Tuesday, 30 July 2013

Why Did The Chicken Cross The Road According To Famous Historical Figures


chicken cross the road
Why did the chicken cross the road?
Answers:
——–
Machiavelli:
The point is that the chicken crossed the road. Who cares why?
The ends of crossing the road justify whatever motive there was.
Thomas de Torquemada:
Give me ten minutes with the chicken and I’ll find out.
Timothy Leary:
Because that’s the only kind of trip the Establishment would let it
take.
Carl Jung:
The confluence of events in the cultural gestalt necessitated that
individual chickens cross roads. This brought such occurrences
into being.
John Locke:
Because he was exercising his natural right to liberty.
Albert Camus:
It doesn’t matter; the chicken’s actions have no meaning except to
him.

The Bible:
And God came down from the heavens, and He said unto the chicken,
“Thou shalt cross the road.” And the Chicken crossed the road, and
there was much rejoicing.
Freud:
The fact that you thought that the chicken crossed the road reveals
your underlying sexual insecurity.
Darwin:
Chickens, over great periods of time, have been naturally selected
in such a way that they are now genetically predisposed to cross
roads
Darwin #2:
It was the logical next step after coming down from the trees.
Richard M. Nixon:
The chicken did not cross the road.
I repeat, the chicken did not cross the road.
Oliver Stone:
The question is not “Why did the chicken cross the road?” but is
rather “Who was crossing the road at the same time whom we
overlooked in our haste to observe the chicken crossing?”
Jerry Seinfeld:
Why does anyone cross a road? I mean, why doesn’t anyone ever think
to ask, “What the heck was this chicken doing walking around all
over the place anyway?”
Martin Luther King, Jr.:
I envision a world where all chickens will be free to cross roads
without having their motives called into question.
Immanuel Kant:
The chicken, being an autonomous being, chose to cross the road of
his own free will.
Grandpa:
In my day, we didn’t ask why the chicken crossed the road. Someone
told us that the chicken had crossed the road, and that was good
enough for us.
Dirk Gently (Holistic Detective):
I’m not exactly sure why, but right now I’ve got a horse in my
bathroom.
Bill Gates:
I have just released the new Chicken 2000, which will both cross
roads AND balance your checkbook, though when it divides 3 by 2 it
gets 1.4999999999.
M.C.Escher:
That depends on which plane of reality the chicken was on at the
time.
George Orwell:
Because the government had fooled him into thinking that he was
crossing the road of his own free will, when he was really only
serving their interests.
Colonel Sanders:
I missed one?
Plato:
For the greater good.
Aristotle:
To actualize its potential.
Karl Marx:
It was a historical inevitability.
Nietzsche:
Because if you gaze too long across the Road, the Road gazes also
across you.
B.F. Skinner:
Because the external influences, which had pervaded its sensorium
from birth, had caused it to develop in such a fashion that it
would tend to cross roads, even while believing these actions to be
of its own freewill.
Jean-Paul Sartre:
In order to act in good faith and be true to itself, the chicken
found it necessary to cross the road.
Albert Einstein:
Whether the chicken crossed the road or the road crossed the
chicken depends upon your frame of reference.
Pyrrho the Skeptic:
What road?
The Sphinx:
You tell me.
Buddha:
If you ask this question, you deny your own chicken nature.
Emily Dickenson:
Because it could not stop for death.
Ralph Waldo Emerson:
It didn’t cross the road; it transcended it.
Ernest Hemingway:
To die. In the rain.
Saddam Hussein:
This was an unprovoked act of rebellion and we were quite justified
in dropping 50 tons of nerve gas on it.
Saddam Hussein #2:
It is the Mother of all Chickens.
Pat Buchanan:
To steal a job from a decent, hard-working American.
Joseph Stalin:
I don’t care. Catch it. I need its eggs to make my omelet.
OLAJIDE BUSAYOMI:
There is something eatable at the other side of the road 

The Beauty Of Motherhood In The Animal Kingdom

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Monday, 22 July 2013

The list of the Senators who voted marriage for underage girls




Support the #ChildNotBride movement.

Below is the list of the Nigeria Senators who voted for underage marriage in Nigeria...            
1. Sen. Abdulmumin M. Hassan (Jigawa South West, PDP)
2. Sen. Abdullahi Danladi (Jigawa North West, PDP)
3. Sen. Adamu Abdullahi (Nasarawa West, PDP)
4. Sen. Ahmed Barata (Adamawa South, PDP)
5. Sen. Akinyelure Ayo (Ondo Central, Labour Party)
6. Sen. Alkali Saidu A. (Gombe North, PDP)
7. Sen. Bagudu Abubakar A. (Kebbi Central, PDP)
8. Sen. Dahiru Umaru (Sokoto South, PDP)
9. Sen. Galaudu Isa (Kebbi North, PDP)
10. Sen. Garba Gamawa (Bauchi North, PDP)


