Category: Campus Life

  • Press club  gets exco

    Press club gets exco

    A campus publication in the University of Calabar (UNICAL), Echo press, has got new officers. The election, which was conducted by an electoral committee led by Raymond Ekemini, 400-Level Medical Laboratory Science, saw the emergence of Umoh Udeme as president.

    Others elected include Akpanudo Edidiong, General Secretary, Samuel Obibi, Deputy General Secretary, Chris Umanah, Financial Secretary and Christian Odumegwu, Treasurer.

    The officials were inaugurated in a ceremony held at the parliamentary hall, UNICAL. The event was attended by the Dean of Students’ Affairs, Prof Eyong Eyong, who represented the Vice-Chancellor, Prof James Epoke.

    Also at the ceremony were the Head of department of Linguistic and Communication, Dr Agada Obute, Chief Security Officer, Mr Adie Boniface, president of Students’ Union Government (SUG), Ayi Ekpenyong, and Speaker of the union parliament, Emmanuel Olayi.

    The outgoing president, Emmanuel Ahanonu, thanked the management for its support during his tenure. He also appreciated members of the club, who supported his administration. The incoming president, Umoh Udeme, thanked members for confidence reposed in him, stressing that his administration would focus on innovation.

    Prof Eyong advised leaders of the club to sustain the ideal of objectivity and tell the truth always. The occasion also featured presentation of awards and launching of the club’s almanac and magazine.

     

  • Yinka Gbadebo Sworn in as new NANS President

    Yinka Gbadebo Sworn in as new NANS President

    Com. Yinka Gbadebo, the newly elected President of the National Association of Nigerian Students was last Thursday sworn in as them legitimate and democratic 27th President of the association.

    The inauguration ceremony which took place at the Abuja International Conference Centre with the theme “Repositioning Nigerian Students for National Socio-political Development’’ had the crème de la crème of the society in attendance and these include the: Imo State Governor, Owelle Rochas Okorocha; Engr. Jide Adeniji, Chairman, Governinig Board of the Federal Roads Maintenance Agency (FERMA); Professor Sidi Osho, Vice Chancellor, AfeBabalolaUniversity, Ado-Ekiti; and Com. Jude Imagwe, SSA to President Goodluck Jonathan on Students and Youth Affairs who represented the Nigerian President at the event.

    Shortly after Yinka Gbadebo, who was welcomed up stage with the inspirational and highly-spirited Great Ife anthem, was sworn in, he observed his first constitutional duty as he made his other official members take the oath office to serve the utmost interest of the association

    Those who took the oath include: Comrade Jubril Ahmed, Vice President, National Affairs (A.BU. Zaria); Comrade Peculiar Asemota, Vice President External Affairs (A.A.U. Ekpoma); Comrade Ubon Marcus, Vice President Special Duties (UNIUYO); Comrade Olaogun Victor, National P.R.O Comrade (Federal Poly, Offa); Olusina Oyebisi, Director Travels and Exchange (FUT, Minna); Comrade Kalib Abubakar, Director of Sports (Kano State University); Comrade Alaofin Blessing, Ex-Officio1 Comrade (Kogi State University) Others include: Onukaogu Donald, Senate President (FUT, Owerri); Comrade Shima John, Deputy Senate President (BSU, Makurdi); Com.

    Daniel Munir Momodu, Secretary General (OAU, Ile-Ife); and Com. Ali Abdullahi Mohammed, Assistant Secretary General (Kano State Polytechnic).

    Shortly after that, Engr. Jide Adeniji, the first patron of NANS since 2005 was decorated with the Grand Patronship title. Engr. Adeniji has won several awards which include but not limited to: ICON of Leadership Award for the recognition of his leadership quality in 2005; One of the 50 Outstanding University of Ife

    Alumni by the GUARDIAN Newspapers (2009) and his was made the Grand Patron of Niger Delta Students Association in 2009.

    Governor Rochas Okorocha of Imo State was also given ‘Life Membership’ of the association, a honour the governor described as instrumental to the development of NANS.

    Governor Rochas Okorocha has, however, promised never to neglect them and also assured NANS that he would embark on some of the campus tours with the leaders of the association. In his appreciation speech, the Governor also promised to send some of the NANS leaders to China to learn how things are done rightly and progressively by the youths. He maintained that NANS is a very instrumental association to the development of Nigeria because it controls the minds of the heart of the nation, that si the youths.

    Past Presidents of NANS also graced the occasion and the legitimacy of Com. Yinka Gbadebo was perfectly and boldly declared against the activities of two presidential candidates who lost woefully at the poll during the NANS Convention last December where Com. Gbadebo was declared the absolute winner.

  • Students disrupt exams at UNIABUJA

    Students disrupt exams at UNIABUJA

    Engineering students of the University of Abuja (UNIABUJA), on Monday disrupted the second semester exams of the institution which started

    today. The students were protesting the non-accreditation of engineering programmes by the National Universities Commission (NUC).

