Tuesday, 15 April 2014

17-YEAR OLD GHANAIAN ACCEPTED IN ALL 8 IVY LEAGUE COLLEGES IN THE US



In the next month, Kwasi Enin must make a tough decision: Which of the eight Ivy League universities should he attend this fall?
A first-generation American from Shirley, N.Y., the 17-year-old violist and aspiring physician applied to all eight, from Brown to Yale.
The responses began rolling in over the past few months, and by late last week when he opened an e-mail from Harvard, he found he'd been accepted to every one. School district officials provided scanned copies of acceptance letters from all eight Monday. Yale confirmed that it was holding a spot for Enin.
The feat is extremely rare, say college counselors — few students even apply to all eight, because each seeks different qualities in their freshman class. Almost none are invited to attend them all. The Ivy League colleges are among the nation's most elite.
"My heart skipped a beat when he told me he was applying to all eight," says Nancy Winkler, a guidance counselor at William Floyd High School, where Enin attends class. In 29 years as a counselor, she says, she's never seen anything like this. "It's a big deal when we have students apply to one or two Ivies. To get into one or two is huge. It was extraordinary."
For most of the eight schools, acceptance comes rarely, even among the USA's top students. At the top end, Cornell University admitted only 14% of applicants. Harvard accepted just 5.9%.
But Enin has "a lot of things in his favor," says college admissions expert Katherine Cohen, CEO and founder of IvyWise, a New York-based consulting firm.
For one thing, he's a young man. "Colleges are looking for great boys," Cohen says. Application pools these days skew heavily toward girls: The U.S. Department of Education estimates that females comprised 57% of college students in degree-granting institutions last year. Colleges — especially elite ones — are struggling to keep male/female ratios even, so admitting academically gifted young men like Enin gives them an advantage.
He ranks No. 11 in a class of 647 at William Floyd, a large public school on Long Island's south shore. That puts him in the top 2% of his class. His SAT score, at 2,250 out of 2,400 points, puts him in the 99th percentile for African-American students.
He will also have taken 11 Advanced Placement courses by the time he graduates this spring. He's a musician who sings in the school's a capella group and volunteers at Stony Brook University Hospital's radiology department. Enin plans to study medicine, as did both of his parents. They immigrated to New York from Ghana in the 1980s and studied at public colleges nearby. Both are nurses.
Being a first-generation American from Ghana also helps him stand out, Cohen says.
Enin says he got the idea to apply to all eight in 10th or 11th grade, discovering that each has "their own sense of school spirit" and other qualities he liked. He also applied to three State University of New York campuses and Duke — and yes, they have all accepted him.
In a phone interview, Enin said Princeton so far has offered the most generous aid package. But he has yet to get offers from Columbia, Cornell or Harvard. Either way, he'll need to accept a place in the class of 2018 somewhere by May 1. He wants to pursue both music and medicine.
Cohen says he's "sitting in a very good place right now — I think he can negotiate the very best financial aid package he can get" at his top-choice school. "Almost any of them would do anything for this type of candidate," Cohen says.
She advises that Enin call or write each of the eight and let them know that he's got a slot in each other's freshman class. They'll compete to get him to show up in the fall.
Once he decides, she says, he should write letters to the seven runners-up saying he's "honored to have been admitted." After all, he's got to keep his options open for graduate school.

