Tag: OAU

  • OAU resumes Monday

    The Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife (OAU) will resume on Sunday.

    A statement by the institution’s Public Relations Officer (PRO), Mr Abiodun Olarewaju, said academic activities for the 2013/2014 session would begin on Monday while students are expected to come into residence on Sunday.

    Also, the management of the Kogi State University in Anyigba (KSU) has slated January 6 as resumption date during the 71st meeting of the institution’s senate.

    In a statement signed by the institution’s Registrar, Mr J. A. Zhizhi, students are expected to come into residence on January 4 as lectures commence January 6.

    CAMPUSLIFE gathered that changes have been made to the academic calendar to help students to recover their lost time.

  • OAU Prof yet to be found

    OAU Prof yet to be found

    As universities across the nation get set to reopen after the five-month-old face-off between the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) and the Federal Government, Prof James Bolarinwa Olomo may not return to work with his colleagues at the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, Osun State.

    For over two months now, his whereabouts have been a cause for concern for his colleagues, family and indeed, the university’s authorities.

    They have remained persistent in their appeal to the public to provide any information that could lead to his recovery.

    Olomo, a Professor of Nuclear and Medical Physics at the OAU, was said to have left Lagos on Thursday, October 17 by flight for Calabar and later, by road for Eket near Uyo, the Akwa Ibom State capital, supposedly to an oil & gas company, where he is a Radiation Safety Adviser (RSA).

    A statement jointly signed by the school’s chapter of ASUU, Search Committee (Department of Physics); OAU Administration, Otan Aiyegbaju Progressive Union; and the Olomo family, said Olomo was last reached on phone by a colleague from the institution and his secretary on October 19.

    The statement said the matter had since been reported to the police, State Security Service (SSS), Osun and Kwara states government, and major hospitals in Eket, among others.

    The statement urged any Nigerian with useful information to contact OAU’s Vice-Chancellor, Prof Bamitale Omole, or representatives of the Olomo family on 08033580020.

    The statement added: “A Yoruba adage says: ‘The demise of a child is more tolerated than his or her disappearance.’ The disappearance of Prof James Bolarinwa Olomo is still a mystery and shock and has dealt a deadly blow to his colleagues, students, friends and relations.

    “The search must continue until he is found and therefore, we need to double our efforts. It is exactly two months and one week now since he disappeared mysteriously.”

  • ‘Nigerian educational system is world-class’

    ‘Nigerian educational system is world-class’

    The Minister of Agriculture, Dr. Akinwunmi Adesina, has said that a world-class training can be acquired in the Nigerian educational system.

    He said that the system is unique because it teaches its products hard work, diligence, persistence and the ability to make something out of nothing.

    Adesina made this remark when he received the award of the Grand Commander of the Obafemi Awolowo University in Abuja at the award night/ NUGA fund raising dinner of the institution’s Alumni Association.

    He said, “What I learnt from my education in Ife basically is to make something out of nothing, which I think is very unique about our educational system. That is why I will always remain humble being a product of Great Ife.

    “In OAU, you learn to be very persistent in everything you do. They taught us to work very hard and be very persistent.”

    President, Great Ife Alumni Association, Deola Shokobi, explained that the event was prompted by the need to recognise members who have made their marks in the society and raised money for the Nigerian University Games Association (NUGA) games which will be hosted by the institution.

  • More Nigerian universities urged to run Lab Science courses

    MORE Nigerian universities have been advised to start a degree programme in Medical Laboratory Science in order to meet the World Health Organisation (WHO) requirement in the discipline.

    Speaking at a Medical Laboratory Scientists of Nigeria conference in Ile-Ife, Osun State, Chairman of the association in Ife/Ijesha zone of Osun State, Dr. Ganiyu Adosun, urged the authorities of the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife to take the lead in running the course.

    He maintained that the nation’s universities need to brace up to the challenge facing health care delivery in the country.

    He lamented that very few universities are offering Medical Laboratory Science, adding that other universities in the country where the course is being run should work on the relevant professional bodies for accreditation.

    He called on the management of the university to commence work on the take-off of the programme.

