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Wednesday, July 22, 2015

AAU SCREENING OF THE UTME/DIRECT ENTRY CANDIDATES FOR 2015/2016 SESSION ADMISSIONS


All 2015/2016 UTME candidates who applied to Ambrose Alli University, Ekpoma as Institution of First Choice, with a UTME score of 180 and above are invited to attend a screening exercise in the University on the days stated below.

Screening Time-Table

The screening exercise for the various Faculties is scheduled to take place on the following dates at 9.00 a.m. each day:

DAY

DATE

FACULTIES

1.

Thursday, 13th August, 2015

Management Sciences, Arts, Agriculture, Education and Environmental Studies

2.

Friday, 14th  August, 2015

Social Sciences, Natural Sciences & Law

3.

Saturday, 15th August, 2015

College of Medicine and Engineering & Technology.

Note:  Candidates are to check their Examination venues on AAU c-portal on Tuesday, 10th of August, 2015.
Candidates are expected to report at the venues of screening at 7.30 a.m. prompt.

Subject for Screening:  Candidates will be screened in subjects relating to their First Choice course of study in Ambrose Alli University, Ekpoma.

Method of Application:
Applicants are required to pay for the Ambrose Alli University, Ekpoma Post UTME on-line application form at a fee of #3,000.00 (Three thousand Naira) only using their ATM Debit Cards on Interswitch or purchase an e-Tranzact PIN Payment Voucher) from any of the under listed Banks Nation Wide.

All candidates are to come to the venues of the screening exercise with the following:

UTME e-Registration slip and UTME result slip.
HB pencil, eraser and biro.
A print-out of the duly completed Post UTME Online Application Form.
Direct Entry:

All Direct Entry candidates who applied to JAMB for admission and chose Ambrose Alli University, Ekpoma as Institution of First Choice are also required to complete the Online Application Form for their screening exercise.  All such candidates mustupload scanned copies of all relevant certificates/documents to the c-Portal. 
*Screening Exercise for Direct Entry (DE) candidates is scheduled to take place from Monday, 24th August, 2015 to Friday, 28th August, 2015 from 9.00 a.m. each day.
Please, be informed that there shall be no Direct Entry into Medicine, Nursing, and Law.

NOTE:  All candidates (both UTME and Direct Entry) in addition to note the following:

Examination study guide: #2,000.00 (Two thousand Naira) only Technology fee: #1,000.00 (One thousand Naira) only; and Bank charges will be charged at the point of purchase of forms online via ATM Debit Cards on Interswitch or e-Tranzact PIN (Payment Voucher).
All names should be written in full when completing the online application form as no initials shall be entertained.
Mr. Fola Ojo-Maliki, MNIM, MANUPA
Acting Registrar

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Wednesday, July 15, 2015

World can end AIDS by 2030 – UN

The UN has said the world can end the AIDS epidemic within 15 years, but senior officials said that would only be possible by breaking the pharmaceutical industries “tight grip” on government policies.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said reaching the goal would be difficult but achievable in a report released in Ethiopia on Tuesday.

“Ending the AIDS epidemic as a public health threat by 2030 is ambitious, but realistic, as the history of the past 15 years has shown,” Ban said in the report.

The UN Millennium Development Goal to halt and reverse the spread of the disease has been achieved, said UNAIDS, the global body’s agency focusing on the disease.

UNAIDS is driving efforts to end the epidemic by 2030 by enabling everyone to have access to prevention services, treatment and support.

“During the first decade of the epidemic, there was very little to offer someone dying from AIDS,” Michel Sidibe, executive director of UNAIDS, said in the report.

The key to change, he said, was breaking the pharmaceutical industry’s “tight grip” on government policies and drug prices.

Some 15 million people are receiving antiretroviral treatment for HIV/AIDS, a staggering increase from less than 700,000 in 2000.

At that time, patients had to take an average of eight pills per day, costing $10,000 a year. Today, medicines can be bought for $100 a year.

