Tag: varsity

  • VC restates commitment to repositioning varsity

    VC restates commitment to repositioning varsity

    • LASUED celebrates International Day of Education

    Vice Chancellor of Lagos State University of Education (LASUED) Otto Ijanikin, Prof. Bidemi Bilkis Lafiaji-Okuneye, has reiterated her commitment to taking the fledgling university to enviable heights.

    She noted that her administration was poised to making the institution stand out as citadel producing excellent teachers.

    Lafiaji-Okuneye spoke on campus in Ijanikin during the celebration of the International Day of Education with the theme: Education for lasting peace.The institution organised a walk as  students trooped in large numbers with a banner to showcase the event, while moving around different faculties on campus.

    The VC said the theme for this year’s event was apt, adding that learning is crucial in the attainment of peace. She said if everyone knows the importance of safety and security,no one will be an insurgent or terrorist.

    Her words: “The theme for this year’s celebration of International Day of Education is apt. Learning is crucial in the attainment of peace . If everyone knows the importance of safety, security,no one will be an insurgent because what goes round comes round. If you are not knowledgeable, you won’t know that the security challenges you are creating as insurgents will eventually rub of on perpetrators. If you are well educated, you will be in a better way to preach peace.”

    The don urged government and the National Orientation Agency (NOA) to deepen  security awareness on radio, television with a view to avoiding  being kidnapped. She said safety measures should be widely spread to foster lasting peace.

    She said her mandate which is contained in the acronym ,”ACHIEVE” is to embrace academic culture, strengthen community relations, build human capacity, develop infrastructure, encourage entrepreneurial engagement, foster valuable research and excellent professionalism.

    Read Also: Abia varsity teachers begin strike over 11-month salary arrears 

    According to her the  “ACHIEVE” agenda is her guiding light towards taking the institution to enviable heights.

    “This year, management has outlined a lot of trainings and workshops to aid staff development.

    For my tenure, I have the ACHIEVE agenda. A stands for Academic Culture; C is Community relations,H is Human capacity building,I is for Infrastructural development,E is for Entrepreneurship engagement,V is for Valuable research and E is for Excellent professionalism.”

    Acting Deputy Vice Chancellor , Academics, Dr Dawodu Adebayo noted that quality education is a collective responsibility. According him,all stakeholders should be involved to ensure the nation’s education system works effectively.

    ” All stakeholders including government,parents,teachers should be involved in education.The only way to move society forward is through education. The purpose of education is to impact society. Thus, the society should determine what should be taught in schools. If society fails, then education will fail,vice versa,” he said.

    Chairperson of the occasion, Dr Kayode-Ishola  Modupe, said the occasion was special to the university because it wae the first celebration ever since it transmuted from a college of education. She stressed the need for citizens to be educated because education brings confidence, hope and peace.

  • Body solicits increased subvention for varsity

    Body solicits increased subvention for varsity

    University of Cross River State (UNICROSS) Alumni Association has appealed to Cross River State Government to consider and approve increase in the subvention given to the state-owned university.

    The body, under the leadership of Mr. Peter Inyali, the recently-elected national president of the body, spoke in Calabar during a presentation event where they donated 50 bags of rice (10kg) to ex-students working in the university.

    Inyali implored Governor Bassey Otu to consider an upward review of the government’s monthly subvention to the university.

    Read Also: Celebration of love at Trinity varsity ‘Xmas Carol

    He said some officials were owed salaries not because the management was unwilling to pay, but because the money not just there. 

    “The subvention from the government can no longer carry the university because the institution is growing with new programmes and the staff strength is expanding. Even if salaries are paid, the hard economic condition will make it difficult for you to cater to the enormity of challenges facing you with your meager salaries,” he added.

    Inyali hailed the governor for the rehabilitation of internal and external roads within the institution, noting that he had been generous to the university even before now. 

