three months of pregnancy

In spite of the fact that it is by and large concurred strategic alcoholism postures noteworthy dangers to a hatchling, powers are part on the impact of moderate liquor consumption following 12 weeks

"A large number of working class mums-to-be putting infants at danger with light drinking" is the feature on one news site, as the intricate issue of drinking amid pregnancy raises its head again.

Barbican art show unleashes naked dancers and rollerskaters in onesies

Those rollerskating can go where they please, while the naked dancers follow a more choreographed routine. Photograph: Graeme Robertson for the Guardian
Those rollerskating can go where they please, while the naked dancers follow a more choreographed routine.
A program of 11 bare artists and six rollerskaters in sheer onesies will shape some piece of a three-month, 10-hour-a-day craftsmanship establishment at the Barbican in London investigating sexual personality, solitary yearning and how we all get to be what we are.

Monday, 7 September 2015

How To Become 9jaCampusMag.com Guest Author

9jaCampusMag.com’s editorial team is working to incorporate user-submitted content into everyday reporting and make interaction with the readers as bilateral and mutual as possible.

That is why we are creating a new platform to give Nigerians a unique chance to express their own views and be heard by the millions of readers who visit our site every day. Want to become 9ja Campus Magazine guest author? Here’s how!

Become our contributor!

Are you an aspiring author, writer, or a blogger? Have a say on current hot and trending topics! We would appreciate your desire to share your writing with us.

So, if you’re passionate about a subject or are an expert in your field and have something original to say, we’d love to hear from you.

Please note that all submitted opinion articles are carefully reviewed by the 9jaCampusMag.com editorial team.

If your piece is refused, we’ll let you know why so that you could be able to make the necessary changes and then resubmit it for publication.

After sending your article, please be patient. We will get back to you shortly!

We do not publish:

  • articles containing foul language;

  • anything that can be considered hate speech, sexist, or otherwise discriminatory materials;

  • libel and/or defamation.


Please keep in mind the following recommendations:

  • refrain from promoting political bias at the expense of intelligent, reasoned discourse;

  • remember to cite other people’s quotes and ensure all content is original. We want to know what you think;

  • no linking to adult or illegal sites, or sites that will upload anything inappropriate onto people’s computers;

  • we are interested in high-quality articles with unique content.


Follow these pieces of advice from 9jaCampusMag.com editors to make your post an engaging and immersive read:

  • have a look at the top stories on 9jaCampusMag.com Homepage to get a hint of what’s trending;

  • keep headlines descriptive and to the point, and keep the puns for the article itself;

  • remember to check your spelling and punctuation;

  • if you’re providing statistical data, quotes, making a reference to or citing any external source, make sure you include links to the original material;

  • avoid citing and/or providing links to Wikipedia.


Authors who provide high-quality articles on a regular basis are rewarded with monetary bonuses.

Drop us an email at gist.9jacampusmag@gmail.com telling us what you want to write about and why. Contact us if you have any feedback, suggestions, complaints or compliments. We are also available on Facebook and Twitter.

10 Mistakes Firms Make in their Recruitment Process

Waiting for an interview
                                                          Waiting for an interview

Someone messaged me recently if I had written anything about the recruiting process and hiring. After about 30 seconds of thinking and a search through my YouTube videos, articles and No B. S. Hiring Advice podcasts, I saw that almost everything I write about touches on the subject but few articles are explicit.


As such, I thought I would address ten mistakes firms make in their recruitment process.

Sunday, 30 August 2015

The Purpose of Power

The Purpose of Power

How do you use the power that comes with your position: for personal gain – or for serving the people and the enterprise?

A few years ago, I was with a group of Popeyes assistant restaurant managers and I asked them, “what happens when one of your friends gets promoted to restaurant manager? Does anything change?”

Saturday, 29 August 2015

MY LIFE STORY


Terapi Philip Uche, CEO Goshen Film Academy

Terapi Philip Uche, CEO Goshen Film Academy

Hi, My name is Terapi Philip Uche, I want to take you on a trip into MY LIFE STORY, I will be telling you so much about me. My Birth, My childhood, My Schooling days, My love life as it were, My Journey to becoming the CEO Goshen Film Academy, so much to talk about. You can't just imagine it.

Wednesday, 19 August 2015

When WAEC was WAEC: Back in the days

Yet again, Nigerian students fare poorly in WAEC examination.  It’s time to go back to the basics


Only 38.68 per cent of the 1.593 million students, who sat the 2015 West African Senior Schools Certificate Examination (WASSCE), passed with credits in five subjects including English Language and Mathematics.  That is another sobering reminder of the deep-rooted nature of the educational challenges currently facing Nigeria.