12. Sen. Gobir Ibrahim (Sokoto East, PDP)
13. Sen. Gumba Adamu Ibrahim (Bauchi South, PDP)
14. Sen. Hadi Sirika (Katsina North, CPC)
15. Sen. Ibrahim Bukar Abba (Yobe East, ANPP)
16. Sen. Jajere Alkali (Yobe South, ANPP)
17. Sen. Jibrilla Mohammed (Adamawa North, PDP)
18. Sen. Kabiru Gaya (Kano South, ANPP)
19. Sen. Lafiagi Mohammed (Kwara North, PDP)
20. Sen. Lawan Ahmad (Yobe North, ANPP)
21. Sen. Maccido Mohammed (Sokoto North, PDP)
22. Sen. Musa Ibrahim (Niger North, CPC)
23. Sen. Ndume Mohammed Ali (Borno South, PDP)
24. Sen. Sadiq A. Yaradua (Katsina Central, CPC)
25. Sen. Saleh Mohammed (Kaduna Central, CPC)
26. Sen. Tukur Bello (Adamawa Central, PDP)
27. Sen. Ugbesia Odion (Edo Central, PDP)
28. Sen. Umar Abubakar (Taraba Central, PDP)
29. Sen. Usman Abdulaziz (Jigawa North East, PDP)
30. Sen. Ya’au Sahabi (Zamfara North, PDP)
31. Sen. Zannah Ahmed (Borno Central, PDP)....
32. Sen. Ahmad Rufai Sani (Zamfara West, ANPP)
33. Sen. Ahmad Abdul Ningi (Bauchi Central, PDP)
34. Sen. Bello Hayatu Gwano (Kano North, PDP)
35. Sen. Ibrahim Abu (Katsina South, CPC)..

Culled from CKN

Nigerian student graduates with First Class from UK University....another nigerian making us proud


Nigerian student Ihuoma Njoku just graduated with a First Class degree in Computer Sscience from the University of Manchester. Worthy of celebration. Congrats girl!

Monday, 1 July 2013

THE NEW MAN ARRIVING FOR THE 1ST DAY IN OFFICE.....WELCOME DAVID MOYES

 



 



 



 



David Moyes arrived at the AON Training Complex on Monday morning (today), ready to start work as the new Manchester United manager.

The former Everton boss, who is replacing the recently retired Sir Alex Ferguson, arrived at 08:00 BST and looked relaxed as he met a selection of staff members at the home of the Reds.Dressed sharply, Moyes also posed for photographs outside and in his new office, from where he will manage the Barclays Premier League champions during the highly-anticipated 2013/14 season.

Moyes, who was appointed on 9 May, takes up his new challenge after more than 11 years in charge at Everton. There, he won the League Managers’ Association’s Manager of the Year award – voted for by his fellow football bosses – on three occasions: in 2003, 2005 and 2009. Only Sir Alex Ferguson (four awards) collected the honour as many times.
You can read a detailed profile of the new Manchester United manager on our Players & Staff page. Working alongside Moyes will be Steve Round (assistant manager), Jimmy Lumsden (coach) and Chris Woods (goalkeeper coach).
A number of changes behind the scenes also take effect today. Executive vice chairman Ed Woodward takes on the duties previously undertaken by former chief executive David Gill, while Richard Arnold begins his tenure as group managing director. Chief operating officer Michael Bolingbroke has been appointed to the main board and takes on further responsibilities, including chairman of MU Foundation.

Profiles: Moyes' men

To help achieve success, the Scot has brought with him a crack team of coaches from his former club Everton, where they all worked closely at various points of his 11-year tenure at Goodison Park. Here, we profile his three trusted allies who will fulfil separate roles at the Aon Training Complex...



Name: Steve Round
 
Age: 42
 
Role: Assistant manager
 
Player history: A full-back of great promise, Round’s ambitions for on-pitch success were cruelly extinguished by injury at just 25, forcing him to retire after only nine appearances for Derby County.
 
Coaching career: After hanging up his boots, Steve became a Rams coach under Steve McClaren, who he later worked with for both Middlesbrough and England. A first-team coach position at Newcastle followed in 2007, before replacing Alan Irvine as Everton’s assistant manager a year later.



Name: Jimmy Lumsden
 
Age: 65
 
Role: Coach
 
Player history: Lumsden began his career at Leeds, playing only a handful of matches, before representing Southend, Greenock Morton, St Mirren and Clydebank.
 
Coaching career: The Glaswegian famously discovered Moyes as a young player at Celtic and, ironically, linked up with him when the younger Scot took charge at Preston North End. Both men then moved to Everton in 2002, where their partnership blossomed in the top-flight.
 
Quote: “I wouldn’t say it’s friendship all the time. We’re close, but I’ve got to be truthful and say part of the reason I think [he likes working with me] is because we don’t agree a lot of the time.” – Lumsden on Moyes.


Name: Chris Woods
 
Age: 53
 
Role: Goalkeeping coach
 
Player history: A former Rangers star, Woods also played for Nottingham Forest, QPR, Norwich City, Sheffield Wednesday and Southampton. He earned 42 England caps between 1985 and 1993.
 