    The protesters blocked the main entrance of the mini campus, preventing students who were going to write exams from entering the campus.

    Others, who were already seated in exam halls, were sent out by the demonstrators, who tore answer booklets given to the students.

    There were reports of arrest of students by security operatives who stormed the campus to disperse the protesters. None of the university officials was available to address the demonstrators, who were chanting “no accreditation, no exam”.

    Officials of the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) were on the campus to sympathise with the protesters. Addressing the engineering students, the NANS president, Yinka Gbadebo said the association would continue to protest until the management secures the accreditation for

    the courses.

    Abraham Thompson, a student, said the accreditation crisis had prevented graduates of the faculty from being mobilised for national youth

    service.

    Security operatives including the police, soldiers and naval troops were still stationed on the campus by the time of this report.

  • Photo: Unilag Mass Comm students visit The Nation

    Photo: Unilag Mass Comm students visit The Nation

    First year Mass Communication students of University of Lagos on Friday visited The Nation on study excursion organised by the Mass Communication Students Association (MCSA) of the institution.

    During the visit they were received by The Nation’s Editor, Online, Lekan Otufodunrin who briefed them on the operations of the company and conducted them round the various departments.

     

  • ‘We wasted one year serving Nigeria’

    ‘We wasted one year serving Nigeria’

    Batch ‘A’ 2012 Corps members are passing out today. But many of them are not looking forward to the event. Reason: the high unemployment rate and lack of low-interest loan  for graduates, who want to go into business. GERALD NWOKOCHA writes.

    •Corps members paint bleak picture of National Youth Service

    Today, Batch ‘A’ 2012 Corps members will pass out after the one-year mandatory service. In the past, it was an event graduates looked forward to with high hope of a better future. Today, Corps members do not share that sentiment. Many of them are not happy because “we are going to join millions of unemployed graduates”.

    Many Corps members had come to see the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) as an avenue for employment after service. Many of them lobbied to change their postings and places of primary assignment to either government offices or corporate firms.

    Last year, the Federal Government introduced a policy, mandating the NYSC directorate to stop posting Corps members to private firms. Former Minister of Youth Development Mallam Bolaji Abdullahi, who introduced the reform, said the NYSC was becoming moribund, adding that there was need to revamp the scheme for better results.

    Abdullahi said the government had cogent reasons for redirecting the energy of the youth to four sectors of the economy.

    He said: “Posting of Corps members to various parts of the country in the area of rural health care delivery, education, infrastructure and agriculture will lead to equitable labour supply and create equal development across the nation, thereby making the youth to serve the community, instead of being cheap labour for private firms in the city.”

    The Corps members passing out today are the first set to be posted to the four sectors. Many of them bemoaned their postings to remote villages, where they said they could not utilise their business skills. They are afraid that after passing out they will be abandoned.

    They are also aggrieved at what they call a ploy to get them to serve for one more than one year through the background. To them, the requirement that they should go for one year practical training to benefit from the Subsidy Re-investment and Empowerment Programme (SURE-P), amounts to “second service”.

    They said instead of providing jobs to practicalise what they were taught in school, government wants them to go for another round of training, which may not ensure immediate employment after completion.

    Abdulkadir Muazu, who served in Abuja, described the SURE-P training as a waste of resources. He wondered why the government could not channel the resources to provide loans to business-minded youth.

    Stanley Ibeku, a former Corps member, described the training as government contractors idea. He said: “The idea is irrelevant. Why did they not make the training available to graduates during the service year? Are they also advocating the scrapping of NYSC?”

    Most Corps members, who spoke to our correspondent, described their service year as a waste of time.

    “What do you expect when Corps members are sent to communities where there is no life for a whole year and yet when they are through, there is no immediate employment? The whole thing is a waste of time,” said an outgoing Corps member, who served in Kaduna.

    Those posted to remote villages said the service year was hell for them. Idris Ibrahim, who is passing out today in Katsina State, told CAMPUSLIFE that the service year was tough for him. He was posted to a community where there is no electricity. To make calls, he said, was a problem. He wondered why he was posted to a village when there was no meaningful thing the villagers were expecting from Corps members.

    Hope Ofobike, who served in Niger State, said it was as if, she was cursed to waste a year.

    “The experience is not worth it, because I was made redundant for 11 months. The best way to engage Corps members is to repeal the policy, which makes all Corps members to teach or serve in rural communities. I studied Mass Communication and during the service year, I was supposed to be posted either to the print or electronic media. But I was asked to teach. Now, employers will be asking for two or three years experience in journalism. My brother, where will I get that when I was posted to a rural school?” Hope said.

