Tag: read

  • Read your way forward (II)

    Last week, we started a conversation on how reading can change our lives. We reviewed the examples of Benjamin Franklin and Michael Faraday and how, despite their limitations, they went on to become great achievers through self-development. We really don’t have any excuse to remain where we are inasmuch as there is information out there on how to change levels. In modern times, our greatest challenge is not the lack of information but the lack of direction. If we know where we want to go, we will ask the right questions on how to get there and seek out relevant information on the steps to take.

    Imagine this: there are several biographies and autobiographies of great people that can inspire us to greatness. In just a few days, we can learn of a person’s strengths, weaknesses, challenges, victories and even personal success traits. While it took the person perhaps 60 or 70 years to live through those experiences, and a few other years to publish them as a book, it willonly take us a few days to read. That individual learnt his lesson at the end of his life, we are learning the same from him at the prime of ours.

    First, we must have a direction or goal, then we should read our way towards the achievements of that goal. Here are a few ways we can do this:

    Classify the goals: I assume you have a list of what you want to achieve this year. In case you haven’t a list yet, please make one right now. Classify your goals according to similarities to ease the process of finding relevant materials.

    Identify the leading authors on the subjects: sinceit is wise to learn from the best, find out the people who have achieved desirable success and get their materials. You will learn from their wealth of experiences and add their strategies to yours.

    Determine to read a book every month: if you become too enthusiastic and want to read the books all at once, not only will you get exhausted quickly, you will also neglect other important things that equally need your attention. The best approach is to adopt a system that is gradual, but effective. When you pick the book for the month, divide the number of pages by the number of days in the month; that way, you will make progress gradually and also be able to measure your performance. You may also create a log for yourself and check it every day after reading; this will give you psychological satisfaction that you are making progress.

    Take notes: get a notebook and write out what you learn every day. Also, write your impression about what you read and indicate how it applies to your own situation. Among other things, taking note will serve as a quick reference any time you need the information.

    Act immediately: don’t wait till you finish reading an entire book before you start using the information therein. The motivation that comes from reading the book is meant to propel you to act- don’t let it ware out.

    Convert every idle time: you can read anywhere, so, convert every opportunity in the traffic, toilet, etc. to reading time.

    Thanks for reading my article today. I would really love to hear from you. So, do share your views with me by sending SMS to 07034737394, visiting www.olanreamodu.com and following me on twitter @lanreamodu. Remember, you are currently nothing compared to what you can become. This will be your year, if you want it to be!

  • Read your way forward

    Benjamin Franklin was one of the founding fathers of the United States and he had several achievements to his credit, such as being an author, printer, political theorist, scientist, statesman and diplomat. Not only was he said to have exemplified the emerging America, he also played a foundational role in the definition of the values upon which the nation was build. It is, therefore, amazing to note that he had less than two years of formal education. His father couldn’t afford to send him to school beyond that level, so, he practically read himself to his achievements. Benjamin Franklin was referred to as a voracious reader and several books and articles have been written about his personal library.

    Another icon that is worthy of attention is Michael Faraday. As in the case of Benjamin Franklin, Michael Faraday had only the most basic education, after which he educated himself. At the age of fourteen, he became an apprentice to a local bookbinder and bookseller and was reported to have read several books during his seven-year apprenticeship. After his apprenticeship, he attended scientific lectures delivered by Humphry Davy, one of the leading scientists of his days. Michael Faraday took notes from the lectures and later bound his notes into a three-hundred-page book and sent it to Davy who was really impressed. When the need arose, Davy employed Faraday to work for him and the rest is history; of course, we know that Michael Faraday later made major discoveries such as electromagnetic induction, diamagnetism and electrolysis.

    If we examine the lives of several other successful people, we will discover that they all have something in common- reading. Let us adopt a common sense approach here. We expect a studious student to excel but, if a student does not study for his/her examination, we assume failure is imminent. Hence, whether consciously or unconsciously, we equate studying or reading with success.  Again, most people would agree that life is a life-long school. How is it then that we don’t consider it necessary to read in order to deal with our daily challenges? Do you think you are the first person in your position? Do you think no one has ever gotten to where you are? Of course not! There are books on almost every topic or career that there is. When last did you read a book to update your information?