Tuesday, 18 August 2015

How The Yorubas Can Deal With The Igbos

For decades, the Igbo and the Yoruba have lived in peace but have bickered ceaselessly like cat and dog. On April 22, 2014, I wrote an article entitled, “‘Tom and Jerry’ relationship between Igbo and Yoruba to highlight the inherent strengths of these two ethnic groups and how they can positively direct these strengths for the good of the two ethnic groups and Nigeria in general. I added another article on April 21, 2015, entitled, “Lagos is not a ‘No man’s land’ but to underpin how the two ethnic groups can work together.

However, one complaint some Yoruba have against the Igbo is that the latter are limiting the opportunities available to the Yoruba by being in control of their homeland in the South-East and also sharing the opportunities in the South-West with the Yoruba. If the Igbo were all resident in the South-East, and only come into the South-West to transact business and go back, some maintain, there would not be much problem. But the idea of the Igbo settling en masse in Yorubaland, especially Lagos, buying property massively, controlling some markets and products, and having a say in the politics of the South-West seem threatening to some Yoruba.

It creates the impression that the Igbo usually hold an annual general assembly in a 30-million-man capacity stadium at which a directive is issued to every Igbo person to go to the South-West and take it over. But as has been shown, the Igbo are investment-driven, and land seems to be the best investment in Nigeria, because of its ever appreciating value and the protection it gives to the owner from landlords who talk down on tenants, increase rent at will and eject tenants at the flimsiest reason. The Igbo are proud people who don’t like living at the mercy of any “master”.

One weird alternative is to send all Igbo out of Yorubaland. But that option is not an option because the Igbo are Nigerians and have a right to reside in any part of Nigeria without any passport or residential permit. Secondly, even if the Igbo and the Yoruba don’t belong to the same country, the global standard is that people are free to reside in any country once they have valid papers, and they have a right to own property once they can afford it. Currently, Nigerians reside in all parts of the world and own property there without being citizens of those countries.

However, there is an option that will balance the skewed equation between the Igbo and the Yoruba and reduce the tension between the two ethnic groups. That option is to have a strategic migration of the Yoruba in droves into Igboland, residing there with their families, transacting business, buying property and participating in the local politics and social activities in Igboland. Currently, many Yoruba seem to be averse to living in other parts of Nigeria outside the Yoruba enclave. Interestingly, they love to live in large numbers in the UK and the US.

Even in the choice of university, it is the same story. The PUNCH edition of August 10, 2015 published a news story on page 6 on the result of the post-UTME examination released by the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife. The person with the highest score was Igbo (Onyenachi Nze). Two people tied at third position, and one of them was Igbo (Jude Epunam). If you check the results released by universities which are based in the South-East, Yoruba names will be few and far between, not because they don’t want to admit Yoruba students, but because they rarely apply to South-East universities or even those in the South-South. In my class of about 70 students at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, we had only one Yoruba student.

Once the Yoruba take a decision to “invade” the South-East in large numbers, the relationship between them and the Igbo will improve greatly. They will stop feeling short-changed by the Igbo. While an Emeka is buying a house in Okota, an Ayodele should be buying a house beside Emeka’s ancestral home in Amawbia. While a Dozie is calling himself Eze-Igbo of Ojo, a Dayo is calling himself Oba Yoruba of Ngwaland.

That was why I was very happy when Ekiti State mooted the idea of sending some Ekiti youths to Onitsha and Aba to acquire trading skills and craftsmanship. We Nigerians love to see the bad sides of each ethnic group rather than the good sides. Each ethnic group has some great qualities that anybody who is not enslaved by tribal supremacy and hate can copy and put to good use. My 21-year sojourn in Yorubaland has added some value to me.

In all parts of the world, settlers always have an edge to succeed more than the indigenes. Why? Settlers come with different perspectives. They naturally think outside the box. They see things differently and therefore spot opportunities that indigenes can’t spot. They have more drive to succeed. While sons of the soil live in their own houses and pay no rent, and have access to farmlands where they can get food for free, etc, which make them complacent and conceited, settlers know they have to succeed or die of hunger or get booted out by their landlords. They are also not bogged down by their culture or positions. A prince in a foreign land will pocket his title and do even menial jobs to succeed, but he can’t do the same in his own land.