Friday, 4 April 2014

Proprietor collects N26.6m, fails to register pupils for WASSCE

Oshi LukeThe Economic and Financial Crimes Commission has arraigned a school proprietor, Oshi Luke, before Justice A. O. Onovo of the Enugu State High Court, Nsukka, Enugu State, on 10 counts of stealing.
EFCC spokesman, Wilson Uwujaren, said the accused allegedly connived with three employees of his school, OBFO International Academy, and collected N46, 000 each from 580 candidates as the registration fee for the West African Senior Secondary Certificate Examination, May/June 2012 examination, but failed to register the pupils for the said examination.
The commission said the action was contrary to Section 342 of the revised Criminal Code of Enugu State and punishable under Section 353(g) of the same Act.
One of the charges reads, “That you, Oshi Joel Luke and OBFO international Academy sometime between the months of September and November, 2012, with intent to defraud, stole N30,000, property of one Agba Susan, by fraudulently converting the said sum which was paid to you through Ajah Ndidiamaka into OBFO International Academy First Bank account No:2008346092 as registration fees for the 2012 May/June West African Examination Council/National Examination Council examination to your use and thereby committed an offence.”
The accused pleaded not guilty to the charge and was granted bail in the sum of N500, 000 with a surety in like sum.
Onovo said the surety must show evidence of tax clearance for the past three years and must submit two passport photographs for verification.
The case was adjourned to April 29, 2014 for trial.
In a related development, the accused was also arraigned before Justice N. Ageshi of the Federal High Court, Enugu, Enugu State.
He was arraigned on11counts that bordered on obtaining money under false pretences.
The accused pleaded not guilty to the charge.
Attempt by the defence counsel, J. O. Mba, to request bail for his client was opposed by prosecuting counsel, A. Moses.
Ageshi adjourned the case till April 4, 2014 for hearing on the bail application and ordered that the accused be remanded in EFCC custody.
-PUNCH

Sunday, 16 March 2014

If all fails, get handiwork –Juliet Okolie

juliet okolieThe events industry in Nigeria have grown enormously in the past decade and Juliet Okolie is among the creative youth that is cashing in on the booming industry. She is the manager of Liet Nigeria, a fledgling event planning and marketing service provider in Surulere, Lagos. In this encounter with HENRY OKONKWO, she shares some of the tips on how to start an event-planning firm, the challenges and what the business is all about. Excerpts…

Tell us a little about your firm Liet Nigeria                                                                                      Liet Nigeria is a registered company and we are basically into event management and electronic marketing service.
Educational background:                                                                                                                        I was born and bred in Jos, Plateau State; so I did my early schooling there. Later, I started my first degree in Adamawa State. But I had to stop my education when I lost my dad in 2006.
I left in my second year and came to Lagos. I got a job in a shipping company in 2007 as an accountant. But at a point I felt the urge to go back to school to round off my education, and my love for business made me study Business Administration at OND and HND levels.
 journey into entrepreneurship                                                                                                              I have been into entrepreneurship right from when I was a little girl. My dad had a flourishing importation business back then in Jos. He deals in poly bags and assorted kinds of polythene bags. I love business; so normally I go to his shop after school and from there we all leave for home. When he became seriously ill, nobody was on ground to take over the business. So, as the first child in the family of seven, I had to take charge. I was in SS 2 when I took over the business.
I have tried my hands in so many businesses. I first floated an interior decoration company that dealt in office and house fittings. But the market was so competitive for small scale enterprise to thrive. After a while, I closed shop.
Then I delved into publishing and floated my magazine, Golden City which focused on impacting morals among youths, entertainment, education, motivation and interviews with inspiring celebrities. It did relatively well in the market but we couldn't overcome the challenges of the print media, maybe because we didn’t have a good business plan from the beginning.
 My turning point                                                                                                                                 Our turning point came in 2011 when we set up Liet Nigeria, launched our first project tagged, ‘the chef of the mainland’, a project we conceptualised for cooking schools to compete among one another. We partnered sponsors like Ajino-moto, Crown Floors Plc and some pharmaceutical companies that supported us then. In 2012, we held the Season 2, partnering sponsors 7-Up, Ajino-moto, Gas-Express and so many other big brands that threw their weight behind us. In 2011, we had about 1,500 participants and in 2012 we had about 2,500 participants.
We could not organise the Season 3 in 2013 because of some logistic problems, but we are really planning big for it by September this year.
 Handling men, material and money                                                                                                      A tree cannot make a forest. So, Liet Nigeria boasts of a team of four vibrant youths. And I keep them motivated by verbally inspiring confidence in the team, occasionally exposing the team training and retraining and ensuring that their salaries are promptly paid, because delaying their salaries diminishes your status before them as their leader.
 Starting up an event planning company                                                                                         The first and the most important is that you must learn the rudiments and get the basic knowledge about event planning services. Experience is very important towards setting up any firm. You must garner enough planning and organisational skills, and be creative. For me, I had to humble myself to learn from many friends that have flourishing event-planning company to get practical experience after reading so much from books and internet.
 Advice to youths                                                                                                                                     I hear a lot of fellow youths say that there is no money to start up a business, but I don’t think that money is an issue in terms of starting up a business. The challenge I think they’ve got is lack of determination, because when I’m determined to do anything, I see myself moving forward. I tell my friends and anybody that care to listen that no matter how small you start up a business, it all depends on how strongly determined you are and how focused you are in handling the venture.
It doesn't make sense to brag that you are a graduate, or beautiful or handsome when you don’t have knowledge and know your potentials. I say this because God has created everyone with talents and has given us two hands. So, what can you do? That is why I advise people to go and get trained. If you have problems not knowing what you want to do with your life, then go and learn handiwork. We have lots of them that are surviving with it these days in Nigeria. We young ladies going into make-up artists, some are going into fashion designing, instead of waiting for a white-collar job that may never come.
-The SUN.