Coaching career: The 53-year-old began his second off-field career in 1998 by taking up a coaching position under Walter Smith at Everton, where he was tasked with the development of their goalkeeping stable. Years later, in October 2011, he was employed by the USA national team, linking with Toffees stopper and former Red Tim Howard.
 
Quote: “He's been fantastic for my career. He's one of the best in the world and I don't say that lightly. He's fantastic with a tremendous reputation.” – Tim Howard on Woods.

The death of tiki-taka, or the rebirth of exciting football?


Spain's utterly-average display in their 3-0 Confederations Cup defeat to Brazil led to the usual suggestions that their era of supremacy is over. Kaput. Finito.
It's a pretty tired follow-up that we see every time the Spaniards or the club football kings of tiki-taka, Barcelona, take the sort of beating they're apparently only allowed to dish out these days.
In fact, there were plenty of participants on both sides at the Maracana who also featured the last time the 'end of an era' autopilots took to the skies - Bayern Munich's brutal splattering of Barca in the Champions League last four.
It probably feels like deja vu to them. And to us spectators too.
But the truth is that this isn't a death. Quite the opposite.
Football is alive. And a supposedly-meaningless tournament has provided the finishing touches to the resurrection.
Credit where it is due, Spain have been nothing short of amazing for the last six years. Their style of football has become a thing of sporting fashion and their success has made them one of, if not the top national football sides of all time.
But it was getting dull. So, so dull.
Tiki-taka will keep the ball. Tiki-taka will keep the ball some more. Tiki-taka will be salivated over and worshipped by puny opponents. Tiki-taka will sap the willpower of everyone in sight.
ED is not saying that Spain and Barcelona must do badly for football to prosper. We've just been in dire need of someone, anyone, to drag them out of their almost painfully smug comfort zones.
Bayern did that in the spring, and now Brazil have followed suit in a wonderful culmination of a staggeringly enjoyable 'minor' event. Neither side were underdogs, of course, but their successful approaches against tiki-taka can and will be replicated.
Sure, Spain could yet easily retain the World Cup on the very same pitch which hosted their dissection, and subsequently dismiss the 3-0 humbling as an insignificant blip on the road to another 'real' final.
But there now exists cast-iron evidence that tiki-taka is not the only way to play these days.
Not only that, but the antidote to the Spanish stronghold cooked up an absolute humdinger of a contest for a massive global audience. And exciting, open football matches are good, right?
Brazil of course would love to replicate the deafening roars inside the Maracana in a year's time. They have reason to believe they can do anything at the moment.
But their key to success against Spain was not exactly rocket science. They simply showed the world champions no respect, put them under intense pressure and forced them into unfamiliar, uncomfortable territory.
And even when the Spanish hit their attacking stride, Brazil showed the true meaning of a superb defensive display (SPOILER ALERT: it isn't putting 10 men inside their own final third). Julio Cesar, David Luiz and Thiago Silva in particular were superb.
Brazil have a shedload of quality players at their disposal, of course: a country of 193 million football-obsessed people means the deepest talent pool on the planet.
But they are not the only country who can realistically take the same approach. There are at least half a dozen nations with the firepower to match Sunday night's intrepid approach and open up a ton of otherwise lop-sided games.

If more teams wake up from the hypnotic spell football has been under thanks to Spain and Barca, the 2014 World Cup will be wide open. The action will feel fresher. And it won't just be in Spain matches where things improve.
Every match between a clear favourite and a clear underdog will no longer likely be a tedious tussle between classy and cynical play. Put the superior teams under pressure. Roll the dice.
It may end in a heavier defeat but it could yield a performance with the guts and glory that Big Phil Scolari and his boys treated a delighted partisan crowd to on Sunday.
The common case against this argument appears to be Tahiti. Who would want to ship six, seven or 10 and 'devalue the tournament' when they can just plead guilty to the crime of being less developed as a nation and accept the lesser charge of a 2-0 snorefest reverse?
What tripe. Tahiti devalued nothing. They earned their spot and they attracted more casual fans than your average whipping boy ever could.
The Confederations Cup has proven that a little hustle and a complete lack of fear is a breath of fresh air.
And even Spain now must go back to the drawing board and add a few new wrinkles to their battleplan if they are to be sure of a second world title in 2014.

from yahoo sport

Nigerian student graduates with 5.0 CGPA in Russian University........This guy be effico read his stat below

 


A Nigerian student Victor Olalusi has emerged the best graduating student with a grade point of 5.0 in the Faculty of Clinical Sciences at the Russian National Research Medical University, Moscow.

According to his friends, Olalusi previously had the best WAEC result in 2004. JAMB Best Science Student (JAMB score 322) - 2006. Cowbell Prize Award - 2006. Medcine First Merit list (OAU) - 2006. Highest OAU Post UME (score - 325)  - 2006. Federal Government Scholarship (Medicine and Surgery) - 2006. Wow! Congrats to him.

WELCOME TO THE MONTH OF JULY...........

 

May this month be the greatest of all the month u ve spent this year In Jesus Name.