  • A campus covered in graffiti

    A campus covered in graffiti

    In its recent ranking of universities on conduciveness and academics, Cybermetrics Lab, a Spanish research group responsible for ranking of universities, listed the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) as the eighth institution in Africa for excellence, openness and knowledge impact and presence.The honour befits “Africa’s most beautiful campus” as the university is fondly called by students given its aesthetic environment and architectural masterpiece.

    However, a visit to the campus tells another story. Every available space is covered in graffiti. Students indiscriminately paste posters, flyers, stickers and banners on wall surfaces, despite the notice boards provided by the management and students’ associations.

    Such places where posters are haphazardly pasted include toilets, walls, hostel doors, lecture rooms, doors of departments’ offices, faculties’ walkway, reservoirs, barks of trees, incinerators and butteries’ wall. The posters contain mostly upcoming programmes of students’ fellowships, political manifestoes, associations’ week schedules, faculties’ seminar, press releases and business adverts, with motive to gain readership, disseminate information and quick patronage.

    In spite of the school regulation against abuse of school facilities, the campus has been covered with layers of papers and scribbles. The posters remain on the wall for as long as they are covered with other posters.

    The Campus Aesthetics and Trade Regulatory Committee (CATREC) on various instances held awareness programmes to discourage the act. The body had participated in orientations to show students a responsible method of pasting posters without constituting a nuisance on the campus.

    In Students’ Handbook given to freshers, it was comprehensively stated in Article XII Section D on Environmental Issues, that: “A student shall not deface the Halls of Residence by pasting posters, writing on the walls or engaging in any act that may destroy the aesthetics of the halls.”

    The Rain Semester is time when departments, faculties and students’ indigenous associations experience change of guards. During this period, the university walls are covered with all sorts of pictures and programmes of candidates.

    In the hostel, rooms are covered with scribbles such as names of the occupants, quotes of famous people, cleaning schedules and timetable for lecturers.

    Another way students abuse facilities of the school is engraving clubs’ programmes on writing boards with sharp objects. Others use permanent markers to create permanent awareness about themselves or their associations.

    Some students, who spoke to CAMPUSLIFE, condemned the abuse, describing it as sign of bad housekeeping. They blamed the management for its weak enforcement of regulation to stop the abuse.

     

  • ‘There is need to re-establish Yoruba culture’

    ‘There is need to re-establish Yoruba culture’

    A professor of Agricultural Economics at Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, Osun State and former Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC), Gombe State,  Olasupo Oyetoro Oladipo, spoke with our Correspondent, Adesoji Adeniyi, on national  issues; Yoruba culture, and the forthcoming local council election in Osun State.

    Is Nigeria better, 53 years after independence and 14 years of unbroken democracy?

    From my own point of view, yes we are better off; yes we are worse off. We are not really better off but we could have been worse. The reason is simple. It is our own doing. It is caused by our greed.

    We allowed foreign elements and influences to direct us.

    The first major error or mistake we made was not promoting our own languages and, by so doing, we are not promoting our own culture and that led to our not promoting our development. We have been trying to find solutions to problems without really considering how the problems started, or how they occurred. We have become an ad hoc people that find solution to problems without considering how the problem occurred.

    Though we have culture that handles problems, if we really used that to our own advantage; all the new things we have learnt should not be problem for us. Let us go back to the 1950s, when a farmer or the wife of the farmer wants to sell something, he or she doesn’t have to be there. He puts the goods on the road side; put a sample and the price. Anybody who wants to buy will come, take what he wants to buy and leave the money there. We have, however, lost that culture of trust, credibility, brotherhood, faithfulness which was our heritage.

    In receiving foreign cultures, whether political or religions, we forgot that the base of our existence is our entity and our culture, and this is embedded in our language which is our means of communication. We are losing this culture; for example, we have lost parenting. We are no longer parenting, and when I hear people talk and I see them and I hear their name, I pity them a lot this is because the Yoruba make a culture of being able to tell the history of a person by the person’s name.

    As a seasoned educationist and a technocrat, how will you describe the merger of schools by the Aregbesola administration in Osun State?

    When we talk of merger of schools, what exactly are we merging?