    Speaking on behalf of ex-students working in the university, Dr. Godswill John, convener, ‘BLazers for UNICROSS’, praised the alumni executives for their magnanimity, noting that the rice would be shared fairly.

  • Murdered varsity lecturer receives confirmation as professor during wake

    Murdered varsity lecturer receives confirmation as professor during wake

    • Eulogies pour in for Adefolalu

    The Federal University of Technology (FUT) Minna, Dr Mrs Fumilola Adefolalu, who was allegedly killed by her housemaid recently, was sent a belated letter asking her to submit her credentials for promotion to professor.
    The Head of the Department of Biochemistry in the school, who disclosed this during Adefolalu’s wake held at her residence in Gbaiko area of Bosso, said her death has left a big hole in the Department of Biochemistry, noting that the department has lost a dedicated and hardworking colleague.
    He described her as honest, faithful and one with high principle.
    Adefolalu’s son-in-law, Adegboyega Odogiyon, who spoke on behalf of the family, said they would miss a lot about the deceased, adding that her work and walk with God would continue to challenge them in their Christian race.
    “Boisterous, unrelenting, steadfast in the work of God was her disposition to the things of God. In spite of the dreadful passing away, our one consolation is that Mummy is resting in the bosom of the Lord,” Odogiyon said.

    Read Also: Body trains Ekiti varsity lecturers, students in career development


    Her childhood friend identified simply as Mrs Abigel, who was the deceased’s chief bridesmaid during her wedding, said the deceased lecturer was beautiful inside and outside, adding that she was a humble lover of God and trustworthy to a fault.
    Abigel said: “I have no words to say. She was beautiful in and out. She was gentle but firm. She was principled and a humble lover of Jesus. She was a peacemaker.
    “She was my friend. Neither of us saw this coming. Heaven has gained a silent achiever.
    “I can say that this is not the act of God; it is the act of evil men. They killed a righteous one.”
    The Senior Pastor of the Voice of Mercy Ministry, Rev. Ojo Peters, said the death of the deceased was a big blow to the church and to him personally.
    “I lost a warrior, a fighter. I lost Aaron. It was a trying moment. I lost a Laborer in the vine yard.
    “I will revenge every drop of her blood by winning every soul for Christ. Devil, this is the worst you have done. We will redefine our fight for the winning of souls.”

  • Varsity announces resumption date

    Varsity announces resumption date

    The EL-Amin University, Minna, Niger State has announced Monday as the resumption date for the commencement of 2023/2024 Session.

    A statement by the institution said the semester will last for 18 weeks, with the arrival and orientation of students scheduled to hold from November 16-21.

    Lectures will last for five weeks before the break for Christmas and New Year on December 22, after which classes will resume on January 2, 2024.

    Read Also: Bill to establish Federal Varsity of Medical Sciences in Abia passes second reading

    The mid-semester tests are scheduled to hold from January 22 to January 27.

    Matriculation for students is scheduled for February 22, while the First Semester examination will commence from March 18, and end on April 7, afterwhich the university will go on First Semester Break on March 30.

    The statement also announced that lectures for the second semester will commence on April 8 and run for eight weeks, before mid Semester Tests will start from June 3.  

  • Transportation varsity takes off

    Transportation varsity takes off

    Transportation University, Daura, Katsina State, has received the green light to begin academic activities.

    Its approval letter was issued by the National Universities Commission (NUC) on October 18.

    The university will offer 14 programmes catering to the transportation industry and related fields. The approved programmes include B.Eng. Civil Engineering; B.Eng. Electrical Electronics Engineering; B.Eng. Mechanical Engineering; B.Eng. Mechatronics Engineering; B.Eng. Highway Engineering; B.Eng. Railway Engineering; B.Sc. Aviation Management and B.Sc. Transport Management

    Read Also: AGF, Offa varsity VC, Akinrinade, others for alma mata’s 80th anniversary

    Others are B.Sc. Logistics and Supply Chain Management; B.Sc. Maritime Safety and Environmental Administration; B.Sc. Railway Transport Management; B.Sc. Sea Port and Dry Port Management; B.Sc. Inland Waterways Safety and Environmental Administration and B.Sc. Maritime Economics.