These medicines keep the virus from growing and multiplying helping people to live longer and reducing the chances that they will transmit HIV to others.

Legislation allowing developing countries to override patent rights was critical, allowing them to manufacture copies of the drugs and cut prices.

AIDS-related deaths have dropped more than 40 percent since 2004 to 1.2 million a year, the report said, adding new HIV infections have fallen by 35 percent since 2001 to 2 million a year in 2014.

Investment in HIV/AIDS surged to almost $22bn in 2015 from less than $5bn in 2001.

One of the biggest successes has been reducing new infections among children by 58 percent between 2000 and 2014, the agency said.

This has been achieved by ensuring women with HIV receive medicine to prevent them from passing on the infection when they give birth.

Last month, Cuba became the first country in the world to eliminate mother-to-child transmission of HIV.

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Did Birdman Really Throw a Drink at Lil Wayne?.... No

The drama never seems to end between Lil Wayne and Birdman.

The latest to unfold between the rappers took place over the weekend in the VIP section of Miami's nightclub LIV, where partygoers accused Birdman of throwing a drink at Wayne.

Video footage shows Wayne on stage with several pals giving a remix performance of "Coco" when all of a sudden, a drink is tossed at them from the crowd.

There's no evidence the drink came from Birdman, however, witnesses claim that people from Birdman's camp began throwing water bottles on stage at the same time.

Meanwhile, Wayne looked up in the VIP balcony to see Birdman, his very public nemesis, smiling and waving at fellow clubgoers.

And it should be noted that this isn't the first time that these two hip-hop heavyweights have battled it out in public, although it may be the first physical altercation we've seen these men get into with one another.

Birdman and Wayne have been in the middle of a lengthy court battle over millions of dollars and the release of Tha Carter V.

Last December, Wayne went on a Twitter rant over his next album and gave fans some insight on what hurdles he's facing with the release of the highly anticipated music.

"To all my fans, I want u to know that my album won't and hasn't been released bekuz Baby & Cash Money Rec. refuse to release it. This is not my fault. I am truly and deeply sorry to all my fans and most of all to myself and my family for putting us in this situation," he began.

"I want off this label and nothing to do with these people but unfortunately it ain't that easy. I am a prisoner and so is my creativity. Again, I am truly sorry and I don't blame ya if ya fed up with waiting 4 me & this album. But thk u."

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20 Questions We Have About the New Fantastic Four Trailer

Over the weekend Comic-Con audiences were treated to the final Fantastic Four trailer, and today it was released to the public at large. It includes a whole lot of ominous music and hints at major destruction, but it also raises more questions than it answers.

The road to the big screen has been a rocky one for the reboot, but it should be mentioned that a lot of the gossip and whispers surrounding the flick and it's troubles have been just that: gossip and whispers. There were reports of drama with the director, reshoots and script reshaping, and some legitimate concern from diehard Marvel fans over whether Fantastic Four could live up to their very high standards.

All that being said, we're still keeping the faith in this movie. Partly because we like to look on the bright side, and partly because we have a lot of confidence in the young-but-talented cast. (And, sure, maybe a little crush on Miles Teller and Michael B. Jordan to boot.) We're going to give it a fair shot, but we still have a few probing questions that are lingering from our many viewings of this morning's trailer. First, check out the newly-released footage for yourself and then it's on to the (friendly) interrogation.

1. Will Dr. Doom actually resemble the more traditional character, or is Fantastic Four really going through with the villain as an angry tech blogger?

2. Will Reed get an I-told-you-so moment with his a--hole elementary school teacher?

3. Is this going to be more than just a run of the mill origin story? We're kinda chock full on those right now (cough...Ant-Man...cough).

