Tag: September

  • Martins named MLS player of September

    Martins named MLS player of September

    Seattle Sounders and Nigeria striker, Obafemi Martins, beat off competition from Landon Donovan to win the Major League Soccer (MLS) player of the month of September.

    A red-hot run of five goals and one assist in five games has powered Sounders star Obafemi to the award sponsored by Etihad Airways.

    In the fan vote, Obagoal’s 58.43 percent comfortably out-polled LA Galaxy icon, Landon Donovan, August’s Player of the Month winner, who finished with 13.56 percent.

    Martins’ honour marks the second time a Sounder has taken home this award in 2014, with his strike partner Clint Dempsey having claimed the April edition.

    Seattle presently sit top of both the MLS Western Conference and Supporters’ Shield standings, level with Donovan’s Galaxy.

    Major League Soccer is a professional soccer league representing the sport’s highest level in both the United States and Canada.

  • NFF Elections moved to September

    NFF Elections moved to September

    As expected, the election to usher in new members to the board of the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) will not hold on August 26, SportingLife can confirm.

    This shift in the date has been in the pipeline owing to the controversy that has surrounded Nigerian football in recent times.

    SportingLife gathered from a top Glass House source yesterday, that the election has now been fixed for September.

    Our source revealed that those calling the shots as regards the planning and organization of the election have now seen the need to shift it by a month because of pending issues.

    Nigerian football has been in crisis since the former board of the NFF was sacked by a Jos High Court in July.

    “The issues are so weighty that we cannot ignore them. That is why we decided to move it (the elections ),” said the source.

    Only on Wednesday, the Sports Minister/ Chairman of the National Sports Commission  (NSC), Dr. Tammy Danagogo met with the interim leadership of the NFF to deliberate on some of the issues.

    One knotty case in point is the purchase of forms which some aspirants claimed was being hoarded by the electoral committee so as to prevent some of them from contesting.

    The NFF may have finally succumbed to the wishes of stakeholders as it is understood that another electoral committee may be sworn in in the coming days.

    “Since the NFF has agreed to give everybody a level playing field, it is important we do that,”” our source added.

    SportingLife understands that the football house will soon notify the Federation of International Football Associations (FIFA) of the development.

  • Ebola vaccine trial in September

    Ebola vaccine trial in September

    The United States will launch an early-stage trial in September of an experimental vaccine against Ebola, the deadly viral disease that has killed 729 people in the largest outbreak in history.

    The National Institutes of Health has been developing an Ebola vaccine for several years that has had “encouraging results” in primates, says Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. Fauci said he’s working with the Food and Drug Administration to fast track the vaccine into a phase 1 clinical trial this fall. This type of trial is the earliest study in humans and aims to make sure that drugs are safe and show some efficacy.

    Results from the study should be available by January, Fauci said. If the vaccine proves safe and effective, Fauci said he expects that it could be given to health workers in affected African countries sometime in 2015.

    “We are starting to discuss some deals with pharmaceutical companies to help scale it up, so on an emergency basis, it might be available in 2015 for health workers who are putting themselves at extreme risk,” Fauci said.

    Ebola, which has a fatality rate of up to 90%, has infected more than 1,300 people in West Africa, including a number of health workers, according to the World Health Organisation.

    There are currently no effective treatments or vaccines for Ebola, which causes fever and headache in early stages but can lead to hemorrhaging, liver failure and kidney failure in later stages. But scientists have been working on four or five preventive vaccines that appear effective, said Thomas Geisbert, a professor at the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston.

    The only positive development to come from the epidemic is that it’s attracted long-needed attention from drug makers, Fauci said.

    “We have been working on our own Ebola vaccine, but we never could get any buy-in from the companies,” he said.

    For years, pharmaceutical companies have seen little potential for profit in Ebola, because outbreaks are unpredictable and typically small, Geisbert said.

    “It’s not like cancer or heart disease, or even a prevalent infectious disease like malaria,” he said.

    The Food and Drug Administration has made exceptions to its usually stringent rules for drug development when considering treatments for Ebola and other rare and lethal diseases, Geisbert said.

    Developing effective treatments is promising for Ebola. These include a man-made antibody treatment; a promising Canadian drug from Tekmira Pharmaceuticals shown to protect monkeys from Ebola; and a vaccine that can be used both to prevent infection and also treat it.

    “One of our goals is to start combining these treatments, like we do with AIDS medications,” Geisbert said.

    He said there are a number of obstacles to bringing these drugs to the clinic.

    “It’s a very fast-moving disease, and you often don’t have a lot of time to intervene,” Geisbert said. “If someone has full-blown Ebola hemorrhagic virus, there is no drug on the planet that is going to protect them. But in the monkey model, we do have drugs where, if you have an early stage of infection and an early stage of illness, some of them are pretty successful.”

    Developing effective treatments is growing more important by the day, as the West African outbreak grows. In the past, public health officials were able to get control of Ebola outbreaks by quarantining the small, remote towns and villages where they occurred, he said.

    Quarantining large populations in more densely populated cities, where Ebola is now occurring, is far more difficult, Geisbert said.

    The disease is popping up in so many places at once. That makes it harder to concentrate health experts and specialists in one area. “It’s spreading the experts who know how to manage these things pretty thin,” he said.

     

    •Culled from USA Today

     

  • Buildmacex holds September

    Buildmacex holds September

    Buildmacex Nigeria, the popular exhibition fair for building materials and machinery, is set to take place at Eko Convention Centre in Lagos. The exhibition, scheduled to take place between September 9 and 11 between the hours of 10am and 18pm, will showcase the best of materials in building construction and machinery.

    Speaking to newsmen in Lagos, Mr. Ayodeji Olugbade, the Managing Director of Meridyen International Fair Organization, stated that, Buildmacex, which is in its third edition, will provide an outstanding platform for the sales and promotion of products and services in the building construction and machinery sector of the Nigerian economy and the West African market at large.

    “Our last edition was held in Eko Hotel & Suites. It was a successful one with 84 exhibitors from various parts of the world,” he said.

     

  • IBBU to start PG programmes September

    IBBU to start PG programmes September

    Post Graduate programmes will commence at the Niger State-owned  Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida University (IBBU) Lapai in 2014/2015 academic session, the Vice Chancellor of the institution, Prof Ibrahim Kolo, has said.

    Kolo said this at the first convocation of the university where 1,732 students graduated – eight of them with first class honours.

    He said the university was prepared for the visit and the inspection of facilities by the Resource inspection team of the National Universities Commission (NUC).

    Kolo said the post graduate courses at masters and doctoral levels would be offered in Counselling Psychology, English, Adult Education, Biochemistry, Geography and Political Science including post Graduate Diploma in Maritime Studies.

    “For this purpose, the Post-Graduate School board has been put in place. By the grace of God, we expect to start our Post-Graduate Programmes by the coming 2014/2015 academic session in September this year,” he said.

    Giving a breakdown of results, the Vice Chancellor said 324 students graduated with second class upper while 902 graduated with second class lower. He added that 472 others made Third Class while 22 students got pass degree.

    Speaking of the university’s growth, Kolo said from having only four professors and 28 lecturers at inception in 2006, the university now has 20 professors, 20 associate professors, 42 senior lecturers and 140 lecturers in its employ.

    He added that the university has 680 technical and support staff facilitating quality of teaching and learning at the institution.