  • Varsity appoints board member

    Varsity appoints board member

    Venite University, Iloro Ekiti, has appointed Dr. Olatise Olalekan Olayinka to its governing board. His diverse professional background as a Consultant Physician/Nephrologist and his unwavering commitment to medical excellence promises to usher in a new era of transformative education and holistic growth of the university.

    He graduated with a Bachelor of Medicine and Surgery from University of Jos in 1998. This marked the beginning of a lifelong commitment to the medical field.

    His pursuit of excellence continued as he became a fellow of the National Post-Graduate Medical College of Nigeria in Nephrology in June 2010. Dr. Olatise’s thirst for knowledge also led him to the University of Liverpool, where he obtained a Diploma in Transplantation and a Master’s in Transplantation Science, solidifying his expertise in the field.

    Olatise’s professional journey began at the Military Hospital in Yaba, Lagos, where he served as a House Officer from 1999 to 2000. He fulfilled his one-year National Youth Service Corp obligation at the Nigerian Army Medical Centre, Bonny Camp, Victoria Island, Lagos, from 2000 to 2001. His dedication to the medical profession shone as he embarked on a residency at the Jos University Teaching Hospital from 2003 to July 2009, honing his skills and knowledge.

    As a Consultant Physician/Nephrologist, Dr. Olatise’s contributions to the field of medicine have been profound. His role at Garki Hospital, Abuja, from June 2010 to May 2011, allowed him to excel in general nephrology, renal transplantation, dialysis, and general medicine, further establishing his expertise.

    His leadership at Zenith Medical and Kidney Centre, Abuja, as a consultant Nephrologist/physician since 2011, demonstrates his dedication to improving healthcare. In 2014, he assumed the role of Head of the Department of Internal Medicine at Asokoro District Hospital, Abuja, where his expertise as a consultant physician/nephrologist continues to positively impact patients’ lives.

    Read Also: ‘Adedayo’s false allegation against Abiodun is politically-motivated’

    He serves as the coordinator of the International Society of Nephrology, a role that makes him the Chief of Nephrology in Africa’s only interventional Nephrology training centre. His international exposure, including attending the Nephrologists School in Prague, Czech Republic, has enriched his understanding of global healthcare trends.

    Olatise is a member in esteemed organisations such as the Medical and Dental Consultants Association of Nigeria (MDCAN), Nigeria Medical Association (NMA), Nigeria Association of Nephrologists (NAN), Transplant Association of Nigeria (TAN), American College of Physicians (ACP), and European Renal Association (ERA).

    His diverse background in nephrology and general medicine ensures that Venite University’s medical programmes will be imbued with cutting-edge knowledge and practical experience.

    Moreover, Olatise’s international exposure and collaborations open doors to global partnerships, research opportunities, and a broader perspective on healthcare, benefiting both faculty and students.

     His dedication to education and healthcare transformation aligns seamlessly with Venite University’s mission to provide life-changing opportunities for students, preparing them to excel in both skills and job prospects.

  • Varsity worried by late fee payment

    THE Usmanu Danfodiyo University, Sokoto (UDUS) has expressed dissatisfaction with late payment of tuition by students.

    It made this known during an interactive session between the university management and students’ leaders at the school auditorium.

    In a document, the management  stated that as at Monday, April 29,  of the 25,513 students of the university, only 7,382 had paid. The document further stated that while 10,145 students generated invoice, but were yet to pay, 7,986 students  had neither paid nor generated invoice.

    Of this, students of Sokoto and Kebbi states, who are being sponsored by their governments, have the highest figure.