    You don’t know how much you don’t know until you open up yourself to more information. I used to think that being wise means knowing everything, until I came across a passage in my favorite book which says that when you give instruction to a wise person, he becomes even wiser. This means that “knowing” is not what makes us wise, but identifying what we don’t know, being humble enough to admit it and having the good sense to seek it out. How did you perform in 2018? Do you sincerely think you used the highest quality of information to manage your affairs? If you did, do you suppose that information will be sufficient to give you better chances in 2019? If you desire a better result than you had last year, you need to broaden your knowledge base.

    Another value of reading is that it conditions our thoughts. According to Less Brown, psychologists say that 20 – 30 thousand thoughts go through our minds every day. Since our dominant thoughts determine the results we see around us, it is best that we feed our minds with productive materials in 2019.

    Thanks for reading my article today. I would really love to hear from you. So, do share your views with me by sending SMS to 07034737394, visiting www.olanreamodu.com and following me on twitter @lanreamodu. Remember, you are currently nothing compared to what you can become. This will be your year, if you want it to be!

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • ‘Why students should read to develop themselves’

    Olubayode Oluwunmi is the holder of world record of Longest Marathon Read Aloud. He is passionate about the reading culture of youths in Nigeria. In this interview with Nwachukwu Chizoba, he describes himself as a seeker of greatness and a builder of legacy

    What is your view on the decline of reading culture among youths?

    Well it depends on the angle you are looking at it from.  To start with it is not as if the youths are not reading. They are actually reading, but the question is what are they reading. If you pick up your phone and open Facebook, check Bella Naija website, or Linda Ikeji’s blog check all these gossip you are actually reading and gaining information. But how beneficial is that information to develop yourself? So you don’t compare someone that is reading to develop himself and someone reading to pass examination. In those days our fathers read magazines, books so that they improve their lexicon, their vocabulary and how well they command their English. And by doing that they are improving their cognitive ability. Today wealth is being taught, some people have gone through the root of acquiring wealth and stopped reading.

    What motivated you to read?

    I was pained that youths are no more reading.  You can’t have a vibrant nation where the youths are not reading and even the old ones, because you can only think from the concept you have in mind and if you’re shallow, we can’t have a robust discussion on how to move our country forward. So I had to go through that journey to arouse the love for reading. It was not for Fame, it was not for money, it is just so it can be there, was it easy? No, it was a crazy quest, a suicide mission. At a point in time I was about to die because of it, but I said that if I die, I die at least it would be said that he was reading when he died. So maybe if I die doing that, I will be like Jesus that when he died people started believing in him. So if I die in the cause of doing that, Nigerians might begin to read again so that was the reading.

    What are you working on now and in the future?

    Right now I do one thing, I call it LEAD TO READ. It is a project whereby, an accomplished person in the society, doctor, lawyer goes back to their secondary school to read to the current pupils and talk about the importance of reading. This project helps accomplished people become mentors to the students.

    Also by December 1 2018 we are holding a picnic at Eco Atlantic called FAMILY READ PICNIC to enable adults and parents read to the children. Because parents often ask me how to make their children read, but when I ask how often they read to their children they never answer the question always saying they don’t have time.

    Also, we are trying to intensify reading, so that when I read I can get a reward. So on that day there would be reading competition, prose, poetry, spoken word, spelling competition where the winners are going to win at least 500,000. This is to entice youths to read. This is another problem in our society, they are paying the entertainers well, but when it comes to academic competition, they pay peanut. Because they believe people are not improving academically, so they are putting the money in entertainment. We want to bridge the gap.

    We are bringing reading and entertainment calling it READTAINMENT to make it fun for children and their parents. On that day we are attempting two world record, the first one is most parent reading to their children simultaneously on that day by God’s grace 10,000 parent would be reading to their children at the same time and it would be in a family circle, family a, family b.

