Thursday 20 October 2016

Police Arraigned School Principal For N600,000 Alleged Fraud

 nigerian-police
The police on Thursday arraigned, Samuel Patrick, a school principal, at a Wuse Zone 2 Chief Magistrates’ Court, Abuja, for defrauding the school of N600,000.
Patrick, the principal of Lukas International School, Jikwoyi , Abuja, is facing a two-count of misappropriation and cheating.
The Prosecutor, John Simon, told the court that Yunusa Joseph of Nyanya, Abuja, reported the matter at Criminal Intelligence Department, Abuja on Oct. 10.
Simon said that the defendant dishonestly misappropriated N600,000 part of school fees for some students in the school between 2015 and 2016.
He said that the defendant directed some parents to pay the school fees to his personal account instead of the normal procedures of paying into the school account.
Simon added that the defendant diverted the money for his personal use.
The prosecutor said that the offence contravened sections 308 and 322 of the Penal Code.
Patrick pleaded not guilty to the charge.
Senior Magistrate, Teribo Jim, admitted the defendant to bail in the sum of N100,000 with a reasonable surety in like sum.
Jim also ordered that the surety must have fixed address within the jurisdiction of the court, and adjourned the matter till Nov. 9 for hearing.
NAN
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Ghen Ghen! Gunmen Kidnap Muslim Cleric, Wife, Others In Kano

 nigerian-gunmen-640x426-640x360
Some unknown gunmen have reportedly whisked away a prominent Muslim cleric, Sheikh Muhammad Madoki, while he was traveling on the Abuja-Kano Expressway on Thursday.
Madoki was said to have been abducted along with his wife, her sister and the wife of his younger brother.
BBC reports that the cleric is the head of the Sokoto state government’s charity and endowment commission.
It was learnt that the incident had been reported to the police, which had commenced investigation into the abduction.
But the Force Public Relations Officer, Donald Awunah, said he had not been briefed about the incident.
“I don’t have any information on it, I have not been briefed; maybe by tomorrow, I would have details of the incident,” he said.
Few days ago, a group of men suspected to be kidnappers engaged the police in a gun duel at the Falgore Forest in Dogua Local Government Area, LGA, of the state.
The shootout lasted for almost one hour after which the police arrested 11 suspected kidnappers, and rescued 12 kidnap victims from the dreaded forest.
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Ladies, Be Careful O! These Are 10 Things Guys Notice About You And You Never Knew They Do (No. 7 Is New)

 black-girl-flirting
Men are masters at noticing the ladies. These are certain things they may have noticed about you that you didn’t even know about.
It’s a common belief that guys are not observant and are not tuned in to women, but they notice a lot more than you might realise. You think that some of these things that you do are your little secret, but, they do know about them really. They just don’t let on that they do. Here are ten of those things that you think guys don’t notice:
1. When you are upset
You think that they are being insensitive, when it seems that they don’t even notice you are upset. They probably have noticed either, but they don’t know how to handle it, or they know it’s their fault!
2. When you check your hair
When you see a guy you like and you unconsciously check your hair in a nearby window, not only do the guys notice, but they also get the message!
3. When you adjust your bra
Those times when you try and make it look like you are rubbing your shoulder, but you are actually putting your bra strap back into place; guys know exactly what you are really doing.
4. When you really dislike another girl
It’s those little scowls and deep sighs that give this one away. If you don’t like another girl, then your man will notice. You simply can’t hide the body language.
5. When you wear your hair differently
Another thing that guys are often accused of, is not noticing it when you change something about your appearance. More than likely they have noticed that something’s different about you, they’re just not sure exactly what, so they won’t risk a comment in case they get it wrong!
6. How you behave around your friends
Most girls get a bit more girly and excitable when their friends are around. When this happens, the guys do notice and they will probably beat a hasty retreat from the scene, if they possibly can.
7. When you go to the bathroom with your friends
When you are out with a group of friends and you all mysteriously need the bathroom at the same time, guys know exactly what’s going on. They know you are going to compare notes and discuss them. No one’s bodies are that finely in tune with one another!
8. When you have a crush on a guy
Don’t think that you can hide it, when you really like a guy, because you can’t. The touches to the hair, the furtive glances, and how your body shifts to face him, will always give the game away here.
9. When you give another girl the evil eye
When another girl shows an interest in your man and you warn her off with a withering, icy look that could kill, men will notice that too. It strokes their ego, but it also scares them, so they will probably step in to lighten the mood.
10. When you make a suggestion that is really a command
Any man with a brain knows that when a girl makes a suggestion, she is really saying do it! The thinly veiled instruction behind a phrase like: ‘Don’t you think that music is a bit loud?’ or ‘This new restaurant in town looks nice’, holds no mystery at all to a man.
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Wednesday 19 October 2016