    A total of 322 and 210 students from Sokoto and Kebbi states have paid. But 3,835 and 2,066 from Sokoto and Kebbi who have generated invoice are yet to pay. Also, 4,133 and 1,573 students from Sokoto and Kebbi are yet to either generate or pay their tuition.

    Last session, CAMPUSLIFE recalled that the management held a similar meeting to sensitise students on  timely payment of tuition. It  spelt out penalties, such as deferment of session, among others to discourage defaulters. Nonetheless, some students have not offset the 2016/17 and 2017/18 sessions fees.

    The Vice Chancellor of the university Prof Abdullah Abdu Zuru bemoaned the non-chalant attitude of students to fee payment. He noted that defaulters were more. The problem, he said, had  affected the university.

    “We are very disappointed that this has become a tradition every session and it is not supposed to be. Many of your colleagues have neither paid nor printed invoice for payment of school fees,” Zuru lamented.

    On state-sponsored students, Zuru revealed that the school has received communique from state governments, which had pledged to offset the fees of their students.

    “We have only got a letter from the Kebbi State government to submit the list of their students, but we haven’t got any written from the Sokoto State government.

    “However, it is very wrong of you, if you have been given money to pay, but you’re waiting for scholarship,” he added, warning defaulters to pay up, or forfeit the forthcoming examination.

    “It seems that students have taken the system for granted. This information is given to you because we need to clarify the issue of registration. Your registration is not valid unless you made payment. For those who have neither generated their invoices nor made payment, once we put a deadline on it, you just have to apply for deferment of session.”

    Also, the Head, Exam and Registrations, Dr Ibrahim Magawwata, appealed to students to pay their fees  to enable the university  carrying out development projects.

    “People think there is another channel from which the university gets money, but there is no other except the tuition fee,’’ he said.

    He continued: “You have to utilise this opportunity given to you to register. The university might double your registration fee when you come for notification of result. If you’re to pay N120,000 as normal fee for result notification, you may have to pay N240,000 before you can collect your result.’’

  • Varsity gets Acting Vice Chancellor

    Cross River State Governor Ben Ayade has approved the appointment of Prof. Akon Joshua as the Acting Vice Chancellor of the Cross River State University of Technology (CRUTECH).

    Akon, a professor of Educational Psychology, is a former Deputy Vice Chancellor (Academics) and a former Dean, Faculty of Education.

    A statement by Ayade’s Chief Press Secretary, Christian Ita, said Akon would act for three months.

  • Varsity creates endowment fund in Adesanmi’s honour

    The world has not stopped mourning since the death of renowned scholar Prof Pius Adebola Adesanmi in the Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737 MAX 8 plane crash on March 10; 156 others died in the accident. The late Adesanmi’s friends and colleagues in Canada, where he worked, the United Kingdom (UK), the United States (US) and at home in Nigeria say in the intellectual world he will be greatly missed. Carleton varsity has set up a fund in his honour, writes EVELYN OSAGIE.

    It’s been 10 days since the world received the heart-breaking news of the death of one of Nigeria’s widely celebrated scholars based in Canada, Prof Pius Adebola Adesanmi.

    Adesanmi, 47, a Professor of Literary Arts in Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada, was a revered social critic and literary icon, who was hyper active on the social media.

    The late scholar and another Nigerian, Ambassador Abiodun Bashua, and 40 United Nations (UN) officials, were among the 157 victims of the ill-fated Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737 MAX 8 flight.

    Adesanmi’s death shook the literati and intellectual world. It left his university, friends and colleagues in Canada and United Kingdom mourning.

     

    Carleton University establishes an endowment fund in honour of Adesanmi

    Subsequently, Carleton University has called for donations towards an endowment  fund to support students who aspire to follow in his footsteps and Adesanmi’s work.