Tuesday, 28 January 2014

Eat these foods, beat diabetes

Have the disease, or simply want to lose weight? The following foods can help:
• Whole grains: Not all carbohydrates are bad. Foods made with whole grains, such as whole-wheat bread and brown rice, are sources of filling fibre (aiding weight loss, which can reduce your diabetes risk) and nutrients such as potassium, which helps the pancreas release insulin, the hormone that helps your cells use glucose for energy.
• Fish, eggs, poultry: These foods (poultry without the skin) are fair game in a diabetes-friendly diet. Why? Because they’re high in protein (result: full stomach); but typically low in fat (result: better weight management). Fatty fish also contains omega-3 fatty acids, which cut down on cardiovascular problems that can accompany diabetes.
• Fruits: Although they do contain sugar, the rate at which it enters the bloodstream is slowed by fibre. Fruits with a red, blue or purple hue might be particularly beneficial, because they’re loaded with anthocyanins, compounds that heighten your body’s sensitivity to insulin.
• Nuts and seeds: Craving a snack? Grab a handful of nuts. Even though they’re high in calories, they’re also packed with filling protein and healthy fat that can help keep your weight in check. If you’re a fan of walnuts, you’re especially in luck, because their high level of polyunsaturated fatty acids improves the body’s sensitivity to insulin.
• Green leafy vegetables: Pretty much everyone, with or without diabetes, should eat a lot of veggies, ideally at least three servings per day; and green leafy types, including spinach, kale and romaine should top the list. They have high fibre and water content that satiates your appetite on fewer calories, and they’re an important source of magnesium, which improves the body’s ability to turn glucose into energy and keep your metabolism humming (a process that is impaired in people with diabetes).
Source: All You Magazine(Punch)

Ejigbo: Injustice Prowls, Justice Crawls

A YEAR after they were tortured – one of them died – and their suspected attackers were strutting the streets in sheer defiance of the law; justice may come to three women assaulted in Ejigbo Central Market. The Lagos suburb gained a place in the map when about 1,000 people perished in its canals while fleeing the Ikeja bomb blast 12 years ago.
Ejigbo is 16km from Ikeja, the state capital. It is not to be confused with Ejigbo in Oyo State, 177km from Lagos. Ejigbo, Lagos, has a local council area authority, almost its own local government area, a police station, a traditional ruler, representatives in the state and national parliaments.
Yet the authorities had no interest in the incident, which was on social media since February 2013. The women were tortured; pepper and other foreign objects were stuffed into their genitals. They allegedly stole pepper from the market.
Section 34 of the 1999 Constitution states that, “Every individual is entitled to respect for the dignity of his person and accordingly, no person should be subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment”.
Worse than this violation is the connivance and indolence of the police. It took pressure from Arise, a human rights group, and conversations on the social media for the Lagos State House of Assembly to stir. The police only acted after Inspector General of\ Police, in Abuja, 555km from Ejigbo, sent a special team.
Suspects have been arrested, but when and how would justice get to the victims and their families? The lawlessness and impunities that abound in Nigeria thrive on fear the authorities create by abandoning the people to hoodlums who with their own laws fill the vacuum official indifference generates. Assuming the women stole, under what laws were they punished? What are the powers of vigilante groups? The concerns are nationwide.
In Makurdi, eight farmers were charged to court for allegedly stripping a widow, Mrs. Ann Adikwu, and parading her at a market square in Orokam, Ogbadibo Local Government Area of Benue State. They  took her pictures, which, like in the Ejigbo case, they circulated. The men were her late husband’s relations who had issues with her. She said they also stole her clothes, money and jewellery.
It was the social media again that brought attention to the plight of Mrs. Alexandra Ossai, who lost her seven-month pregnancy after her Lebanese boss Kaveh Noine reportedly kicked her on the stomach. The police in Lagos ignored the case until the President ordered“investigation for sanctions and remedial action.” We cannot run a country where hoodlums are the law. Local authorities, as well as Abuja, share in making Nigeria governable.
-Vanguard.