    In making education functional, you need a lot of tools and equipment which may be very expensive. But if you can have a centre where all these teaching equipment are assembled and you bring the children to learn at that place, if you call that merging, it is. Let’s go back to what we were in the past. When I was in secondary school, there were only 17 secondary schools in the entire Southwest and many of them were actually founded in the 50s. Osogbo Grammar School was one of them, founded in 1950 and so many of them. And we all came from every place to seek knowledge and obtain knowledge, and it was the crop of that generation that we have today.

    Proliferation of schools without the necessary tools does not really help anybody. I mean we can have, if we are that rich, secondary school in every compound, but is it economically efficient? But it is economically efficient to have all the tools that make for good secondary education.

    Can we even afford to have it scattered all over the place?

    The educational system went bad because we had too many schools and were unable to equip them adequately. Education is expensive and requires equipment. Modern education requires expenses on all the modern amenities. If we do not merge, we will not be able to afford to give sound education to our children, who are the future of this nation.

    What do you think can make Nigeria a self-sufficient and economically sustainable?

    There is no nation that developed without first developing its agriculture. Britain developed and protected its agriculture. Germany, Japan, America and so many others did the same. It is when a nation is able to feed itself from its own products, and has produced enough to feed itself and export, that is when a nation can be said to be developed.  A nation that is not food sufficient cannot develop.

    One thing we have to know is that we should believe in small businesses and in cooperation. Cooperation is what brings success. We used to be one of the largest producers of groundnut and cotton. Do we still produce those things? We used to be the leading producer of palm oil.

    Do we still produce enough for our own consumption? Why? It is because we have derailed. We want something that really does not belong to us.

    We have become a nation of consumers, not of producers. Unless you produce and get income through taxing those products, there would be no development.

    When you look at agriculture, you should not only look at it from production aspect alone. When you produce, you also have to process. When you process, you have to market. Any investment in agriculture is not lucrative unless you do all these things. Lucrative here is relative. One of the things we have to understand is our own investment behaviour. As a nation we are always in a hurry. We are always looking for instant returns, we want quick returns.

    Agriculture has a term to complete before the returns start pouring in.

    When you know that there is money in black soap, you start running about to sell black soap in the market, forgetting that that black soap has to be produced. You have to take care of the production sector and that is palm tree. You can’t plant palm tree now and expect to harvest in some months. It takes at least three years before you see anything, and before it becomes profitable, it will be after five years.

    How do farmers have control over what they produce because there is the insinuation that farming is not lucrative?

    We do not know our marketing structure. The farmers only think about the farm. There are processors, like those who make the gari and carry it to market, they are all agriculturists. Their life is dependent on the farm products which is the cassava in the case of gari, and that makes them agriculturists. Even the woman who roasts the gari and markets it, including the woman who sells food are all agriculturists. If you now look at the chain, the process system of agriculture, you can now see that it is profitable.

    The person who has put all his money in setting up a palm plantation will only get about 30 per cent of the profit that is if he follows it up to the palm oil level. When you have the palm kernel, you should be able to have proceeds from it. There should be no waste. They are all used for different products. You will then see that it can be profitable.

    Many of us are absentee farmers. We employ a farm manager and expect him to work for us; we have forgotten that the Yoruba does not have a culture of working for a salary. When you are working for somebody, you are actually planning how to own your own. He is working for you and getting his salary, but actually he is working and trying to set up himself and he doesn’t care whether you succeed or not. And that’s why we think farming is not profitable. That’s why we wait until we see somebody succeeding in a particular business and we all rush to that enterprise without knowing what he did before getting to that stage. We just saw the success and we jump there and invest our money. Then when we do not get the same results, we conclude that it is not profitable.

    As an economist, we find ways to maximise profits by cooperative societies. For instance in poultry farming, they can come together to purchase or even produce the feed and this helps them to maximise profits. So, if you want to make agriculture profitable, the farmer must have control of the market and reward for his input.

    So, where does the government come in?

    The government comes in by ensuring affordability of inputs. The government should try to make fertiliser and other inputs to the farmers. The state government should put in place a medium where the farmers can apply for and get fertiliser instead of these things being hijacked only to be sold to the farmers at a higher price. They can monitor the farmers through extension workers, to ascertain the size of the farms and the quantity needed so that they don’t hoard it to resell it. This way the farmers will gain since the price will be more affordable to them. The government should make these inputs available, affordable and accessible.  Also the government should ensure that all contractors that breach contract are taken to court.