    Encouraging the public to share their memo-ries of Adesanmi with them, the university wrote on its website: “Carleton University is devastated by the sudden death of Prof. Pius Adesanmi, director of our Institute of African Studies and a remarkable writer, poet and political commentator who was celebrated for his eloquence and fearlessness in speaking truth to power. Our thoughts are with his family at this difficult time.

    “His award-winning book – You’re Not a Country Africa: A Personal History of the African Present – was groundbreaking. One of the most important minds of the African Diaspora, he inspired his Carleton colleagues with his brilliance and cemented his close ties to faculty, staff and students with his kindness, thoughtfulness, enthusiasm and unforgettable laugh.

    “To honour his memory, a fund is being established which will support students and continue his life’s work.”

    The university is also collecting memories and tributes that they will be publishing on their website.

    The President and Vice-Chancellor, Carleton University, Benoit-Antoine Bacon, said: “Pius Adesanmi was a towering figure in African and post-colonial scholarship and his sudden loss is a tragedy. Our thoughts and prayers are with his family and all those who knew and loved him, and with everyone who suffered loss in the tragic crash in Ethiopia.

    “The contributions of Pius Adesanmi to Carleton are immeasurable,” said Pauline Rankin, dean of the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences (FASS). She added: ‘’He worked tirelessly to build the Institute of African Studies, to share his boundless passion for African literature and to connect with and support students. He was a scholar and teacher of the highest calibre who leaves a deep imprint on Carleton.”

     

    ‘Each time I see his pictures on the TV I shudder in disbelief’

     

    His death is still being felt by his friends and colleagues as they remember him with fond memories. One of them is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Winnipeg, Canada, Chigbo Arthur Anyaduba. Still in shock and at a loss for words, Anyaduba wrote in his piece, entitled: “Pius Adesanmi: A Tribute”: “The first thing that came to my mind past midnight of Saturday when I initially saw a news headline about an Ethiopian Airline crash was: ‘I hope Oga isn’t in that plane. He travels a lot in that region.’ I wished the thought away and went to sleep only to wake up to the intimate reality of that horrifying tragedy. I still don’t know how to make sense of it. Each time I see his pictures on the TV, I shudder in disbelief. And there’s that sharp stab. That deep indescribable sadness. Pius, I never got my chance to “spoil” you in 2017 when you were meant to visit Winnipeg (at my invitation) to deliver a keynote lecture you “wickedly” titled: “You Can Love Drogba and Claim Gretzky: Negotiating the Hyphen between Africa and Canada.” You didn’t know this then: I had set you up for a combat. I was plotting to settle some intellectual scores with you.

    “It was my way of trying to “arrive,” to impress you, and to offer my mentee loyalties. But then… Yes, you were that kind of man who even when in the opposing end of a debate still managed to pave a path for others to walk. You were, to me, the man faraway, yet so present in my life and consciousness. Thank you for all your generosity and friendship and mentorship. The only consolation I can fathom from your tragic death requires me to brush aside, even if only temporarily, my acquired education in empirical thinking and agree with your paternal grandmother that you’re indeed an abiku. That way, I can live with the hope that in your characteristic spiritual trickiness you came, left, and indeed, you are coming again. Be ready because next time we will brand you with a bigger, deeper scar, if only to keep you much longer in this pain-sweet realm. Journey well, brother!”

     

    ‘Pius Adesanmi: A humane,

    rare breed scholar!’

    One of his mentees, Ademola Adesola, who is a PhD candidate at the Department of English, Theatre, Film and Media, University of Manitoba, and a research assistant at the Centre for Globalisation and Cultural Studies, University of Manitoba, describes  Adesanmi’s death a “disabling tragedy”.

    “His tragic death on the ill-fated Ethiopian plane that crashed penultimate Sunday six minutes after take-off concentrates the mind. Many precious souls met their untimely end in that disabling tragedy. My heart goes out to all the families of the deceased, who with Prof. Adesanmi took ‘the wings of the morning’.