Tuesday, 21 January 2014

E-commerce: Konga to sue Rocket Internet over domain name .

Nigeria’s online retailer, Konga.com, has said it is set to drag German based Internet conglomerate, Rocket Internet to court over domain name ownership.
Sim shagaya_2Rocket Internet is the parent company of Nigeria’s popular online retailer, jumia.com.
Konga has alleged that Rocket Internet registered Konga related domain names in ten different countries, areas that it would possibly establish should it decide on expansion outside of Nigeria.
According to a document made available to Vanguard, the list of the domain names and the countries they are registered include: Konga.cd for Cote D’Ivoire, Konga.cm for Cameroun, Konga.ly for Libya, Konga.mu for Mauritius and Konga.ma for Morocco. Others include: Konga.mw for Malawi, Konga.sc for Seychelles, Konga.sh for Saint Helena, Konga.co.ke for Kenya and Konga.co.za for South Africa.
Speaking on the development, Konga’s Public Relations Strategist, Ifeanyi Abraham told Vanguard that Rocket Internet intentionally registered the domain names in order to effectively ensure that Konga does not come effectively into the orbit of their competition.
He  said that Konga having exhausted all options to retrieve the names would engage Rocket Internet in litigation. He noted that Konga would follow all legal procedures and alternatives there are in all the jurisdictions that those domain names have been registered. According to him, “We are going ahead with legal actions in the different jurisdictions where these domain names were registered.”
Vanguard obtained a letter by Konga’s founder and Chief Executive Officer, Sim Shagaya to his Lawyer, Opeyemi Agbaje.
According to the letter entitled: “Destructive foreign competition in the internet industry,” Shagaya wrote: “I hope you can take this up fairly because I think it is necessary that people understand what’s happening in the internet industry. Jumia is wholly owned by Rocket Internet GmbH. It is not indigenous.
“Rocket owns a range of businesses including Camido, Jovago, Kaymu, Vamido, EasyTaxi and HelloFood. Each of these operations is seriously hurting a local operation with the same business model including Cheki, Private Property, BuyAm, Tranzit and CityChops respectively.
These local companies will die if not supported. It is that simple. Konga has at least been able to withstand the onslaught and even beat them back.
“In addition, Rocket Internet, the parent company of Jumia, has proceeded to buy and sit on the domain names of Konga across the continent. This action speaks to an intention to drown out indigenous innovation and frankly our government does not know any better.”
- vanguard