History of Halloween By Benjamin Radford, Live Science Contributor






 
Halloween is the season for little ghosts and goblins to take to the streets, asking for candy and scaring one another silly. Spooky stories are told around fires, scary movies appear in heaters and pumpkins are expertly (and not-so-expertly) carved into jack-o'-lanterns.
And this year, creepy clownsseem to be doing some real terrorizing: In August, locals in Greenville, South Carolina, reported a clown who was allegedly trying to lure children into the woods; then in September, a teen reported a knife-wielding clown in Summitville, Tennessee. Local and state officials in many areas are urging people to report suspicious clown sightings. And in South Florida, some stores are pulling clown costumes from their shelves and Broward County police are advising people not to dress up as the masked grinners, according to the Miami Herald.   
Amid the silly and scary antics, Halloween is much more than just costumes and candy; in fact, the holiday has a rich and interesting history. [Halloween 2016: A Guide to the When, Why, What and How
Halloween, also known as All Hallows' Eve, can be traced back about 2,000 years to a pre-Christian Celtic festival held around Nov. 1 called Samhain (pronounced "sah-win"), which means "summer's end" in Gaelic, according to the Indo-European Etymological Dictionaries. [13 Halloween Superstitions & Traditions Explained]
Because ancient records are sparse and fragmentary, the exact nature of Samhain is not fully understood, but it was an annual communal meeting at the end of the harvest year, a time to gather resources for the winter months and bring animals back from the pastures. Samhain is also thought to have been a time of communing with the dead, according to folklorist John Santino.
"There was a belief that it was a day when spirits of the dead would cross over into the other world," Santino told Live Science. Such moments of transition in the year have always been thought to be special and supernatural, he added.
Halloween provides a safe way to play with the concept of death, Santino said. People dress up as the living dead, and fake gravestones adorn front lawns — activities that wouldn't be tolerated at other times of the year, he said.
But according to Nicholas Rogers, a history professor at York University in Toronto and author of "Halloween: From Pagan Ritual to Party Night" (Oxford University Press, 2003), "there is no hard evidence that Samhain was specifically devoted to the dead or to ancestor worship. 
"According to the ancient sagas, Samhain was the time when tribal peoples paid tribute to their conquerors and when the sidh [ancient mounds] might reveal the magnificent palaces of the gods of the underworld," Rogers wrote. Samhain was less about death or evil than about the changing of seasons and preparing for the dormancy (and rebirth) of nature as summer turned to winter, he said.
Though a direct connection between Halloween and Samhain has never been proven, many scholars believe that because All Saints' Day (or All Hallows' Mass, celebrated on Nov. 1) and Samhain, are so close together on the calendar that they influenced each other and later combined into the celebration now called Halloween. 
The tradition of dressing in costumes and trick-or-treating may go back to the practice of "mumming" and "guising," in which people would disguise themselves and go door-to-door, asking for food, Santino said. Early costumes were usually disguises, often woven out of straw, he said, and sometimes people wore costumes to perform in plays or skits.
The practice may also be related to the medieval custom of "souling" in Britain and Ireland, when poor people would knock on doors on Hallowmas (Nov. 1), asking for food in exchange for prayers for the dead.
Trick-or-treating didn't start in the United States until World War II, but American kids were known to go out on Thanksgiving and ask for food — a practice known as Thanksgiving begging, Santino said.
"Mass solicitation rituals are pretty common, and are usually associated with winter holidays," Santino said. While one tradition didn't necessarily cause the others, they were "similar and parallel," he said.
These days, the "trick" part of the phrase "trick or treat" is mostly an empty threat, but pranks have long been a part of the holiday.
By the late 1800s, the tradition of playing tricks on Halloween was well established. In the United States and Canada, the pranks included tipping over outhouses, opening farmers' gates and egging houses. But by the 1920s and '30s, the celebrations more closely resembled an unruly block party, and the acts of vandalism got more serious.
Some people believe that because pranking was starting to get dangerous and out of hand, parents and town leaders began to encourage dressing up and trick-or-treating as a safe alternative to doing pranks, Santino said. 
However, Halloween was as much a time for festivities and games as it was for playing tricks or asking for treats. Apples are associated with Halloween, both as a treat and in the game of bobbing for apples, a game that since the colonial era in America was used for fortune-telling. Legend has it that the first person to pluck an apple from the water-filled bucket without using his or her hands would be the first to marry, according to the book "Halloween and Commemorations of the Dead" (Chelsea House, 2009) by Roseanne Montillo.
Apples were also part of another form of marriage prophecy. According to legend, on Halloween (sometimes at the stroke of midnight), young women would peel an apple into one continuous strip and throw it over her shoulder. The apple skin would supposedly land in the shape of the first letter of her future husband's name.
Another Halloween ritual involved looking in a mirror at midnight by candlelight, for a future husband's face was said to appear. (A scary variation of this later became the "Bloody Mary" ritual familiar to many schoolgirls.) Like many such childhood games, it was likely done in fun, though at least some people took it seriously. [Why Do We Carve Pumpkins at Halloween?]
Some evangelical Christians have expressed concern that Halloween is somehow satanic because of its roots in pagan ritual. However, ancient Celts did not worship anything resembling the Christian devil and had no concept of it. In fact, the Samhain festival had long since vanished by the time the Catholic Church began persecuting witches in its search for satanic cabals. And, of course, black cats do not need to have any association with witchcraft to be considered evil — simply crossing their path is considered bad luck any time of year.
As for modern Halloween, Santino, writing in "American Folklore: An Encyclopedia" (Garland, 1996), noted that "Halloween beliefs and customs were brought to North America with the earliest Irish immigrants, then by the great waves of Irish immigrants fleeing the famines of the first half of the nineteenth century. Known in the North American continent since colonial days, by the middle of the twentieth century Halloween had become largely a children's holiday." Since that time, the holiday's popularity increased dramatically as adults, communities and institutions (such as schools, campuses and commercial haunted houses) have embraced the event.
Through the ages, various supernatural entities — including fairies and witches — came to be associated with Halloween, and more than a century ago in Ireland, the event was said to be a time when spirits of the dead could return to their old haunting grounds. Dressing up as ghosts or witches became fashionable, though as the holiday became more widespread and more commercialized (and with the arrival of mass-manufactured costumes), the selection of disguises for kids and adults greatly expanded beyond monsters to include everything from superheroes to princesses to politicians.
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