    “The pitiless grim reaper has robbed us of a mind who truly cared for our humanity. Death knifed us brutally when it snatched Prof. Adesanmi from us. Prof. Adesanmi was one of the finest of us as humans. Doubtless, the world has lost a rounded and sound knowledge producer. His robust scholarship is of the excellent brand. He was a rare breed scholar. He was uncompromisingly given to the pursuit of excellence and unreservedly demanded same from all around him. Mediocrity depressed him. It was for that reason that he became the punishing nemesis of many African, nay Nigerian, rulers.”

    Adesola recounted further: ‘’The news of Adesanmi’s death is disconcerting. Wasn’t he just healing from his last close shave with death last year?” I asked myself as I began to process the excruciating pain of his sudden exit from this world. In that hour of incapacitating grief, one of my conversations with him popped up on the screen of my mind. I vividly remembered the ineradicable impression this eminent, humane, patriotic, and witty scholar made on my mind.

    “It was a day in January 2018. I had just started my PhD programme at the University of Manitoba (U of M) in Canada. Being a member of the African Doctoral Lounge (a Facebook meeting point for African scholars he created together with others), I had written to inform him of my programme at U of M. A few minutes after I pushed the send button, I received his response. His reply revealed to me his deep unaffected sense of altruism and irrevocable readiness to be instrumental to young scholar’s progress.

    “In that response, he provided the names of two people at the U of M that I should go and introduce myself to, noting to them that he asked me to see them. That meant those people should vouchsafe to me – within what was and would be humanly possible for them – whatever help I would require as I settled down for the programme given that I came from him. Only a person of solid reputation and productive connection could confidently make that kind of recommendation. Yet, I am talking of a man who I had no personal relationship with! As a matter of fact, that mail I sent to him was the first time I would write to him. And there he was; on being notified of my presence in a foreign land in pursuit of the proverbial golden academic fleece, he freely made available to me his network of contacts. In other words, my quest for progress immediately became his and he hanged no fire in walking me on a path that he considered vital for the actualisation of my dream. Those I shared my story with crooned similar ditty of his uncommon contribution to their academic wellbeing.

    “Prof. Adesanmi was irreversibly convinced that, in the wide, sometimes confounding labyrinth of  academic  forest, healthy  association is vitally important. He networked wisely and widely. He connected people to sources of beneficial ideas and inspiration. He spent and was spent for the causes of young scholars. He was a mentor to innumerable established and burgeoning scholars. He neither lacked nor withheld the right resources for the advancement of intellectuals. Whatever he didn’t have, he knew someone who possessed them.  He was an active port of grace and ideas that many easefully connected to for their career advancement.

    “His structured interventions and critical contributions to debates on issues of governance, human development, and knowledge production around the world, especially in Africa, energised my mind. I benefited richly from his deep insights, unafraid engagement of varied issues, and his unbending candour in the face of misdirected angst and bile.

    “Although his sudden departure is disheartening, one takes solace in the fact that he has made indelible marks. Anywhere and anytime people speak of exemplary, humane, and sound scholars, Pius Adesanmi’s name will stand out attractively. His works remain inexhaustible sources of useful inspiration. I am grateful I know and read him

     

    ‘Pius was a scholar per excellence and a humanist’

    Benjamin Maiangwa, who is completing a PhD in Peace and Conflict Studies at the University of Manitoba, Canada, says Adesanmi was “one of Nigeria’s contemporary leading public intellectuals and celebrated columnists; never afraid to say it as he saw it – tactfully and with grace who worked tirelessly for good governance and scholarship in Africa and beyond, where the array of people he has trained and groomed will no doubt continue his legacy”.

    He recounted: “My first encounter with the late Pius Adesanmi was at the University of Johannesburg in February 2014, where he gave the keynote at a Young Scholars and Graduate conference organised by the African Institute of South Africa. Pius’s passion for social justice and post-colonial issues rubbed off on all the participants at the conference. I know this for sure because our hearts and minds were greatly moved as we sat with rapt attention listening to him with open mouths.