    We are also attempting most number of adult reading to children at the same venue. So 10,00 adults would be reading to children at the same venue, it has never happened, in Nigeria or Africa we are going to do that and make Africa proud.

  • Foreign minister does not read?

    SIR: In an otherwise erudite and articulate interview published by The Guardian, June 23, (Page 37) Nigeria’s foreign minister, Geoffrey Onyeama capped his brilliant discourse with a pathetic anticlimax, when the correspondent asked him “the title of the book you are currently reading”. Onyeama answered flatly: “Honestly, I do not have time to read books at the moment and it is quite a long time since I had an opportunity to read because I am trying to get the Nigerian foreign policy situation right”.

    One does not actually know how the minister would “get the Nigerian foreign policy situation, right”, without the benefit of the deep insight and uncommon understanding that can only issue from wide-ranging study and readings.  The contemporary global order is fraught with shifts and uncertainties, and even to grasp the flow of events, one need to understand the context, from which it could be aligned to the fundamentals of foreign policy, with the consequence of generating options for actionable engagements. While any foreign minister would maintain a coterie of expert advisers and the total benefit of the bureaucracy, it is nonetheless of strategic importance that the chief foreign policy actor should maintain a considerable degree of intellectual alertness, guaranteed only through study and reading of books.

    Onyeama is definitely suave, urbane and has the personal carriage and charisma of a foreign minister that can hold his own, among his global peers, but must drop his cynical disdain for reading books and study. If he wishes to function only as the mere head of bureaucracy, with only the routine of juggling files and memos, he may well do without books but if he intends to lead the Nigeria’s foreign policy charge, in a complicated global era of information over-drive, then reading books, both classical work of theories and the accumulated experiences of notable key global actors that could be gleamed for their memoirs must be his inseparable partner. Infact, to be a foreign minister, without relishing the recent histories of the games that nations play, through the elaborate memoirs of numerous key actors in several world circuits, is to deprive oneself a drink from the fountain and spring of accumulated wisdom, which usually details both the intrigues, straight forward naivety and even the honesty of contemporary diplomacy.

    Should Onyeama reconsider, the following among many others, should be in order. The diplomatic memoirs of the legendary Henry Kissinger in two volumes – “Years of upheaval” and “Years of Renewal” stand distinguished as historical work on diplomacy. Also the memoir of the then world longest serving foreign minister, of the former USSR, Andrei Gromyko, simply titled “Memoirs”.

    The work of the former Israel foreign minister Abba Eban, “The New diplomacy: International Affairs in a modern age”, a work of contemporary diplomacy, a work combining both the scholar and practitioner insight of contemporary diplomacy.

    Former Chinese foreign minister, Tang Jiaxuan’s memoir, which he titled “Heavy Storm and Gentle Breeze”, an account of China’s diplomacy at an epochal moment of her economic reforms and modernization efforts.

    Other works containing deep insight to contemporary global order, especially in this age of uncertainty includes Henry Kissinger’s latest work published in 2014 with the title “World Order” and a brilliant work of Dr. Richard Hass with the title “A world in disarray.

    The bimonthly U.S based journal, “foreign affairs”, though largely a scholarly mouth-speak of the liberal international order and its current travails, is a great eye opener to several critical and strategic spot of the work.

    Last but not the least, the only memoir of a former Nigerian foreign minister the engaging and intellectually invigorating work of Joe Garba “Diplomatic Soldering, can lend some deep insight to the practice of Nigeria’s diplomacy at the time of the intense cold war.

     

    • Charles Onunaiju,

    Centre for China Studies, Utako, Abuja.

  • We need to read books, not just money

    Truth is, where there is a dearth of books, foolishness abounds. Foolishness multiplies because scientific enquiries and breakthroughs are stifled, while artistic endeavours are also neglected.

    We live in strange times indeed, but they are not interesting ones. You know the times are strange when you are getting one hour of electricity supply to your house from your own clodhopper Disco in seventy-two hours. You say that is not strange? I’m sure I beg your pardon. I forget that there are people who are not supplied any electricity in six months. Ok. Let me try again. You know the times are strange when apartments that should hold clothes and furniture hold bales of bank notes; and banks that should hold bank notes are holding empty vaults.