While growing up in Nnewi in the South-East in the late 70s and early 80s, I saw hired farm workers from Enugu and Ebonyi send their Nnewi counterparts out of business. They came in with hoes whose blades were three times the size of the hoes used by Nnewi farmers. So, they worked faster. And unlike the Nnewi hired workers for whom you must provide one meal plus wine per day until they finished working for you, the Enugu/Ebonyi workers demanded no such thing. They got the job done fast, get paid, and move on to another job. Soon, nobody was hiring the Nnewi workers, and they fizzled out.

Ghanaian tailors, barbers, cobblers, etc, did the same thing to their Nnewi counterparts when they came into the town in the late 70s and early 80s.

The bottom line is that people who want to pay for goods and services want new, better, faster and more cost-effective ways of offering them. They don’t care about your race or religion or nationality. That is why settlers have an edge over indigenes.

So for the Yoruba involved in house construction, architecture, roofing, tiling, wiring, plumbing, auto mechanics, panel-beating/car-painting, house-painting, fashion designing, herbal medicine, hairdressing, nail-fixing, upholstery, restaurants/bars, etc, it may be time to seek a new territory. Igboland needs your fresh perspectives and artistry.

In China, Chinese food would seem ordinary, but in Africa, Europe or America, it is exotic. The same thing goes for something as ordinary as roast plantain (boli) or specially prepared goat meat called asun. Because these are Yoruba meals, if prepared in the South-East by a Yoruba person, they are seen as exotic delicacies.

When there is an influx of Yoruba into Igboland, it will create more competition there. Variety will be added to the lifestyle in Igbo land. A win-win situation will be created. The Igbo will no longer feel that they are being foolish by investing in Yoruba land without the Yoruba reciprocating.

Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe with Dim Emeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu and Chief Obafemi Awolowo could not unite the Igbo and Yoruba. On the contrary, they created a deeper gulf between the two ethnic groups. The absence of regional governments has created an absence of central figures in Yorubaland and Igboland that can champion an honest and enduring Igbo-Yoruba relationship. A real handshake across the Niger is therefore essential now more than ever before.

Azuka-Onwuka.jpg

Credits: Azuka Onwuka

Source: PUNCH

Tuesday, 21 July 2015

My Little Angel is Gone: LAST WORD OF A DYING LITTLE GIRL TO HER PARENTS & FRIENDS

[caption id="attachment_239" align="aligncenter" width="468"]My Little Angel is gone My Little Angel is gone[/caption]

Hello everyone this is Avery's father. Avery passed away yesterday sometime around 3pm due to pulmonary complications related to SMA. In short, one of her lungs collapsed and she went into cardiac arrest. I immediately performed CPR on her and was able to bring her back to life, but only for a brief period of time before she passed away shortly after arriving at the hospital. Avery's passing this quickly came as a complete shock to all of us, as she had just been given a thumbs up at her last doctors appointment only three days ago. While we were aware of the
severity of her diagnosis, we never lost hope for Avery and even in her passing, we still have hope for our daughter and all of her friends. I'm going to share a note Avery gave me back when all of this started, but made me promise not to open until I knew the time was right...
Dear Mommy & Daddy,
If you're reading this it's because I've gone to take care of my Uncle Bryant, Nana Carolyn, Papa George, and all my great Grandparents. I love you veeeeeeeeeery much. Also, tell Nana & G-Pa I love them too. In fact, tell everyone who loved me that I love them and I appreciate them caring about me. When I started writing my blog, I thought I'd only be speaking to my closest friends and family members. Little did I know soooooooo many people would care about me and while I'm flattered to have so many people who love me, I hope they will also take time to love and care about all of my friends out there with SMA.

You see, I'd never heard of SMA prior to being diagnosed with it, yet there's thousands of my friends out there living
with it today and millions of my future friends parents who are unknowingly carriers of the SMA gene. Without awareness and without a cure, I'm afraid more of my friends are at risk to have their lives drastically shortened by SMA. When people think of me, I hope they'll also think of all my friends who have been through this and who are going through this now. But what I really hope for is that when people think about me, they will not waste time sitting there feeling sorry for me, rather I hope they will STAND UP in honor of me and all of my friends (past, present, and future). And they can do so by spreading awareness and helping to fund a cure for my friends.

To all my SMAns, you followed me, now please follow all of my friends. Mommy. Daddy. I love you every bit as much as you love me. And while I'm not here physically, I will forever live in your minds, as you will mine. Love always,
Avery, Aviator, Aves, Scuttlebutt Also, before Avery passed away, I made her a promise that I would continue to be an activist in raising SMA awareness, making genetic testing universally available, and in finding a cure for her
friends. I will not break that promise and in the name of SMA awareness and funding a cure.
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