“Though your beginning was small, yet your latter end would increase abundantly.” Job 8:7 NKJV
The Lazy B ranch sits on two hundred and sixty square miles. Most of it is scrub brush, and it’s been in the Day family since 1881.
When Harry and Ada Mae Day had their first child, a baby daughter, they traveled two hundred miles to a hospital for delivery and brought her home to a difficult life. The four-room adobe house had no running water or electricity, and there was no school within driving distance.
You would think with such limited resources, the little girl’s future might be limited. But Harry and Ada Mae were determined their children would have the best education possible. They subscribed to metropolitan newspapers and magazines, and read to their child hour after hour.
When her daughter was 4 years old, Ada Mae began her on the Calvert method of homeschooling and later saw that she went to the best boarding schools possible. One summer they took their kids on a car trip to visit all the state capitals in America west of the Mississippi River.
When young Sandra was ready for college, she went to Stanford University, then on to law school, and eventually she became the first woman justice to sit on the Supreme Court of the United States of America. So the word for you today is—invest in your children.
And be willing to start small, otherwise you won’t start at all. Instead of dwelling on what you don’t have, use what God’s given you and He will bless it. Stand on this Scripture for your children: “Though your beginning was small, yet your latter end would increase abundantly.”
On this night exactly 54 years ago the then Registrar of UNN and its first indigenous, Mr Vincent Ike, now HRH Eze Prof. Chukwuemeka Ike, performed one of the most heroic feats in the University's history.
It was supposed to be the 4th Convocation, a ceremony always greeted with lots of fanfare, being a nascent University that already blazed the trail among its contemporaries, also as having broken series of records in the country's higher learning space.
It was to be at prestigious Akanu Ibiam Stadium UNN, same ground on which Nationalists like Chief Awolowo and Sir Ahmadu Bello became the pioneer Honorands of that great institution. This should paint you a mental picture of how hallowed the ground and the receptions on it were.
Nestlé has admitted that over 60% of its staple foods and beverages are not healthy diets.
The world's largest food company, Nestlé, has admitted that more than 60 percent of its staple foods and beverages do not meet the "recognized definition of health" and that...
"some of our categories and products will never be" healthy. " Only 37% of Nestlé's food and beverage products by revenue, excluding products such as pet food and specialty health foods, achieve a rating above 3.5 on the Australian health scoring system, as reported FT.
This system rates food on a five-point scale and is used in research by international groups such as the Access to Nutrition Foundation. Nestlé, the manufacturer of KitKats, Maggi noodles, and Nescafé, describes the 3.5-star threshold as "the recognized definition of health."
Earlier this week, news broke that Aliko Dangote was moving 60% of his family investment to the US. Two days after, we saw him in Tanzania promising to increase his investment in the country because he wants to support the new president, whose business...
decisions have been investment friendly. I am happy for him. He has sense.
But as a businessman, I am not sure Dangote is a model. Don't take my word for it. Let the data speak:
In October 2016, Dansa, Dangote's fruit juice company packed up because it wasn't making profit.
It closed shop, owing it's workers 6 months salary.
He also started a $13 million tomato processing plant in March 2016 and closed shop in August 2017, saying it was because of "importation of tomato paste, shortfall in the supply of fresh tomatoes and power failure."
President General of Ohaneze Ndigbo Worldwide, Prof. Obiozor's Address To Senate Committee On 1999 Constitution Review
AN ADDRESS PRESENTED TO THE MEMBERS OF THE SENATE COMMITTEE OF THE REVIEW OF THE 1999 CONSTITUTION.
OWERRI, 27/5/2021
AMBASSADOR PROF. GEORGE A. OBIOZOR
PRESIDENT GENERAL, OHANAEZE NDIGBO WORLDWIDE
PROTOCOL:
Distinguished Senators and Members of the National Assembly, on behalf of Ohanaeze Ndigbo Worldwide, I welcome you to this historic city of Owerri in the South East of Nigeria.
Welcome to the South East zone and welcome to Igboland.
In our submission you will find that what Ohanaeze Ndigbo Worldwide and Ndigbo in general are asking for are clear and simple.
Nigeria's escrow company, EscrowLock has won a $100 million global business grant from the world's largest social media company, Facebook Incorporated.
The local escrow platform based in Anambra State is a trusted third-party that receives and "locks" transaction payments...
from buyers and only releases payment to the intended seller when the seller has delivered the necessary goods or services in the agreed condition.
The middleman service helps to protect both buyers and sellers from online fraud, thereby boosting eCommerce activities and...
helping more people earn a decent livelihood.
According to the Director of EscrowLock, Elochukwu Eze, the information was contained in a statement issued by Facebook and made available to EscrowLock's office in Agbiligba Nanka, Anambra State.
Mike Tyson remains one of the highest-paid boxers in recent history, accruing millions of dollars in the course of his starling but controversial career in the ring. Reports said he made over $300 million throughout his boxing career before losing it all.
Forbes reports that back in the day, he accumulated $685 million throughout his career before losing almost everything.
Forbes estimates his current net worth to be $3 million.
The former heavyweight champion, unfortunately, spent his money as quickly as he earned it during the peak of his career with lavish expenses such as luxury houses, flashy cars, and even his infamous pet tigers, according to TalksSports.