    It is a little like a story I once told but for the sake of those of us who were not there then, I will delightfully tell it again. There was once a rich man who had a grown up son. But this man was desperate to have his son become a renowned violinist. The young man had no such ambition but you know, when you are a rich man… Anyway, to realise his dream for his son, this rich man paid, blackmailed or convinced a renowned violinist to endorse his son’s violin playing abilities by accompanying him (the son) on the piano in a public concert. The violinist in turn convinced a pianist friend of his to turn the pages (of his music sheets) for him while he played.

    Well, you can imagine the result of this talent mix but this is what a music reviewer wrote. ‘Last night, I was at a strange concert. The man whom we admire when he plays the violin played the piano. The man whom the world recognises as a renowned pianist turned the pages.

    But the man who should have turned the pages played the violin. What could they have been thinking?’ Yes, indeed, what could anyone have been thinking leaving these bags and bags of foreign and local currencies in an apartment in Lagos? Worse, what could any civil servant have been thinking, as I heard it, cutting grasses instead of… well, serving?

    Then, to top it, what could our whistle-blowers have been thinking snitching on their fellow Nigerians? Oh, we’ve talked about whistle-blowers? So sorry. Imagine, snitching is not only a virtue now, it even pays! Can you hear someone ask, ‘how did he make his money? Oh, he blew the whistle on his boss’. Clearly that is one group smiling to the bank legitimately. The wonder is that the rest of us are not seeing anything wrong with this picture. Instead, we are all too busy holding our hurting stomachs because of hunger and deprivation and envying whistle-blowers.

    Anyway, it is time again to celebrate books and copyright this year, but we can hardly raise any toast. There is a standard joke among academics. It is said that when people become professors, they no longer want to read books; they want to ‘read’ money. Just think, if they all now go to read money, who will profess for us, particularly in books? No sir, we do not need them to ask us the rhetorical question: who steals N15b and keeps it in an apartment? We know the answer to that: a Martian. What is going on inside his head? We also know that: Martian music that he alone is hearing and dancing to. We also do not need them to ask for us, who cuts grass with millions of naira? We know the answer to that too: a confused Martian pretending to be a Nigerian.

    The other day, someone tried to explain to us that Nigeria is poor because it had not paid much attention to studies in science and technology. I laughed with only one side of my mouth. I believed that man had only a hammer in his hand, so he tended to see the problem as a nail, as the Chinese would say. He was partially right; but from my little study, I would say that Nigeria is poor because it has not paid any attention to anything that is not printed in Naira notes.

    Nigerians only pay attention to anything that carries a price tag to it. They are not interested in any scientific breakthrough. They are not interested in any artistic endeavour. All, to a man, are only interested in making money illegitimately; in fact, the more illegitimate, the better the sum.

    Truth is, where there is a dearth of books, foolishness abounds. Foolishness multiplies because scientific enquiries and breakthroughs are stifled, while artistic endeavours are also neglected. So yes, we need writers of books to show us to ourselves. The writers would tell exactly why laying so much emphasis on controlling either the country or billions of sums usually would make the individual or entity come up empty handed. It never has brought out any tangible results. We learn through books that having inordinate ambitions for oneself or one’s tribe never augurs well. Nature will always correct any imbalance resulting from falsity and injustice.

    Books are man’s veritable source of truth and justice. There is no greater destruction to the human society a government can do than to deprive it of books. The Nigerian government is actively destroying the Nigerian society by denying it free access to books; it’s worse than book haram is doing. Lack of access to books is the sure pathway to lack of knowledge and a highway to a closed mind and ignorance. Ignorance cannot benefit anyone, least of all the ignorant. If the ignorant had access to knowledge, I bet you he would not be happy with his ignorance. Now, I have no idea what that means but no matter.