Menace of nude ‘selfie’ pictures, videos

Titi has a smashing body and she knows it. So, every time her boyfriend told her to send her nude picture to him, she always felt a sense of self worship and always obliged. However, the ‘wan-tin-tin’ love didn’t last forever. She caught him cheating, the love turned bitter, she broke up with him even after a lot of pressure and pleading by her boyfriend.
But what happened to her pictures? Well, it later appeared online as revenge porn. Nude ‘selfies’ — pictures and videos — are on the rise.
Err… what is a selfie?
Ewww… ok, I’ll help you. Every time you attempt to take a video or picture of yourself, you are taking a ‘selfie.’ It was named the Oxford Dictionary’s most popular new English word for 2013. It reached a new popularity height when a high profile trio — the Danish Prime minister, Helle Thorning-Schmidt; British Prime minister, David Cameron; and U.S. President Barack Obama were photographed taking a ‘group selfie’ during the funeral of former South African President, Nelson Mandela. However, the underworld of pornography has its own popular trends — revenge porn, sexting, cyber-luring, with some men and women unknowingly participating in live porn shows. The list and the victims are becoming endless.
 You just wondered what ‘sexting’ means again. You may be seriously old school. If your child, friend, or colleague are protecting their phones, they may be more exposed than you think.  Sexting is the act of sending sexually explicit messages, photographs and videos between mobile phones — either between two people or one too many broadcasts.
Rising amateur pornography
With the emergence of camera phones, it is now easy to create and share texts, media messages, photos and videos and at the click of a button, you can share it with the world. It is happening in private sexting messages between couples — married and unmarried; and sexual predators are luring teens to share personal and intimate sexual images and videos. Many gullible youths succumb, without imagining possible future consequences.
Remember, a couple of weeks ago, I mentioned that a young girl asked me if she could send her nude pix to her Facebook ‘boyfriend’ in the U.S. She was a JSS3 student.
This has become rampant for a number of reasons: technology has made everyone an amateur cameraman; worse still, young people are more likely to act impulsively, especially when deceived into taking actions that might have future consequences. Some have sent sexting selfies to someone they trusted, only for the person to pass them round until they end up on the internet.
Never share or record what you can’t publish
Especially with teens and young people generally, harmless fun can translate into eternal regret. If photos and videos you share get online, it will still be searchable by the time you are looking for your first job, when you become a star, governor or CEO. If you hope to achieve any of these significant achievements, be careful what you record for posterity. Don’t share photos that could embarrass you, your partner or your children, even in 10 or 20 years’ time. If you will be embarrassed if your sex scene, naked bath or toilet photos are out, then don’t share them.
By sharing a picture with someone, you are essentially telling them that you completely trust them with your most intimate secrets. If you cannot look into the eyes of your partner and tell him/her about it, then I suggest you keep the pictures in your memories. If you must film anything — and I don’t want to spoil your fun — have a device dedicated for it. If you must share anything, please delete immediately.
You are never 100% in control of the contents
 You may think the person you are sharing it with will not betray you and that you are 100 per cent in control of the images and videos you record. But then, what happens if your phone gets stolen? What if you took the laptop for repairs and forgot to remove the photos? What if you wanted to share the picture on Twitter, Facebook and Blackberry and a glitch in the system made it a broadcast?  Impossible? It’s happened before.
The Internet is replete with stories of several people who made the headlines as a result of this development. Imagine if social media and its tools are one huge cocktail event. Never share the things you do not want to be published.
No secret arrangement with someone you met online
I have heard and celebrated stories of people who met online and eventually got married. However, there are thousands of others whose sad stories never made it into the news. Silent and unreported cases of rape, robbery and kidnaps abound and the people involved are suffering for it. Some people you chat with may have a sexy picture of a 16-year-old lady while they are actually 40-year-old smart dudes hoping to exploit your body and money.
Even if you are to arrange a meeting, let someone know about it or, better still, don’t go alone. You can be there earlier or later than the agreed time and keep your eyes peeled to spot mischief.
Those videos and pictures can haunt you
Experienced predators can easily track where you live. This is because most smart phone users are unaware that their devices use GPS location services to upload pictures, power maps, driving directions, phone locators, and other handy apps, but not everyone is aware that the same technology may pose a risk to their safety and privacy by recording precise geographical information of where and when the pictures were taken. This feature is called ‘geotagging.’
A Burger King employee was arrested last year for taking a ‘selfie’ showing himself standing with shoes on a container of shredded lettuce, with the comment, “This is the lettuce you eat at Burger King.” The picture located him. So, if you are a young, single or married person and you think you are out of reach when seducing someone secretly online, you may be wrong. Those pictures can be fed into a map and voila, the picture of your house, office or school is in the hand of that individual.
When uploading pictures, you can check their document properties and geo-tagging settings as well as the privacy settings on Facebook, Twitter, Pintrest and Instagram; especially at a time when most of these platforms are having challenges with security.
Social media and technology are shifting business and social culture. It is a new ‘country’ and we must be aware of the advantages and implications of abusing the freedom to publish.
Copyright PUNCH