    Charles Israel, who served in Kokona Local Government Area of Nasarawa State, said serving in the North was depressing. He told CAMPUSLIFE that the blocks of classrooms in the secondary school where he served had all collapsed. “I don’t know how they want us to survive in such environment,” he wondered.

    Chinwe Madubuike, who served in Federal Capital Territory (FCT), has a different story. “I fell in love with the students I taught at my place of primary assignment. I have a good service year not because I served in FCT, but because I was posted to teach, which is what I like,” she said.

    Gbeminiyi Ope-Ewe, who served at Africa Comprehensive School, Asokoro, Abuja, was discouraged when she was posted to a school but her experience was a source of inspiration to her. “I want to groom youth after my service year. I want to open an outfit for talent discovery and skill acquisition,” she said.

    Emeka Oge, who was in Niger State, said the service would be meaningful if Corps members are employed after service. “If we are made to be looking for jobs after our service year without provision of loans or service that can engage us productively, the nation has no business sending anybody to serve the in rural communities after their degree programmes. Let graduates find jobs after they complete their university degrees. This will save time and resources than sending us to places where none of our leaders have been to.”

  • Breeding leaders through entrepreneurship

    Breeding leaders through entrepreneurship

    In its effort to make entrepreneurship attractive to students, Enactus, a non-governmental organisation, has held three-day training for students of tertiary institutions. Participants came from 38 public and private higher institutions, which included University of Ibadan (UI), Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, University of Ilorin (UNILORIN), Ahmadu Bello University (ABU), Delta State University (DELSU), Al-Hikmah University (ALHIKMAH), Ilorin, and Federal University of Technology, Owerri (FUTO) among others.

    The training was held at Joseph Ayo-Babalola University (JABU), Ikeji Arakeji, Osun State and had over 300 Enactus students in attendance.

    The Consulate-General of the Embassy of the United States, Mr Jeffery Hawkins, graced the event with Faculty Advisers from the 38 institutions. Hawkins was represented by Public Affairs Officer of the embassy, Dehab Ghebreab and Director Information Resource Centre, Dr Samuel Eyitayo.

    The training focused on ways to improve the quality of outreach projects, which will be embarked on by the Enactus teams in the participating institutions.

    The Programme Manager, Mr Mike Ajayi, who spoke on behalf of Enactus network, said the mission and the objective of the training was to make Enactus the premium campus entrepreneurship programme for aspiring students. He said that the training was to help build the capacity of the Enactus team to develop quality projects that would have sustainable and measurable impacts.

    He added that the activities of the NGO had been endorsed by the National Universities Commission (NUC) and National Board Technical Education (NBTE) and the institutions.

    Representatives of the US Consulate-General addressed the students on the procedures to follow in securing admission for Master’s degree in the United States. They also advised on the visa procedures.

    Olajide Omojarabi, 300-Level International Studies, ABU, told CAMPUSLIFE: “This training is timely because it presents discussion on ways Nigerian youths can be leaders in their fields. The training helps students to acquire necessary skills to become business leaders right from the campus. I am happy to be part of the team from ABU.”

    Chris Nwosu, 400-Level Agricultural Economics, FUTO, said: “The training will make the Enactus team in FUTO to embark on better projects, which will, in turn, have direct impact on the people living in rural communities.”

  • Lagos SUG speakers meet

    Lagos SUG speakers meet

    Speakers of the legislative arm of Students’ Union Government (SUG) in tertiary institutions in Lagos State have met to forge a common front.

    The students met under the banner of Lagos State Speakers’ Forum (LSTSF), a platform initiated by speaker of Yaba College of Technology (YABATECH) SUG, Titilayo Arikawe.

    At the inaugural meeting held at YABATECH, Titilayo explained the forum’s role in ensuring peace and harmony on campuses. She said LSTSF was founded to project intellectualism, dynamism and innovation on campuses, adding that the body was committed to build an ideologically-oriented generation of leaders, who would liberate the nation from the challenges of bad leadership.

    However, the Secretary-General to the forum, Kehinde Olofintuyi, Speaker of Lagos State Polytechnic (LASPOTECH) students’ union, outlined the vision and mission statement of the forum which he said included improving relationship among institutions in the state, promoting parliamentary education and initiating programmes that would benefit the students in the state.

    The Director of Logistics, Sodiq Animashaun, speaker, Adeniran Ogunsanya College of Education (AOCOED) students’ union, advised members to be focused and goal-oriented, adding that integrity should be the forum’s watchword.

    Other speakers present at the meeting included Lukman Oluwagbemileke, Lagos State College of Health (LASCOHEALTH), Kennedy Iloh, Nigerian Institute of Oceanography and Marine Research, and Sodiq Sanni, Lagos State University (LASU).

    Kennedy, who is the Public Relations Officer of the forum, extended the body’s membership to other recognised tertiary institution in the state.