    Anyhow, a walk through any bookshop in Nigeria reveals a very sorry state. It will reveal the leftover pickings of an era of dependency on foreign books. In other words, once upon a time, our bookshops sold nearly only foreign books. But now, since dollars are no longer available, there is a diminished supply of these books to sell. Unfortunately, there are no Nigerian-made books to take their place on any subject, just name it, even in light reading materials. Why is this so?

    As we said earlier, people are not writing. Everyone in the land is encouraged to go after counting or ‘reading money’ rather than go after seeking and disseminating knowledge or information. Have you noticed that instead of books, people keep shops? Have you noticed that writers of books are not celebrated? The only people given chieftaincy titles are kidnappers (high on the list), well-established armed robbers, politicians, top-ranking soldiers, etc. These are the ones people call to their events. Poor writers of books are hardly thought to be good for anything in Nigeria except to be shown to little children as something not to aspire to.

    More importantly, most governments in the world recognise the importance of books; so they put as little restriction on its production as possible. Not in Nigeria though; the government seems to have gone all out to destroy the book industry since the seventies. It has done this by not only putting people lacking in the appropriate knowledge in charge of affairs concerning the book industry (or anything else for that matter), it has also used heavy importation tariffs to discourage local productions. It is time Nigeria started to put things right. In practically every sphere of public life, Nigeria has put the ignorant on the violin, the violinist on the piano and has made the pianist to turn the pages as our story illustrates.

    We can go after money, but we must get knowledge first so as to know how to use the money rightly. Without knowledge from books, our monies will keep ending up in apartments and shops.

     

  • Librarian to youths: read

    OYO State  chapter of the Nigeria Library Association (NLA)chairman Dr Olatunji Olaojo has appealed to youths to develop themselves by reading.

    He gave the charge plea when  The NLA’s new executives visited the Oyo State College of Agriculture and Technology in Igboora.

    The chairman called on people to make use of libraries, as there are professionals to guide them there.

    He said the library contributes to people’s advancement in life and called on government at all levels to increase the budgetary provisions for libraries.

    Olaojo who described his visit to the college as a homecoming, praised its Provost Prof Gbemiga Adewale for his support. He described Adewale as a friend of the library for his support to NLA members in his institution  and for the payment of institutional dues to the association.

    He solicited for more support from the Provost and other tertiary institutions in the state.

    Responding, Adewale urged Olaojo to work towards ensuring that tertiary and secondary institutions have befitting libraries.

    He should also work towards encouraging good reading culture in Nigeria.

    The NLA chairman and his executives also visited the Ibarapa Polytechnic, Eruwa, Oyo State College of Education, Lanlate; The Polytechnic, Ibadan; Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, (LAUTECH), Ogbomoso; LAUTECH Teaching hospital, Osogbo; and other tertiary institutions in the state.

  • ‘Judges should  read widely’

    ‘Judges should read widely’

    The Chief Judge of Anambra State, Justice Peter Umeadi has urged his colleagues on the bench to read widely and carry out extensive studies in addition to embracing the information technology.

    The aim, he said, is to improve themselves and their judgments.

    He made the appeal while declaring open the maiden Bar Week, which featured a dinner and award night.

    The event was organised by the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) branch at Anaocha area of the state.

    The theme of the annual conference was “Nigeria’s Self-Inflicted Judicial Wounds: The Calamitous Consequence of Legal Practice, SANs, the Stabilising Guidance of Legal Theory”.

    The event took place at White Castle Hotel in Neni, where Governor Willie Obiano was represented by his Senior Special Adviser on Legal Matters, Mrs Vera Okonkwo.

    Justice Umeadi identified two schools of thought which guide writing of judgments in Nigeria: the Babalakin and Olatuwara schools.

    Identifying himself with the Olatuwara, Umeadi said a judge should never be in doubt as to the facts of a case and the justice of a matter.

    Furthermore, he advised legal practitioners to embrace the appropriate legal theories-jurisprudence which was the norm of legal practice.

    The chairman of the occasion, the Chief Judge commended the cooperation of the Chief Justice of Nigeria with the NBA on the issue of implementation of stamp and seal policy.