    In Osun state, one of the biggest problems of the farmers, including fish farmers, is flooding and this present government has been attempting to re-channel our water ways. let do it properly the way we are doing it. When we succeed and others see it, they will imitate us.

    With the Osun State Government declaring Isese Day for the traditional religion worshipers some people believe the Aregbesola administration is promoting an idol worshipping. What is your take on this?

    When a king is enthroned, he becomes the Oba for all, whether or not they support him. He takes decisions for all. Same thing applies to our leaders. There is no leader who only represents his religious or ethnic group. When he is seeking for votes, he does not only seek the votes of Christians or Muslims because he will represent them all. The composition of the people can be varied. No governor can decide to favour only his religious group. He seeks the votes of all, so he must represents the interest of all. What he does in his private life is his own business. A nation without a history has no future. We must realize that we came from somewhere.  The African knowledge enables us to know and understand our land and develop our own technology to meet our needs. The hoe used in Nigeria cannot be the same used in America. Those who go to seek the traditional religious people’s help will continue no matter what you say. People joining secret cults and groups in search of protection will still exist. You cannot westernise some aspects of our culture. I was in Germany and I saw some people throwing some things at something wrapped in white while it was going down a river. And they said they were throwing all the failures and disappointments of the previous years, and these are whites. They still do this. You cannot throw your culture away.

    Whether we are ashamed of ours, good or bad, we cannot throw it away. We hide our groups and turn it into secret societies instead of making it open.

    Can the African culture survive in the face of these foreign bombardments and influences?

    We, as Yoruba, need to re-establish the Yoruba culture. We need to re-establish the fact that we have a heritage which is our languages and culture. We are a people. We have to first appreciate what we own, instead of looking at other people’s things. When we get to the church, we talk about the pastor as if he is God. Is he? This is how we are derailing. We are making ourselves what we are not. What are we leaving for the future? When I say future, I mean our children.

    What about our language? If you are Yoruba, you have to think and act like a Yoruba. The Yoruba is a dynamic person. Whatever foreign culture you visit, look at it and imbibe the part that bears similarity with the Yoruba. One thing about our governor is that unlike other politicians, he left other places where he could have been in money to come here and make changes. I said earlier that people don’t like to change. We have to change if we will continue to be Yoruba. As of now, we are losing that name. There’s hardly any house you go to where they speak Yoruba language to their children. If you see the French and the English man, they speak their languages but what has gone wrong with the Yoruba. Look at Aregbesola, he is trying to raise that generation of farmers that will be able to utilize modern facilities. Where in the world do you see somebody putting 17 subjects on the curriculum including computer, and they are opposing him for including the study of Ifa. Ifa is only one of the subjects.

    There is Mathematics, Chemistry, Biology, Geography and others. They don’t see that but they are all opposed to the study of Ifa. Yoruba will succeed. Yoruba will go back to its original prominence. Aregbesola is one leader who I can say is very much in line.

    Local government election has always been generating controversies in the country, what do you think is responsible for this credibility problem?

    I think the best solution is that when people finish voting, the votes should be counted and announced immediately. The time you leave the voting centres some ugly and funny things may happen. The person in the best position to rig election is the person that moves votes from where it is conducted to another place. But once the votes is counted and announced immediately at the voting centres and results displayed, the problem of rigging is half solved. This is why the option A4 is the best among others voting system in this country.

  • All set for varsity games

    All set for varsity games

    The management of the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) in Ile-Ife, Osun State, has announced the date for the Nigerian Universities Games (NUGA) which it is hosting. The sporting event will hold next month. DHIKRU AKINOLA (400-Level Political Science) writes on the preparations so far.

    Barring any last-minute changes, the 24th edition of the Nigeria Universities Games (NUGA) to be hosted by the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) in Ile-Ife, Osun State, will begin next month.

    Last Thursday, officials of the university unveiled the logo for the sporting event at the conference room of the OAU Guest House in Ikeja, Lagos. The starting and closing dates of the event were also chosen at the event, which was attended by former Nigerian international Mutiu Adepoju and ex-Super Falcon goalkeeper Ann Chiejine.