     

  • UNICAL student wins essay prize

    UNICAL student wins essay prize

    A 400-Level student of English and Literary Studies of the University of Calabar (UNICAL), Augustine Ayilewu Edung, has emerged the winner in the just-concluded Golden Penny Carnival Calabar Essay competition.

    Augustine with entry number 002 emerged the winner at the tertiary category of the contest with an aggregate score of 64 per cent. He was given two brand new HP laptops, glass plaque, books and N300,000.

    Augustine, who was among the 10 students selected in Nigeria for a script writing competition of Wale Adenuga’s Pefti Film Institute in 2008, told CAMPUSLIFE that he was grateful to God for his achievement.

    The first runner up in the contest was Williams Begba Undebe, Medicine and Surgery, UNICAL, who scored 60.6 per cent, while Sunday Utibe, Curriculum and Teaching student, UNICAL, emerged the second runner up with 60.4 per cent score. The competition is held annually as part of activities to mark Calabar Carnival.

  • 50-year-old matriculates at institute

    50-year-old matriculates at institute

    : Principal tasks students on excellence

    The Petroleum Training Institute (PTI), Effunrun, has held matriculation for the freshers admitted into part-time programmes last week. The event, which was held in the expansive conference centre of the institute, saw 517 students taking the oath to begin the 2012/2013 session. The figure was low compared to 810 students admitted in the last session.

    In her address, the Acting Principal and Chief Executive Officer of the institute, Mrs Clara Dennar, said 1,077 students applied for admission but only 517 met requirements of the institution. She said the institute introduced strict selection procedure to ensure that only the best candidates were admitted.

    “May I, at this juncture, congratulate you on your successful admission into the institute. I also wish to advise you to be focused and work hard to justify the confidence reposed in you,” she stated.

    She said: “Since inception, the institute has developed competent technical manpower that is turning the valves in the oil and gas sector. I am proud to say that PTI is now a household name in the oil industry, as there is no oil company that does not have a PTI graduate in its staff list. You are, therefore, expected to maintain the high academic standard set by your predecessors.

    “I am aware that most of you are grappling with so many challenges. Besides being employed, some people among you are fathers and mothers. You have to balance your time to achieve academic excellence, bearing in mind that there is no freedom without sacrifice.”

    A 50-year-old man, Mr E. Ironbar, who was part of the matriculating students, attended the programme with his daughters. He was admitted for Higher National Diploma (HND) into the department of Petroleum Marketing and Business Studies. He told CAMPUSLIFE: “I came back to school for further knowledge on a particular aspect of my profession.”

    Another fresher, Patience Akporode, HND 1 Petroleum and Natural Gas Department, said: “I feel very happy today that my plans for my future are yielding results. I hope to be an entrepreneur at the end of my study.”

    Esther Onomuoja, ND 1 Mineral Resources, said: “I am finally a student. The institute is a good place to be. I hope to come out with a good grade at the end of my study.”

     

  • Corps member builds ICT centre for host community

    Corps member builds ICT centre for host community

    A Corps member serving in Gadabuke area in Nasarawa State, Tom Samuel, has built an Information and Communication Technology (ICT) centre in Government Secondary School located in the remote village of Kullo. Tom said the project, which was part of his Community Development Service (CDS) task, was carried out to leave his host community a better place.

    The computer centre offers all ICT services to the populace with modern facilities such as digital computer laboratory, digital computer almanacs, design cottons, window nets, generator, flash drive and computer parts.

    While speaking during the commissioning of the centre, the state co-ordinator of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), Mr Stephen Alabi, who was represented by the NYSC Local Inspector in Gadabuke area, Mr Moses Adamolekun, praised the Corps member for the project.

    He said: “When Tom discussed the project with me, I thought it was something that will not be possible, but through the determination and zeal, Tom has fulfilled his dream for his host community.” He, however, challenged other Corps members who are yet to take up any CDS project to do so and affect their places of primary assignment positively.

    Tom said: “When I resumed at Government Secondary School, Kullo in Gadabuke Development Area, I discovered that there was no computer education in the school curriculum. This prompted me to ensure that the students from JSS One to SSS Three learn the rudiments of computer. So, I took them through the practical aspect of computer through my personal laptop. So far, no fewer than 252 students have been trained in computer application such as Microsoft excel, power point, Corel Draw, Internet browsing among others.”

    On what the school and the community would benefit from the centre, the Principal of the Government Secondary School, Mr Abubakar Adamu, said: “With the computer resource centre in place, the school needs not to waste money for typing or printing examination questions or any official documents. Also, online registration can also be done here, which will save money and time.”

    While praising the initiator of the project for a job well done, the Administrator of Gadabuke Development Area Council, Alhaji Salihu Ibrahim, said: “It takes courage for a Corps member to come up with a brilliant idea like this, not even minding that he is serving in a village. The computer resource centre will help build leadership ability in our students and enhance their intellect.”