    Again, he expressed worry that a lot of new cases filed by lawyers and some Senior Advocates of Nigeria (SANs) do not meet the new stamp policy requirement.

    He therefore assured the NBA of his readiness to implement the stamp policy in Anambra state.

    The chairman of the Anaocha NBA branch, Mr Chris Adimora, called for a joint retreat among the three arms of government to fashion out ways of solving some legal challenges.

    He urged political leaders and governors to make out case for non-northerners who were victims of insurgency.

    Also, the Chairman of the Planning Committee, Mrs. Chinyere Ossy-Okoye, said that the celebration was focused on brainstorming on the professional development of members and promotion of public awareness and understanding of the law and its role in the society.

    Anambra state Governor Willie Obiano, represented by Mrs. Vera Okonkwo assured that judiciary workers in the state would soon call off the ongoing strike action following efforts by the state government to resolve the faceoff.

    The state chapter of the judiciary Staff Union of Nigeria (JUSUN) on Sept. 7 had embarked on the strike action demanding for the implementation of Consolidated Judiciary Salary Structure (CONJUSS).

    Obiano urged lawyers to work hard to ensure that rights of common man was not trampled upon.

    A lecture delivered on the theme, the Past Dean of Law, Enugu State University of Technology, (ESUT) Prof. Race Achara, said that the Nigerian legal profession was facing many challenges.

    According to him, lawyers’ demand notices were no longer respected.

    According to Achara, “Worst of all is the confusing judgments of courts in the country and the attitude of throwing out cases for technical reasons”

    “They don’t lead to respect for the judicial system,” he said.

     

  • Smart card readers  that can’t read

    Smart card readers that can’t read

    After all the trepidations in the past few weeks over our national  elections, Nigerians finally went to the polls last Saturday.

    Until  the elections actually started, many still doubted whether the elections would hold, as all manner of busybodies had initiated one arcane legal challenge or another, to scuttle the elections. There was also fears that the election could yet again be postponed. Many were also really afraid that if the elections held, it will be conducted amidst mayhem and bloodshed, even as the Boko Harem elements that had threatened to disrupt the polls, were in retreat. The preparedness of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), also worried many others.

    Thankfully, our common fears over possible violence came to nought, as the election witnessed minor security challenges, across the country. The real challenge however came from the Smart Card Reader (SMR) that failed to read or play smart, in some polling stations.In my polling station number 059, in Festac Town, Lagos; the SMR became the common enemy of all voters, regardless of theirpartisan interests. While I could haphazard the political preferences of somevoters, as I moved from one group to another, the frustration from the failure of the card reader to perform did not enjoy such discriminations.

    The frustration was palpable. Throughout the morning hours, many of the voters endured the delay as they threw banters at one another, while waiting for a solution to the illiterate SCR.The INEC officials also intermittently tried to see whether the equipment could answer its name. Indeed many of us were confused as to the capabilities of the equipment. For some, the problem of the card reader stemmed from lack of signals from the INEC headquarters. To solve the challenge, the INEC officials were asked to change their seating position, to aid reception. But no deal.

    Some other voters asked the officials to keep trying different voter cards. Again no deal.They were also voters who shuttled between our voting centre and INEC’s office in Festac, to find a solution. When eventually the information filtered in that President Goodluck Jonathan’s card had suffered rejection in the hands of the SCR, I could notice that his supporters, became even more agitated, over the failed card reader. Some canvassed that it was all pre-planned, by INEC and the opposition party, to frustrate the voting centres, which they believed would favour the President’s party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    Not to be outdone by their opponents, those disposed to the All Progressive Congress (APC) in their own quiet corners, taunted that the PDP was responsible for the failed card reader. In one dramatic intervention, one man told those gathered aroundhim that it was the card jamming equipment brought in by the Israelis that was at work. Between those supporting the PDP and the APC, there was however only quietdifferences;no singleconfrontation. As the news that the card readers had malfunctioned in more places, and with the midday stepping in, the frustration enlarged.