4. Why isn't The Thing wearing any pants?

5. Is there such a thing as a science experiment gone right in the Marvel universe?

6. What does the U.S. military really want out of Reed's experiments?

7. How many times will Michael B. Jordan take his shirt off?

8. Is this movie going to set up the rumored Fantastic Four/X-Men crossover?

9. How much time did they have to spend practicing the Superhero Pose in those suits?

10. Will Michael B. Jordan ever smile in the full film?

11. How bad will the CGI be?

12. Is Harvey Elder (a.k.a. the eventual Mole Man in the comics) going to be a bad guy?

13. Which character is going to be the angriest about his newfound mutations? (Our money's on The Thing; he doesn't even get pants after all).

14. Is this new (and decidedly more badass) trailer going to change the minds of all the Fantastic Four naysayers?

15. Is anyone going to miss watching in 3D?

16. What's the deal with Kate Mara's wig? Homegirl deserves better.

17. Why is everything in the alternate universe suddenly green, when it was orange in the original trailer?

18. How many one-liners should we expect? "He's not stronger than all of us!"

19. Who's going to be the best at the requisite a-- kicking?

20. Seriously, how much of a nugget is the kid who plays a young Miles Teller?

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Friday, May 15, 2015

Obama holds security talks with Arab leaders

President Barack Obama has opened a summit in the US with Saudi Arabia and other Gulf Arab allies, seeking to convince them of US commitment to their security despite deep concern among Arab leaders about US efforts to broker a nuclear deal with Iran.

Hosting the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) for a rare summit on Thursday at the Camp David presidential retreat, Obama faced the challenge of allaying their fears of US disengagement at a time of Middle East upheaval while also pressing the Gulf states to work together in their own defence.

The GCC is comprised of Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain and Oman.

In a media briefing, Ben Rhodes, US deputy national security adviser for strategic communication, said the leaders discussed the threat to the GCC from Iran, as well as the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) group, besides ongoing regional conflicts in the region, including Syria, Yemen and Libya.

“The president and his team were able to provide an update on the status of the nuclear negotiations … and also Iran’s destabilising actions in the region, which touch upon the security of our GCC partners,” Rhodes said.

He said the US had set out a range of strategies to help the GCC countries deal with Iran.

“We’re looking at what we can do to expedite the provision of support and capacity-building to the GCC in relation to ballistic missiles, maritime security, special operations, counterterrorism and border security,” Rhodes said.

He said Obama had assured the GCC states that the nuclear agreement reached in Lausanne, Swizerland, was limited to Iran’s nuclear programme only and not other issues.

Gulf Arab frustration

Saudi Arabia’s King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud pulled out early, sending Crown Prince Mohammed bin Nayef and Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in his place.

The decision was widely interpreted as a snub that reflected the GCC’s frustration with the Obama administration.

The White House has said such decisions were not intended as slights and has portrayed the summit as more than just a symbolic event.

But US officials have also played down the prospects for any major breakthroughs.

White House officials have said there would no formal defence treaty, as some GCC leaders sought, and that the summit is likely to produce more modest announcements on integrating ballistic-missile defence systems, easing weapons deliveries and increasing joint military exercises.

In an interview to Al Jazeera’s Patty Culhane on Wednesday, Rhodes said the US was committed to the defence of the GCC countries but a formal treaty would not happen in the near future.

“A treaty is not what we’re looking for. It took decades to build NATO and the Asian allies but we can provide clear assurances that we will come to their defence,” he said, alluding to a prospective alliance with the GCC members.

Sunni Arab leaders are concerned that lifting Western sanctions as part of a nuclear deal with Shia Iran would empower Iran to act in further destabilising the region, especially in volatile countries such as Syria, Yemen and Iraq.

The Obama administration would like GCC support, or at least a toning-down of any criticism, for the deal to help convince a sceptical US Congress it has broad backing in the region.

Adding weight to Arab concerns, Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy fired warning shots over a Singapore-flagged cargo vessel in international waters in the Gulf on Thursday.
The shots prompted the vessel to flee into the UAE’s territorial waters, according to US officials.
Rhodes said the incident highlighted “exactly” why Gulf Arab states were concerned about Iran’s behaviour.

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