    The Vice Chancellor, Prof Bamitale Omole, spoke of the institution’s readiness to host the “best-ever NUGA,” despite the ongoing strike by the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU).

    The partial suspension of academic activities for the sporting fiesta by the hosting institution underscores the importance of NUGA’s platform to the discovery of talents and promotion of unity.

    Over 60 universities across the country participate in the annual sport festival, which has been an avenue through which youths are engaged to tackle poverty and insecurity.

    Omole said all the events of the games would take place in the university, stressing that the facilities would be ready before the games begins. He commended the Federal Government for releasing the funds for the construction of an Olympic-size swimming pool for the event.

    The games were billed to take place last December but it was postponed because of the commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the university. In January, the university’s NUGA committees began preparation for the event.

    Recently, our correspondent was conducted round the game facilities by NUGA committee chairman, Prof Bolaji Oluseye, OAU Sports Council chairman, Prof Godwin Isichei and the Public Relations Officer (PRO), Mr Abiodun Olarewaju, to show the readiness of the university to host the games.

    Our correspondent saw the ongoing construction of spectators’ seats for the swimming pool. The construction work was being carried out by an Italian firm. One of the engineers, identified as Alexandra, was seen working on the track lane.

    Prof Oluseye said the track lane would take weeks for completion. He observed that the pool must have, at least, an eight-lane track, adding that the facility could be used to train world-class swimmers in the country.

    The don boasted that the university would cart away all the gold medals in the games given the facilities put in place by the management to train OAU participants.

    Assuring on security of participants and logistics, Oluseye said there were 12 committees to manage the hosting of the event, adding that each committee was working round the clock to ensure a hitch-free fiesta.

    The only game new to OAU team is swimming, Prof Isichei said, adding: “We are going to train our students on this before the event starts and we hope to win some medals in it.”

    He said the OAU team had won gold medals in hockey and cricket, stressing that the institution would repeat the feat in the games.

    On sponsorship, Prof Oluyemi said the institution had partnered with some corporate bodies but added that “our door is still open” to other firms that may want to partner with the school. He noted that accommodation would be provided for participants from other institutions on campus and some selected off-campus halls of residence.

    The Chief Security Officer of the university, Mr Paul Ogidi, confirmed that latest security gadgets had been procured to forestall security breaches during the event. He noted that the management had made efforts to equip the fire service unit to combat any untoward incident.

    Also, CAMPUSLIFE gathered that officers of the police, State Security Service (SSS), Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Command (NSCDC), Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) and Nigerian Red Cross would be on ground to support the school’s security personnel.

    Adepoju, who was named NUGA ambassador, observed that it was necessary to identify with the game, which he said could produce a generation of educated sportsmen in the country. He urged the Federal Government and corporate bodies to support the fiesta to fight youth restiveness.

    Some students, who spoke with CAMPUSLIFE, said they were looking forward to the games. Kehinde Adefolayemi, 400-Level Economics, said: “I am hoping that the local economy will be boosted by the event.”

    Tayo Ibrahim, an Urban and Regional Planning student, observed that the sporting festival would afford OAU students the opportunity to rob minds with their counterparts from other institutions. “I have the expectation to feel the spirit of oneness during the period, because this is our own Olympic games and I want to experience it. I am anxiously expecting the commencement of the game,” he said.

     

     

     

  • A royal farewell

    A royal farewell

    The funeral rites of Mrs Caroline Agbonma Ejieh, the mother of Prof. Mike Ejieh of the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) in Ile-Ife, Osun State, were held at Ngodo Nise in Awka South Local Government Area of Anambra State. ODOGWU EMEKA ODOGWU reports.

    At 93, she had what everyone prays for: children, wealth and long life. Mrs Caroline Ejieh,  the mother of Prof Mike Ejieh of the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) as at her demise on May 13, had 30 grand children among whom were lawyers and pharmacists and 14 great-grand children.

    Her four children, Prof Ejieh, Helen Udeh, Adeline Nwolisa and Chibuike Ejie are successful.

    Guests came from Osun, Abia, Lagos states and Abuja and abroad to bid the matriarch of the Ejieh Family farewell.

    The life of the late Mrs Ejieh spoke volumes; there was a massive turnout of sympathisers who came to bid her a final farewell.