    By 2.00pm many voters were gone, leaving the diehards to square it out. By this time, the presiding officer quietly left the venue, and I was told she had gone to the INEC office to repair the card reader. Before then, the official had said that an INEC engineer was moving from one polling booth to another to repair the SCR. The idea to go the INEC office came up, after the voters raised their concerns that time was running out. The assistant polling Officers after nearly an hour, made a call, and told those around her that the repairs would soon reach the turn of our card reader.

    By this time, the remaining voters were becoming aggressive. As to whether the presiding assistants would now use manual accreditation, as information filtered in that nearby polling booths whose card readers also failed, had started using manual accreditation;the two assistants vehemently refused, stating that they were yet to receive instructions from the state headquarters,Yaba.With this debacle, a few more of thosehanging around, decided to go home. Some others who earlier went home to have some refreshments,were also strolling back to the voting centre, to see whether the card readers had become literate enough, toread the voter’s biometrics,or smart enough to recognise the INEC cards. But not luck.

    As if on a queue, one voter few minutes after 3pm made a call, and while still having the phone on, he quietly approached the polling assistant, requesting her to talk to her superior. After a few efforts on the phone, the official announcedthat voters should queue up for manual accreditation. Shortly after, the presiding officer sauntered back, and also announced that INEC headquarters has sanctioned manual accreditation. When I asked for complaint-forms from the presiding officials, before the manual voting, they claimed not to have any. Some other voters were so anxious to vote that they were not interested in anything that could cause further delay.

    By 4.30pm, the officials started getting the voting materials ready, after announcing a total of 123 accredited voters, even as one more person claimed number 124. By about 5.20pm, the first voter cast his vote, and close to 6.00pm, I finally voted. Totally exhausted, I headed home with the frustration that the SCR may have across the country, rendered our high hopes a nullity. Later in the evening, I heard from Professor AtahiruJega that only about 350 card readers failed, out of about 119, 000. Since this piece went out on Sunday,a day after the elections; while the results and the reactions of the contestants and their parties were awaited, I was only hopeful that all our efforts would not be in vain.

     

  • Asaba residents pay N10 to read newspapers

    Newspaper vendors in Asaba, the Delta State capital, now collect N10 from readers who prefer to read papers at the newsstands.

    Mr. Azuibuike Emmanuel, who sells newspapers at the Ibusa junction, said most readers preferred paying N10 and reading the newspapers to buying them.

    He said he introduced the levy since the readers, most of who were unemployed, wanted information but could not buy newspapers.

    Azubuike said he could no longer tolerate their reading the papers free because he was no longer making huge sales.

    Another vendor, Miss Abigail Onwuzulike, said she also charged each reader N10 to read the headlines, since they did not want to buy.

    Miss Onwuzulike said some of them even preferred pairing with others to pay the amount.

    She added that she realised money from the levy to augment her income.

  • Educationist to pupils: read, write, explore

    The Chief Executive Officer, Association of International School Educators of Nigeria, Mr Ola Opesan, has said pupils can only distinguish themselves if they read, write and explore.

    Opesan spoke as the guest speaker during the Open House programme of Lead Forte Gate School in Ogudu, Lagos.

    He said that any pupil that reads and engages in extensive research would be different among his peers because of the experience and in-depth knowledge he would gain.

    He praised the school for going beyond academics to inculcate entrepreneurial skills and knowledge of various cultures in the pupils.

    He made reference to the likes of Mungo Park, Lander brothers, Socrates and others who excelled through self-inspired exploration and research that have been of significant assistance for years.

    In his remarks, chairman of the School, Tunde Lemo, underscored the importance of the Open House as one of the core values of the school aimed at establishing relationships among pupils, parents, teachers, and the community at large.

    He implored parents to complement the efforts of teachers in grooming their children into role models and future ambassadors of the school. He advised parents to always be at par with their wards possibly by assisting them in their home work.

    On his part, the Principal of the school, Dr Ben Greyling, said the school focuses on enriching the minds of the pupils with the right knowledge.