    “It was expected then that, after his speech, all of us were struggling for selfies with him in the corridors of the University of Johannesburg. What could have been our second encounter never took place because of his very tight schedule. Pius was supposed to be the keynote speaker at an Africa-Canada Colloquium that Dr Chigbo Anyaduba organised at the University of Manitoba in 2017. I was supposed to welcome Pius at the event.

    He added: “Pius’s untimely death was shocking and painful, to say the least, and so was that of my former schoolmate from Kenya (Kageche Mukua) and the rest of the victims of the ill-fated Ethiopian flight. Pius was a scholar par excellence and a humanist at that.  As precious as he was in our eyes, I believe in the words of the psalmist that even ‘more precious in the eyes of the Lord is the death of his saints.’ May God grant consolation to all who mourn him and his dear family, and rest his soul!”

     

    ‘Pius taught us to think differently’

    Another PhD student with the University of Manitoba, Ifeoluwa Adeniyi,  said of the late Adesanmi: “Even now it still seems like a dream that Professor Pius Adesanmi is no more! His demise feels not like death in the sense we think of death. It feels as if he’s still there somewhere, except that he’s now not accessible to us. Like a flight away from all the decadence and rot he so unsparingly criticised. How do we mourn a man whose words had been and now will remain echoes of wisdom? It will always be said that he was one of us and all of us. Pious Pius, he taught us to see differently, think differently, just as he was – the uncommon academic superstar.”

     

    ‘Pius was a true African, passionately committed to its liberation

    and development’

    A Masters student in African Studies, Oxford, UK, Folabi Jimoh wrote: “As humans, it’s usually an invidious part this calculus of living to unconsciously regard death as closer to the ‘others’ than ourselves. But we’re often jolted into awareness of its callous nearness on encountering a near-death experience, or when death actually happens to someone close to us! Death’s occurrence has a canny way of unsettling our settled habit of living.

    “Pius Adesanmi’s death yet again affirms for me that, as a unifying human experience, there is no ‘us’ and ‘them’ in death! There’s no ‘distance’ or ‘nearness’ about it. Death is as distant as it is near! Adesanmi was neither my ‘close’ relative nor friend. Yet he was by no means a ‘distant other’ to me. I only came to know him through his writings and ideas –and through them he had become an intimate part of my life, my thought processes, and my outlook on life. Probably like everyone else in his orbit of life (both ‘distant’ and ‘close’) I had grown accustomed to seeing him trot around the African continent and return to his base in Canada. Africa is a continent he loved dearly, and a continent that paradoxically took his life!

    “He was a true African, passionately committed to its liberation and development. Pius Adesanmi’s death is another tragic revelation that dying is closely and inseparably woven into the ontology of living. And this should inform our apprehension of death and appreciation of life. His life was meaningfully impactful; and his death inspires grievability in every sense of the word.

    Rest in peace, professor!”

     

  • Varsity graduates 27 first-class at 10th convocation

    About 27 out of 304 graduating students will receive first-class honours at the 10th convocation ceremony of Crawford University, Ogun State today.

    The Vice-Chancellor, Prof Isaac Ajayi said the school would also celebrate a decade of continuous success in fulfilment of its divine mandate of grooming youth academically and spiritually.

    The convocation lecture would be delivered by Dr Kehinde Ladipo, Senior Advisory, LEKOIL Lagos. The lecture is entitled “The Dilemma of Opportunities: Making a Success of Lifelong Choices.”

    Ajayi said all the programmes run in the school have been accredited by the National Universities Commission (NUC) and will continue to promote scholarship and the advancement of learning.

    He said the university has expanded its programme to accommodate the College of Agriculture    in its bid to enable it to contribute to a nutritionally-secure future for the country.  The college is sited at its Oye-Ekiti Campus in Ekiti State.