    At 8:25am penultimate Friday, a convoy arrived at her family home in Awka. Many of those who came sang her praises in heart-rendering songs.

    Also, canons reminded the gathering that they, like the deceased, will depart someday so they should be ready for the afterworld.

    As part of the rituals before her final resting, guards of the Women’s Guild and Mothers’ Union of the Anglican community of Awka, decorated her with white linen, while making supplications to the Almighty on her behalf for a smooth transition.

    The military-like rendition of the Boys and Girls Brigade of St. John’s Anglican Church, Nise led her casket to the church auditorium, where showers of prayer rained on the deceased. The massive hall of the church was filled with worshipers; others stood in the scorching sun.

    Members of the church choir sang hymns.

    It was, however, a sweet- sour and nerve-freezing moment when Revd Nnamdi Ezeabasili of St John’s Church mounted the pulpit. As he spoke, there were tears. He thrilled his congregation with spiritual implications of life after death.

    After the sermon, the family members of the deceased, joined by other members of the congregation and guests, filed to the altar for thanksgiving.

    Prof Ejieh, who gave the vote of thanks, was grateful to all who attended.

    At 12:55pm, the church recessed. The sun appeared to have stood still while the remains of the late Madam Ejieh were wheeled out of the church by the funeral attendants.

    By 1:45pm she was laid to rest from her 93-year sojourn on earth.

    Many praised the late Mrs Ejieh for her goodness and charity and the fear of the Lord.

    Prof. Ejieh and Lady Adeline Nwolisa, who are the deceased’s first son and daughter, in recounting her lives and times, declared that the entire family would miss her love and elderly advice.

    Lady Nwolisa added that every wife who came to the Umuono kindred after her (Caroline), occupied a place in her heart as her daughter; adding that the community would miss her,

    Her remains were interred in her compound in Ngodo Nise Local Government Area of Awka.

     

     

  • NUGA Games to hold Oct 2 in OAU

    NUGA Games to hold Oct 2 in OAU

    The Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, Osun State will host the 2013 Nigerian University Games (NUGA) from October 2 to 10 , this was revealed by the organising committee during the official unveiling of the games yesterday.

    Speaking with reporters at the press briefing, the Vice-Chancellor, OAU, Professor Bamitale Omole, said the school has prepared adequately for the event stating that the school is well equipped.

    His words: “Efforts are being made to put in place all facilities and infrastructures needed for the hosting of the game, apart from the following facilities which exists in the sports complex and an all purpose pitch with pavilion and another football pitch, eight tennis courts, a cricket oval with a pavilion, a hockey field, a handball court, an all-purpose gymnasium with a tennis court, four badminton courts, and basketball court which are being renovated and upgraded, an Olympic size swimming pool with sitting terrance, a changing room, toilet facilities and offices have been constructed.

    “Also being constructed are four volleyball courts and two handball courts with terrances and the construction of an eight lane tartan track of IAAF standard will soon be completed. We are also putting all logistics in terms of accommodation, transportation and security in place for sportsmen and women as well as the officials and coaches of the games for a successful hosting of the games.”

    He thanked the government and other corporate bodies for their support towards the games.

  • OAU rated best in Nigeria, eighth in Africa

    OAU rated best in Nigeria, eighth in Africa

    The Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, has been rated the best university in Nigeria and the eighth in Africa in the latest webometric ranking.

    This was contained in the university’s news bulletin issued on Tuesday, quoting the new Webometric rating by Cybermetric Lab of Spain, a world-renowned research council.

    The publication stated that the council rated OAU higher on the ladder from number 14 to eight in Africa.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that the council also confirmed the university’s academic excellence and intellectual supremacy, saying this was the first time that a Nigerian university would be so ranked consecutively.

    “This is a development that academic analysts and management of universities in Africa have hailed as a monumental leap for educational advancement in Nigeria, ‘’ it stated.

    Reacting, the institution’s Vice-Chancellor, Prof. Bamitale Omole, attributed the giant strides recorded by his administration to unparalleled research output, administrative acumen as well as technical competence of the staff.

    Omole added that only a focused leadership, the hallmark of his management team, could produce such a feat.

    He commended the dedication to duty of all stakeholders in making sure that the ideas of the university founding fathers became a reality.